Tendring Topics……..on line
Birds
of a Feather………
HRH
the Prince of Wales referred to them as ‘headless chicken’. Writing recently in
the Church Times (not a publication
likely to be accused of sensationalism or scare mongering) Paul Vallely, Senior Research Fellow at the
Brooks World Poverty Institute at Manchester University, prefers to call
climate change deniers 'ostriches'. That’s rather more appropriate because
ostriches are popularly believed to bury their heads in the sand rather than observe,
and do something about, scary things going on around them.
Paul
Vallely quotes a geography professor who told him that if the floods and gales
of this winter are the beginning of
climate change (and most intelligent observers are now convinced that they are)
then there is nothing that we can do about it.
What seems to us now to be ‘extreme weather’ will be the norm for at
least twenty years. However he tempered
that apocalyptic message by adding that ‘all
we can do now is to stop it getting worse’.
‘Climate change
deniers’, says Paul Vallely, ‘always
insist that you cannot prove a causal link between one spell of extreme weather
and global warming. That is true, just as you cannot link one specific
cigarette to a smoker’s developing lung cancer.
Trends though, are another matter’.
Lord Stone, a
punctilious and naturally cautious man with a great concern for academic
accuracy, is a friend and former colleague of Paul Vallely. He wrote a seminal report on climate change
in 2006 and recently noted that four of the five wettest years ever recorded in
the UK have occurred since 2,000 – and so have the seven warmest! Elsewhere in the world Australia has
just had its hottest year on record. North America
has been gripped by a polar vortex. Bangladesh has
had two ‘once-in-lifetime’ cyclones in three years. The Philippines have had their
worst-ever cyclone.
It
might have been thought that global warming would make the weather warmer here
in Britain. That though, is not the case. Scientists warned years ago that the first
change the UK
could expect would be more rain and wind, since a warmer atmosphere holds more
water and energy, meaning more floods – and thus it has happened!
Looking
back, Lord Stern says that his verdict back in 2006 should have been harsher
than it was. ‘Since
then, annual greenhouse-gas emissions have increased steeply, and some of the
impacts, such as the decline of Arctic sea ice, have started to happen much
more quickly’
Paul
Vallely notes that recently our Prime Minister advised the folk of
flood-stricken Upton-on-Severn
to speak to ‘the man upstairs’ about
the floods. Paul comments that prayer is
not a sufficient answer and that, as his grandmother used to say, God helps those who help themselves. To expect God miraculously to remedy the
harm that we humans have done to our environment is almost as stupid as
believing that the floods are God’s punishment for our approving same-sex
marriages!
The
God in whom I believe, created the Universe and everything in it using
evolution and natural selection as his tools.
That God is present, both throughout the Universe and as an 'inward light' within the souls of
every man, woman and child in the world.
He listens to and answers our prayers but, as St.
Theresa has declared, ‘In this world God
has no hands but ours to do his work; no feet but ours to run his errands’ and
he (I could with equal accuracy have said ‘she’ or ‘it’) has given us free
will.
We humans
have chosen to follow the paths of greed, covetousness and relentless
competition with each other for wealth and worldly possessions, rather than
those of co-operation, compassion and sharing the earth’s riches with our fellow
men and women. We have squandered the world’s finite resources and as
greenhouse gases accelerate climate change, we are rendering our planet
uninhabitable. God does not punish us for folly and selfishness. We punish ourselves.
Here
is the final paragraph of Paul Vallely’s article: If what we are seeing around us is the
result of a two-degree rise in global temperatures, what can we expect from the
four degrees rise that many scientists say is inevitable unless we cut carbon
emissions? Lord Stern suggests mass
migrations, conflict and war. The last
time the global temperature was five degrees different from today, the earth
was gripped by an ice age. We cannot say
that we have not been warned
……..flock
together.
I
have been following the reports of the trial of Rebekah Brooks and Andy
Coulson – both were senior employees of Ruper Murdoch's News International and both were close friends and confidantes of
Prime Ministers and other top politicians of both the main political parties.
Andy Coulson was for some time David Cameron’s personal spin doctor. Now they are both on trial in connection with
alleged phone hacking and attempts to pervert the course of justice while they were employed by News International. I was particularly interested to note that
Tony Blair, former Prime Minister and creator of New Labour had offered Rebekah Brooks his support and told her
that he would similarly help and advise Rupert Murdoch, who owns and heads News International.
Pioneers of the Labour Party –
Keir Hardie, George Lansbury, Sir Stafford Cripps, Clem Attlee, Jenny Lee and
Nye Bevan must surely be turning in their graves. Rupert Murdoch, his lieutenants, and his News International stand for everything that the Labour Movement
was created to oppose.
The
Ukrainian Tragedy
Seventy years ago – when I was a PoW at a
small Arbeitskommando (working camp) in Eastern Germany we regularly worked
and (when we had learned a little basic German) chatted with civilian
fellow-workers who were clearly not German and who wore a distinguishing badge
OST sewn onto their jackets. We soon learned that the OST was short for Ostarbeiter (worker from the east) and
that they were conscripted ‘slave workers’ from German occupied areas of Russia and the Ukraine.
There were men and
women. We got to know them very well both as fellow forced-workers and as
friends. There is nothing like having a common enemy
to bring people together, and all we foreign conscripted workers, PoWs and
civilians, were good friends. Much more recently I have learned about the rift between western and eastern Ukraine. Is the Ukrainian language very different from Russian? That's certainly not the impression that I gained - but perhaps the Ukrainians that I knew all came from the Eastern Ukraine. They were certainly friendly enough with their Russian fellow 'Ostarbeiters'. In
Russian ‘Ukraine’
means ‘the Outlands’, a province in the south of the former Tsarist
Empire acting as a buffer zone against the always threatening Turks.
Many 'Ostarbeiters', Russians and Ukrainians alike, had seen their parents and their village elders killed in cold blood by German SS units. Some, particularly the girls, had themselves had horrific experiences before being rounded up and deported to Germany. They were invariably friendly, cheerful and patient. Many of them were genuinely interested in our lives in Britain. Daily we heard the thunder of gunfire from the Eastern Front grow louder and louder as the Soviet Armies advanced through Poland and into Germany. We learned a few words and phrases in Russian from our Ukrainian and Russian friends and fellow-workers. These proved immensely valuable to me when the war came to an end and a mate and I were hitch-hiking our way through Soviet occupied Czechoslovakia on our way home to England!
Many 'Ostarbeiters', Russians and Ukrainians alike, had seen their parents and their village elders killed in cold blood by German SS units. Some, particularly the girls, had themselves had horrific experiences before being rounded up and deported to Germany. They were invariably friendly, cheerful and patient. Many of them were genuinely interested in our lives in Britain. Daily we heard the thunder of gunfire from the Eastern Front grow louder and louder as the Soviet Armies advanced through Poland and into Germany. We learned a few words and phrases in Russian from our Ukrainian and Russian friends and fellow-workers. These proved immensely valuable to me when the war came to an end and a mate and I were hitch-hiking our way through Soviet occupied Czechoslovakia on our way home to England!
Now the children and
grandchildren of those warm-hearted and friendly young men and women have been
killing each other in the streets of Kiev and other Ukrainian cities, and all
the major powers can do is ‘take sides’ – the Russian Government supporting the
ousted Ukrainian President, and the UK, USA and EU supporting the rebels (just
as in the Syrian blood-bath!) At the heart of the quarrel between the two
Ukrainian factions seems to be whether Ukraine
should seek the friendship and support of the EU or of Russia.
For goodness sake! The cold war is over and the ‘iron curtain’
drawn aside. Is it really impossible for Ukraine to enjoy the friendship of
both – and to enter into military alliance with neither; perhaps even to serve as a friendly bridge between us and our Russian former
allies? Have we forgotten already the contribution that the Soviet
Army (mostly Russians and Ukrainians) made towards the defeat of the
Nazis? Winston Churchill said that it was the Red Army that ‘tore the guts out of the Nazi War Machine’ and
I have no doubt at all that had it not been for their efforts and their sacrifice
(8 million dead!) I would, at the best, have remained a prisoner for at least another two or
three years. It is much more likely though that I would never have come home at all. I now have
good friends in Germany
and, in particular, in the small town where I spent the last eighteen months of
World War II as a PoW – but I have always remembered with gratitude those to
whom I owe my life and my liberty.
Late News
I wrote the above three days ago (on 28th February) and things have moved swiftly since then. Russian troops have moved into the Crimea where they appear to have been welcomed by the civilian population. They have, in effect, confined troops of the interim Ukrainian Government to their own bases. I can only hope and pray that the world's rulers will keep their heads cool and their eyes on world peace rather than on scoring points or losing 'face'. Is it not just possible that the presence of a considerable Russian force in the Crimean peninsula will deter the current provisional government from attempting to force their ideas and their culture on their compatriots in Crimea and Eastern Ukraine, thus provoking another civil conflict?
I do find the holier-than-thou attitude of the government of the USA somewhat surprising. Some of us still remember the USA's backing of the disastrous 'Bay of Pigs' attempted invasion of Cuba, the USA's illegal blockade of Cuban ports endangering international shipping and - almost exactly thirty years ago - the completely unprovoked USA led invasion of the Caribbean island of Grenada for no purpose other than regime change. This was condemned by the United Nations General Assembly as an act of unprovoked aggression though the UK's government, then headed by 'iron lady' Margaret Thatcher was strangely silent, despite the fact that Grenada was then part of the British Commonwealth and its head of state was our Queen.
Late News
I wrote the above three days ago (on 28th February) and things have moved swiftly since then. Russian troops have moved into the Crimea where they appear to have been welcomed by the civilian population. They have, in effect, confined troops of the interim Ukrainian Government to their own bases. I can only hope and pray that the world's rulers will keep their heads cool and their eyes on world peace rather than on scoring points or losing 'face'. Is it not just possible that the presence of a considerable Russian force in the Crimean peninsula will deter the current provisional government from attempting to force their ideas and their culture on their compatriots in Crimea and Eastern Ukraine, thus provoking another civil conflict?
I do find the holier-than-thou attitude of the government of the USA somewhat surprising. Some of us still remember the USA's backing of the disastrous 'Bay of Pigs' attempted invasion of Cuba, the USA's illegal blockade of Cuban ports endangering international shipping and - almost exactly thirty years ago - the completely unprovoked USA led invasion of the Caribbean island of Grenada for no purpose other than regime change. This was condemned by the United Nations General Assembly as an act of unprovoked aggression though the UK's government, then headed by 'iron lady' Margaret Thatcher was strangely silent, despite the fact that Grenada was then part of the British Commonwealth and its head of state was our Queen.
‘First cast the plank out of your own eye, and you will see more clearly
how to deal with the mote in the eye of your brother’ St. Matthew
Chapter 7 verse 5
No comments:
Post a Comment