Lloyd Russell-Moyle : Home
I'm Lloyd Russell-Moyle the Chair of the Woodcraft Folk which is a progressive education movement in the UK. We are part of the International Falcon Movement - Socialist Education International. I have worked in Student Unions as President and Secretary-Treasurer, was Vice Chair of the British Youth Council and Study Peace Studies at Bradford University.
I'm the Treasurer for the Education Not for Sale Network which is a anti-capitalist network of student activists.
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Thursday, 22 October 2009
BNP on question time
The argument that the BNP are a legal party is a pretty dubious one as Bruno said. They are banned in the Police force, the Prison Service and a number of other professions. This is not a "legal party" in that scene that is should be treated as other parties. In the latest court case the BNP were shown to be breaking the law while banning and discriminating against Black and Asian people - again proof that they are not just another legal party.
The BBC are in a difficult position now, because the if broadcast the BNP will be able to use the programme to show that they are a legitimate party - despite the court case and the facts! However, if the BBC now refuse they will use this as an argument that they are being repressed.
The BBC doesn't have the right to ban parties and people are quite right to defend the idea of freedom of press but the choice to put BNP on Question Time is seriously flawed in a number of areas ( http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/oct/15/bnp-question-time-bbc-griffin). Question Time is one of the flag ship political performance shows. By this I mean the Question Time allows the guest to play up to the audience, it allows politicians to say sound bites and its semi-live formate (the programme it pre-recorded but usually little edited) also shows a lack of editorial control.
If the BBC truly wanted to debate with the BNP, show them up for what they are and make people realise that they are bigots (which by the way wont happen - but ill say more about that later) then they should put them on Newsnight or another "serious"programme where ideas can actually be challenged rather than drowned out by shouts or applauds.
And finally, this concept that debating with the debatable, with the unthinkable will somehow show them up for what they are is just not a concept that is based in reality(or History - please please please give me an example when they facisits, anywhere in the world have been "debated" our of politics!, no they have been fought out of politics) I agree that we shouldn't ignore the BNP, this will make then stronger, but by treating them like another partner to debate with another group to make concessions with will make all of our politics a little more racist. One cant help feel that the argument of debate and reconciliation is abit like Mr Chamberlain coming back from Germany with a peace of paper saying " its alight folks they have promised not to do anything nasty" we can sit back only less than 5 years later to be in all out war and millions of Jews, Roma, Disabled, Gays etc being lined up to be murdered.
The BNP should be challenged, they should be argued, but Question Time is the wrong place to do that. The argument should take place in the courts, in the streets until the illegal, racist and fascist party are off the streets. That means dealing with poverty, inequity and the issues that matter and not giving them a lovely stage with armed police protection.
Labels: Elections, International Politics
Friday, 9 October 2009
Nobel Peace Prize

Just a quick note about the
Nobel Peace Prize. Today they announced that the winner for the 2009 prize will be Barack Obama a president of the USA who has been in post for less than a year and was only in office for two months before he was nominated.
This is an interesting choice for the Nobel Committee, not mostly because he is so unproven. The committee has a history of awarding prizes soon after the event and has been
criticized for acting too quickly and partisan.
I think that the comments in the
Guardian today sum up some of the sentiment:
Michael Cox, a North America expert at the Chatham House thinktank, said: "It is difficult to see why it would be awarded to him at this stage in his presidency. There are problems in the Middle East and an ongoing war in Afghanistan. You could say it is a little bit premature. It is certainly a very interesting choice.
Time have even suggested that winning the prize may heart Obama burdening him in the years to come with an expectation that he can not, [or does not want to] achieve.
Looking forward to Obama in the next year has the committee spoken too soon. We are already starting to see how the US and other western states is using its power to manipulate the Climate Change Negotiations.
John Vidal describes how these countries are "
"fundamentally sabotage" the Kyoto protocol" in a statement from
China and the G77 in Bangkok.
This is potentially very damaging, not only are we looking at the US taking the west off to separate negations which it can manipulate. The Obama administration is causing a schism between the West, led by the USA and the Global South led by China. This will do anything but increase world security.
But lets look at a more local level, because health care, social security in the USA is, in my view, just as important in creating culture of peace than a global politician gallivanting around the world espousing the virtues of the UN whilst sending his cronies to scupper international negotiations in Bangkok.
Here Obama seems to be trying to make headway, but the package which is slowly being riped to shreds the plans started out as less ambitions as Hillary Clinton's plans in the 90s when her husband was in power.
Now for all this, Obama has in the past done some inspirations things. In Chicago, his work on the ground (as we learnt in CR last week level 3 work) has made some real changes to communities and the lives of young and old people alike. This is the problem, the Nobel committee dont mention any of that work in thir citation but the international globe trotting.
The say that Obama is worthy for his commitment to the UN, for his passion to get people around the table and talk, effectively for being an effective statesman. So he manages to negation on level 1 well, not fantastically but well. Iran is still producing more nuclear fuel and potentially weapons, Israel and Palestine has moved forward but there is little sign of peace right now and as i said before China is still spitting feathers at the USA.
So all in all a strange and maybe regrettable choice - maybe lets hope I am wrong!
Labels: china, climate change, International Politics, Israel, Palestine, Peace Studies
Monday, 15 June 2009
Solidarity for Justice for SOAS Cleaners- Stop Deportations, occupation.
Dear students, and staff of SOAS,
Today the University of Bradford Union meet to discuss the deportations of cleaners at the School of African and Oriental Studies, London. We want to send our solidarity greeting to you.
We were both shocked and appalled to hear last week that the University had been complicit in allowing members of their staff to be intimidated, detained and deported whilst working at SOAS.
The fact that the University targeted underpaid cleaners many of whom are active in working to fight for better widest is outrageous.
As students and researches at the University of Bradford we feel that our Universities has a duty to protect all members of its community. The fact that the your school not only refused to protect its staff but was complicit in deporting ill and pregnant staff is outrageous.
We fully support actions such as the present occupation to fight for the rights for these workers. Students and staff must unite to work together in creating a community that is safe and secure for each other.
We send our solidarity with those who have been part of the campaign to stop deportations while out thoughts are on those who are being deported and other staff who are being intimidated by these kind of actions. We wish the occupation all the success.
We want to make it clear to all Universities but particular to SOAS that the behaviour of senior management not acceptable and have called for them in a separate letter to support their staff and the occupation.
Yours, in solidarity and friendship.
For and on behalf of the University of Bradford Union
Lloyd Russell-Moyle
Union Secretary – Treasurer 2007-09
Vice President (Societies) 2009-10
Labels: Education Not for Sale, ENS, International Politics, Universy of Bradford, Universy of Bradford Union
Wednesday, 29 April 2009
Queer Easter - has 10 years of being Queer been so great?

This year was my 5th Queer Easter as we celebrated 10 years of a Queer seminar that may not be so queer but act as a critical friend to Queer.
I don't mean that the seminar has been swamped by straight people (dread the thought!). I think (although not around) that 10 years ago when Queer Easter was set up (its 11 years really but we forget about the first one as its wasn't international) the word "Queer" was chosen as much as a provocation and marketing tool as a bases on Queer theory.
10 years ago queer theory was this new exciting theory, something that was just being developed and explored. 10 years on and Queer looks a bit like another tired post-modernist theory which people either don't understand or contradicts itself so much that it becomes useless.
Queer, for those of you who don't know, is effectively a post modernist, post-structuralist theory. It joins the debate as an opposition to identity as it is perceived through constructionist (nurture) and essentialist (nature) views. Its says that your gender and sexuality identity is for sure created but more than that it doesn't matter. Forget what you are, but its what you do. (confused yet?)
Putting it another way, some argue that "your identity is made up from what you do and constructed" and other say "your identity is essentially you and you do things because of your identity". Well Queer theory comes along and say "fuck that" you just do. Your identity is something that is just made-up and all we should focus on is what you do, and seeing that what you do is fluid - depending on the time and space that we inhabit - so is our sexuality, gender and sex.
It all sounds great, liberating for many, but it has some unexpected consequence. For example, many of the LGBT liberation movement have argued - we are what we are, we are born gay etc. in a bid to fight discrimination. If suddenly we turn around and say, well actually, we are not born like this but "choose" or act like this the whole none-discrimination argument starts to go out the window.
It starts to sound no so great, also start to shove in their the whole idea about "normalisation" and unless you like being different then the whole Queer thing starts to look less and less attractive. for the first time in many years, I think that a number of participants started to get this. As well as a whole media working group looking critically at queer we also had morning workshops focusing on the issue.
I would argue that we still need to embrace queer but as a process not at the end. As with much in post-modern theory the critique the world around us is academically, but it fails to put an alternative. We de-construct identity, in fact much of our world we live in and are left with a pile of rubble.
Humans need a social construction to make this confusing world a bit easer to live in, identity is important for struggles, but also surly as socialist we need to be critical of the bourgeoisie social construction that we live in today. We need to de-construct our lives and our society and I believe that Queer theory is a great way to do that. However, if we stop there then its a pretty empty and lonely world.
If there is no narrative to our actions then we have no historical and political perspective to put things in to we are effectually - as a global society! We need to create another narrative, so I guess, we need Queer theory, just as a path to something else.
That something else, Socialism? well... that's for another day!
Labels: IFM-SEI, International Falcon Movment-Socalist Education International, International Politics, LGBT, Queer, Woodcraft Folk
Thursday, 26 March 2009
Bradford hosts: War-refusers - the other Israel

On Monday 9th March about 40 Students gathered to hear Tamar Katz talk about her experiences being jailed for refusing to fight in the Israeli army. Tamar, a high school student, was drafted in to the army but told her story about how a group of school students and her joined a small but growing movement of conscientious objector in Israel.
Following massive demonstrations and a wave of student occupations against Israel’s war in Gaza, the University of Bradford Union, supported by Education not for Sale (a student anti-capitalist lobby group) joint up with other Unions and also Alliance of Workers liberty to host part of the national tour with Tamar, one of the Shministim, Israeli high school students jailed for refusing to fight in the occupied Palestinian territories.
Tamar said “I was 16 when the second war in Lebanon began and this made me re-consider the prospect of fighting in the IDF after I graduated from school. My family were “ordinary” — not political, and we did not talk about these things at home. I wanted to find out more about the political situation and to think through my ideas. I began to work for an organisation which ran educational initiatives in working-class neighbourhoods. This was my first time in a politicised environment. Through it I met many left wing people. I moved into a collective house and began to get involved with a group called New Profile (an anti-militaristic feminist organisation).
She spoke about her experience in jail, how her family reacted and the pace of change in Israeli. There was much debate about boycotts and their effectiveness and most people reported a successful event. Tamar talked about their work with other organisations such as Combatants for Peace
The Union, with the Peace Studies department is working to bring Bassam Aramin, Co-Founder of a joint Israeli-Palestinian organization, Combatants for Peace to Bradford in the next academic year. He has been accepted at the University to study a masters but needs the fund to come to the University. We will keep you updated with information and whether the University agrees to a fee waiver for Bassam.
Labels: Education Not for Sale, International Politics, Israel, Palestine, Peace Studies, UBU, Universy of Bradford, Universy of Bradford Union
Saturday, 7 February 2009
Stop the War meeting and Occupations

Over the last few weeks, and going in to months now
occupations about Gaza have been happening up and down the country. This amazing act of solidarity has seen almost 20 Universities occupied from Scotland to Brighton even spreading
to New York.
The movement needed to come together - share ideas, and exchange views. That was what I thought
Stop the War Coalition was hosting at their student meeting. Unfortunately that's not what some of the StWC comrades thought - to them it had been billed as an event to build StW groups on campus on the back of occupations.
At some points of the meeting this confusion was used to hijack all occupations to create a national StW committee. Whether this confusion was deliberately instigated or was just due to the mix of people at the meeting I will (for the sake of argument) take the latter.
Due to a reluctance of some occupations to join this committee and a number of people calling for a further discussion of how we build from the occupations, Sussex comrades lead the call for a further meeting. This was to discuss further building of the occupations network (in a loose way) and to this end I agree so with other
ENS comrades backed the calls and helped instage a discussion at the end of the Conference only for it to be later hijacked by Revo and other factions.
We meet at ULU (the University of London Union) to further discuss what to do next. However the issues got inflated and confusion entailed.
I realise that the StW needed to consolidate its own networks and if only this had became clear at the conference then maybe we would not have needed this further discussion. I fully support that every campus should have an active Stop the War Group, and in the understanding agree that they need a national body/ committee elected by branches - this however had not been clear.
By the end of the side meting at ULU, I don't know if people were clearer or more confused by what had happened. Frustration as always at these meetings had grown and people wanted to
leave.
I have a lot of respect for comrades from all the divide. For example Rob Owen, although lambasted, often puts in valuable inputs, and although I disagree I think that without the factions in some sense we would be weaker.
With heat rising I don't think that other appreciated these "inputs"and a few started walking out - factions trying to get their own way, the meeting ended with a understanding that some organising needs to come out of the occupations (the same situation that we were in at the start !)
If the meeting will motivate people to go back and mobilise, if the meeting means that people communicate on the email list and we get moment for a national day of action on Palestine then it would al be worth it - if not it was just another factional bitching session.
Labels: education, Education Not for Sale, International Politics, National Union of Students, Palestine
Friday, 30 January 2009
Songs for Palestine

Last night I want to the
Topic Folk Club, the oldest surviving folk club in the world. It was a great night, as always, and enjoyable. I would recommend that anyone around on a Thursday head off to the IDL - Bradford Irish Club and enjoy the night.
At the night, John Waller sang a song in the intermission about Palestine, having lived in Lebanon only a few miles from a refuges camp in 1969, John had written the song then about how he saw the issue, and although trying to look at both sides, it was clear to him that there was a political perspective that had to be taken.
40 years on, and now 60 years since the start of the occupation, John sang that same song again, nothing had to be changed. The attacks, the deaths, the injustice - still rife.
Many people can see that what has been happening over the last 60 years isn't right and that it must end.
One state, two state or what ever is the academic question, what I clear to many, an especially to those who took part in the
student occupation on Tuesday and Wednesday is that the killing must stop and we must show solidarity to those who are suffering, quite clearly the Palestinians.
Those who inflate the whole debate in to a Jew, Muslim, Christian conflict, are not only trying to use religion, race and racism to win the argument, they are mistake. This is not an issue of your background, but one of an occupier, an imperial force (IDF) and justice and peace.
Labels: International Politics, Palestine, Peace Studies, UBU, Universy of Bradford, Universy of Bradford Union
Wednesday, 7 January 2009
The end of the Berlin - London night train connection

I have been a regular traveller London to Berlin (via Brussels) night service. Leaving London on the last Eurostar to Brussels one was able to step straight on to the sleeper service and wake up in Berlin in time for a days work/rest/or play.
The service was axed at the end of this year meaning that London and Brussels no longer have a fast connection to Berlin. Although the total time (via Koln) is now faster this trip (10 hours) now has to be taken though the day meaning loosing a day of work/play/holiday.
What a shame, this service was a regular for me, I used it at least 5 to 6 times a year and I have very fond memories.
In the trips to work at the
Falken Education centre outside Berlin I would take the night train, encouraging young people to see not only the delight of night travel but also the environmental advantage.
The website
http://euronight.net/ has been set up to campaign for the restoration of this service. (Brussels and onwards for London) are some of the only European capital cities that are no longer reachable from Berlin on the night services.
Please write to DB (the German Train Company) and the German Embassy to complain, last year after passenger complaints they brought back the individual booking service and it is possible that we could put enough pressure on DB to put the service back on.
This can help with the reasons, but its better to write it in your own words.
Labels: International Politics, Trains
Monday, 5 January 2009
Freedom next time revealing a global "double speak"

I have just finished reading "Freedom - next time" by John Pilger, in this book he reviles the global lies that the media have told and the cover ups - started by government agencies and reviled by noble whistle blowers, court actions and other leaks.
The war with Gaza started and while I was reading I thought that I would look to see what the news output was. On the first day of the land invasion the BBC didn't mention once on its fount page or headlines that millions of people had protested against the Israeli governments actions. They equated the deaths of hundreds of Palestinians with only a couple of injured soldiers and showed a blow by blow account of the "tactical actions" in photographs.
This "double speak" as Orwellian would put it designed the truth in Palestine. Hamas is a terrible organisation, and the very people that they fire their rockets to are Israel Arabs and Muslims but this is tiny compared to what Israel is doing now.
Imagine if the UK has flattened Northern Ireland just because there was a hard core IRA, imagine if instead of working towards peace (although long and hard) in the Bask region Spain had decided to start an overhead assault. People would not only be outraged, but they would call the governments extremist, illiberal and a danger to their own people committing war crimes. Well this is what the Israeli state has done, provoked by Hamas, but encouraged by the right in power.
This latest attack, however may be better for Hamas that many outside think, as elections build up in Israel later in the year this latest war will making it more likely for a right wing government to be elected. Hamas directly advantages from the right wing in Israel as they are two side of the same coin. Hamas set up by the right to take power away from the secular PLO has better support, and is stronger when there is an another side to fight. In this war both sides have all to gain and all to loose by escalating it and so they have.
Freedom next time puts this latest sad story in context with many other stories of international brute over brains often linked to the USA and the UK's imperialist past of dreams.
Labels: Books, International Politics, Peace Studies
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