Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

WHY I WON'T BE THERE



The Voices of Freedom events begin tomorrow but I won't be going because I really couldn't bear to hear this pompous prick spouting his vile prejudices.

Just who the hell does Peter Hitchens think he is and what right has he to believe that I'd want a selfish prat like that saving me anyway? If that's a voice of "freedom" frankly, it undermines the whole debate from the outset.

I'd really rather hear true of voices of freedom and not those calling for oppression of one minority group because of some sanctimonious belief that they know better. Hitchens is right not to use the phrase Nanny State though. We now live in the Bully State but he wouldn't recognise it as a bully himself.

Hitchens says that tobacco use has only been in the civilised world for two world wars. How can such an ignorant columinist be allowed to write such a blatant falsehood? Tobacco use is at least 500 years old and has been used across Europe in civilised society for that long and in the Native Americas for much longer as it was used as a medicinal herb. It still is, actually, and can be found as an ingredient in many Big Pharma over the counter products like travel sickness pills and facepacks.

It has only become something else in the FOUR years since the blanket smoking ban legalised the hate and harassment against one lifestyle group. No amount of idiots like Hitchens can change history as much as they would like to fit their own ideological aims.

I had looked forward to the so called Freedom events and I did consider going to the next in the series but it isn't an event I can take seriously because of Hitchens in the same way I couldn't take last year's event seriously after the illiberal Demotwat Mark Pack was invited soon after telling me his irrelevant Party had no plans to give freedoms back to smokers in it's much lauded ... erm ... Freedom Bill that isn't worth the bog paper it's written on.

I see that Dick Puddlecote's going and that is a good thing. At least there will be one true voice of freedom and I hope he is given voice to put that prat Hitchens in his place.

If I went, it would only be the piss up afterwards that interested me - especially if it's at Boidales which really knows how to go that extra mile to make its smoker customers comfortable.

Meanwhile, I'll be saving my limited funds for an event in London that I see as far more worthy and far more likely to have an effect. I hope my MP Karl McCartney will attend the Save Our Pubs And Clubs amendthesmokingban.com reception for MPs where I hope my voice will be heard about how this spiteful ban has affected me and other lifelong smokers.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

OUCH



Prague was amazing but depression set in as soon as I landed back in the Uk especially on catching up on the Govt's final solution for smokers announced while I was away.

Yes, they have us by the proverbials visualised above in a poster advertising an art exhibition that caught the attention of many passers by in Prague.

The sense of freedom I felt in that city was immense. My step was lighter as I walked even in several feet of snow, my fear disappeared. I felt equal and included for the first time in four years.

The first cafe I went into reminded me of the one I used to visit in my local indoor market. It was the sort of place that anti-smokers didn't go because it was more underclass than middle class. I felt at home.

I was also hugely pleased that choice was on the menu in the Czech Republic with signs to indicate both. I walked past those that didn't allow smoking. It was the sort of thing we used to have here before we became a Communist State of the EUSSR.

Oddly I smoked less. Culturally in the UK smoking was never encouraged on the street until July 2007. In my youth there was a name for women who smoked out in the open. It just wasn't done. Now people binge smoke before going into buildings. They are forced out into the open to be ridiculed, humiliated, outcast. This is not about their health but hatred of them by others.

Govt has called them out to be targets.

One thing I was reminded of in Prague was the effectiveness of air ventilation systems. You couldn't tell if you were in a smoking or non-smoking restaurant, pub or cafe just by smell. I always had to ask when I entered or look for ashtrays on the tables. Smoking is not an issue there at all because these people know the true value of freedom and what defines it.

I was actually moved to tears in the Mucha Restaurant to be allowed inside such a wonderful place and to be welcomed. It was very cultural, and like stepping back to 1920. The jackboot lifted from my neck and I could breathe fresh unbiased air. Smoking was part and parcel of it's ambience. We had a four course traditional meal as a jazz pianist played.

It was named after the Czech art nouveau artist Alfons Mucha who was one of the first to be arrested when the Gestapo entered the city in 1939. He did not survive the experience as many more classed as "undesirables" did not.

Yes, the Czechs know the true value of freedom, the danger of denormalisation, and the exclusion of "unwelcome" human beings. Their Jewish cemetery is testament to that.

I've worn my red F2C badge, which has a striked-through cigarette with the words "What Next" underneath, since attending the first TICAP anti-prohibition conference in 2009. We now know it is Obesity, particularly but not exclusively.

The badge attracted a lot of interest from English speaking Czechs who wanted to know what it meant.

"Ah yes, I've heard about the marginalisation of smokers in the UK," said one young man when I explained how awful life was here and how oppressed it's citizens were.

He was shocked and disappointed because of that mythical ideal Eastern Europeans have about the model of freedom - Britain. I told him he should never visit the UK because it was a terrible place of unspoken oppression. I said smokers were jailed, evicted, promoted as child abusers, villified, humiliated, and abused. I said other "undesirables" were being targeted for similar treatment.

Another non-smoking Czech told me he smoked for 20 years but quit. He said choice was important and he was saddened to hear how people are treated here because they like the "wrong" foods, they drink alcohol and they smoke. I joked we'd all have to have blonde hair and blue eyes next to become accepted by "normal" society.

We used to be the laughing stock of Europe because of this lifetyle pettiness but we are now feared by those in Eastern Europe who do not want to revisit their oppressive history now they are free citizens. I found those in Hungary the same when I visited Budapest about three years ago. The UK is Definitely off the list as a holiday venue for some.

It is why Klaus Vaclas, the Czech president, is fighting further integration of the EU where this lifestyle control comes from.

I also explained that my reason for visiting Prague was the only way I could show any resistance to our treatment. I explained about the Resistance Movement we have that refuses to fund the UK denormalisation plan by buying our tobacco abroad. Tobacco at CzK 170 a 50g pack was more expensive than a pack of fags at CzK 61. Both were far cheaper in the city than the airport so buy in Prague for best value and boost the local economy which deserves our custom.

The heaviness and unhappiness that I feel because of having to live in the UK under the dictatorial LibLabCon govt immediately returned on landing and going through customs. Signs threatening this that or the other, were littered along the walls as we made our way through passport control.

I flew from East Midlands airport which has a smoking section. They cage smokers up outside. In Prague airport the pub is smoking. Non-smokers have to sit outside or choose an non-smoking alternative. At least they have one.

I would love to go again but as part of the Resistance Movement I plan to see as many European cities as possible so somewhere in Spain is next on my list. After tasting -16 degree temperatures in Prague, a little bit of sunshine next time would be nice.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

BRILLIANT


One can only hope ....



SHAMED MP BEST FOR LINCOLNSHIRE



I'm sure I heard David Cameron telling our local TV news that the Tories were looking to replace long standing Sleaford and North Hykeham MP Douglas Hogg with a candidate who has been chosen from the local area.

So why are all the Tory pet wannabe MPs being parachuted into the county from other areas including London?


If it were not for Hogg, the NHS would have got away with murdering my Mum. If it were not for Hogg, I would have been homeless and my kids would probably have gone into care. If it were not for MPs like Hogg, then we wouldn't have any dissenting voices in the brain-washed rush to be the same as everybody else.

OK, so I know most people are angry with him for his moat cleaning paid for with public money - except for a friend of mine who thinks because Hogg lives in a stately home, then the moat cleaning, it could be argued, is about preserving local heritage. Personally, I don't mind because in so many ways, over so many years, and for all the good he has done for real people, his local constituents, I think he deserves it.

Hogg was one of the few who voted against a blanket smoking ban. He hates smoking, he's said it's an odious habit that the world would be better off without, but he respects people's rights to live their own lives and not be denormalised because of it.

Just before the news broke that forced his resignation, many people wrote to him about the ban and he answered every single letter positively. I know one consituent who wrote to him thanking him for his work. Hogg's response was that he could not face door knocking and having to explain to his constiuents why he claimed for his moat. He also said that another reason for his leaving was that it was impossible to be a free thinker in politics today.

Sadly, Lincolnshire has lost an excellent MP. What it will get, if Sleaford and North Hykeham vote Tory again, is brain-washed young 'uns who care more about themselves and their own careers.

Despite the fact that I have - until July 2007 - always supported Labour, when I lived in his constuency, I always felt Hogg was approachable, non-patronising, and a man who really did care for his community. When I lived in Lincoln, I never felt able to approach Gillian Merron NuLab MP because she isn't the type you can talk to. I could never approach any of the current candidates because I know what I will get - The Party Line.

Merron also claimed, amongst other things, for a bed mattress costing £1,400. That, I cannot justify at all. No-one benefits there except her. Hogg did the honourable thing. Merron still clings to power and expects us to vote for her again not recognising in any way that she was wrong.

Moat or not, Hogg's resignation was very bad for democracy and very bad for the people of Lincolnshire.