Common Weal/Space need good web designers. They really do - it's their greatest weakness.
As far as weaknesses go it's a good one to work on, as it's almost guaranteed to be one of the things that'll improve once they rake in sterling. They'd have to go full youtube to mess up, and I don't think anyone can manage to go full youtube.
I certainly wonder if they see themselves in some role in fulfilling their own goal on creating a national Scottish media more Scottish than the BBC.
That's just the virus that has infected journalism, I'm afraid. The whole "sources allege" etc thing has crept into every political reporting from the days when journalists would skulk around in Westminster cafes, waiting to have candid "off the record" conversations. I don't really know how we can solve it when it's endemic.
Oh yes, by no means am I saying it's a Common Weal thing, it's global. Unfortunately. Also I would say Westminster's a symptom not the cause, it's actually something unreal to see reporters and photographers in action literally skulking and hiding in crevices and windows behind people's shoulders.
And reading this all I can think of is how simultaneously a bad and great idea would be in exporting Frankie Boyle to the world. Especialy interesting is
the bit addressing reducing inequality by raising wages but a lot of the stuff I'm seeing from Common Weal also favours the same lax immigration created by labour that allowed employers to drive wages down on the first place. Is there some way to reconcile this without imposing controls that allow skilled labourers and students in whilst limiting unskilled labourers and excluding those seeking to take advantage with no thought for Scotland?
Oh, and 4 day weeks. Love it, thought about it before, but will it ever happen? It's probably worse because I'm a Londoner and in terms of work speed we're like the rest of Britain on crack cocaine and even whilst acknowledging the system's wrongs I and many like me are addicted to the system because god dammit more work must be done.
Would the loss of a whole day out of the week provide enough benefits to a person that productivity would actually increase or is the point in valuing individual welfare and societal welfare (by reducing unemployment)?If I got the point right you'd have two people working the same job that would normally be done by one, increasing the number of available jobs whilst also reducing the stress loads of each individual, meaning they're healthier, happier and more productive.
Why that's a fucking great idea.
Management jobs would be weird to work into the system though.
This one about defence, too idealistic and assumes the world is full of rational actors (hint, islamic terrorists have been bombing european nations which never set foot in the middle east or africa and Putin wants to rub his dick on europe's forehead and Kirchner can fuck off muh penguins e.t.c.) and our armed forces have done a hell of a good humanitarian job around the world fighting ebola, clearing mines and keeping sea lanes open from god damn pirates that withdrawing everything because Tony Blair is allowed to walk free is silly.
I can't remember who predicted internet would be a human right some day, but I should. It's a good idea that will happen.