AIRSTRIP ONE

 Updated March 2000


Hi, I'm Jim...

Know me as Gemineye Jim or Jim Gemineye. Anything, as long as it's not Jim Gemineye chéri! On the other hand, Eric is a nice name..


BLAIR'S MILLENNIUM

Eric Blair wrote the book 1984 using the pen name GEORGE ORWELL. Like all good science fiction 1984 dealt not so much with fanciful illusions about the future, but about his own perceptions of his time (1948). Writers sometimes have to use outlandish contexts in order to break the barriers of preconceptions that readers put up. However, in creating this new context, he explored several ideas that we could apply to other eras and also see come to fruition in this new millennium.

  • Telescreen - we thought this was his view of the new medium of TV being used to brainwash the masses. That was before digital TV came along. Digital TV will evolve - it will be on all the time, it will be two way - the TV in the bedroom will have to go.
  • Newspeak - Didn't quiet get this right. The idea was destroy the ability to express unorthodox ideas by destroying the language required to communicate them. This was done by simplification. Well, if anything, language has become even more complex. But some might argue that corruption of words like cool and wicked accomplish the same thing as Newspeak. On the other hand with the creation of a ‘drug culture' do you need Newspeak? If you're on the right drugs you can drivel on for hours without saying anything meaningful - let alone radical.
  • Chocolate rations - Not quite sure why chocolate rations figured so much in Orwell's vision. It was used as a kind of reward or punishment. If news was bad, chocolate rations were reduced - if news was good, chocolate rations were increased. It was as if the people were held to blame for events in Airstrip One, We don't have chocolate rations now - but we do have interest rates.

Airstrip One was the new name for England or Britain under the regime of Big Brother.

Welcome to Airstrip One.

Welcome to a different kind of spin... it's less gassy and leaves no bitter after-taste.

Welcome to the
NEW MILLENNIUM.


If you have any comments to make on Gemineye's content email: jim@gemineye.free-online.co.uk

Why does Frank Dobson remind me so much of Greengrass?
I ask questions like that every month with a hare in it

FREE TRADE or SLAVE TRADE?
Airstrip One Archive Euro-Mad

Join - OR ELSE

They tried bribery - cheaper mortgages among the promise of many other wonderful things. But the rabble didn't buy it. So now they try threats.

The europhiles are now promising huge unemployment in Britain if we do not adopt the European currency.

Well, I wouldn't like to dispute that. The promise of unemployment is the one promise British government has always found easy to keep.

More and more often I keep hearing about how Britain will suffer from withdrawal of Inward Investment if Britain distances itself from Europe.

What's so great about inward investment?

We used to call the cash flow back to this country from overseas investments INVISIBLE EXPORTS.

But we never heard much about INVISIBLE IMPORTS, cash flow out of this country through foreign owned companies. Perhaps the more fashionable "virtual" word should be used, after all we virtually import everything now - food, water, electricity -No wonder everything is so expensive in this country, our nations wealth comes from tax and mark-up!

At one time there was a phrase that we don't seem to hear much now - "balance of payments" - it seems to have been replaced by the words COMPLETE SURRENDER. Just throw in the towel, give it all up, hand it over to Europe and the multi-national companies.

Not a month goes by where some company isn't taken over or merged to become one of the "Europe's Largest" along with the accompanying job losses - this is somehow spun into "inward investment creating jobs for Britain" - neat trick eh?

It is the surrender of our nationhood and our industries to Europe and the globalisation of business that will bring mass unemployment to Britain. Just take a look at who we surrender to - a federation with 20 million unemployed, 50 million below the poverty line and 5 million homeless. Oh, I can't wait to join.

It's a perfect world

It would be naive to think so, but there are dangerous people about who would like us to think it could happen. People of high moral character, like Bill ‘We did not bomb civilians' Clinton. These people look at Austria's new coalition of democratically elected representatives and say that the majority are wrong and must be taught a lesson. There must be sanctions from those who occupy the moral high ground.
The majority are not always right - True, who can argue with that? Democracy needs to be tempered by moral guidance - ah ahhh!

Just suppose their dream comes true. A Europe united as one nation with an elite of those "who know best" to guide us all with wisdom and fairness on how we should think and behave. What happens when these enlightened people die? A morbid question, I know, but it has to be asked. How do we decide who is to take their place? Do we have an election? Oops, no, that would take us back to the bad old days of democracy. So do we keep it in the family then? The progeny of supreme beings taking their rightful place after the death of their parents. That doesn't sound very New Labour to me, in fact that idea pretty much died with the signing of the Magna Carta in 784BB (Before Blair).

So what could all this noise from the moral high ground mean? Could it simply be an arrogant "I am right, you are wrong" sort of noise. Or is it more sinister - Noam Chomsky's new book "The New Military Humanitarianism" suggests that morality is simply a cloak. Could powerful people be using morality as a weapon to achieve change required by hidden mandates? Not a new idea, Alexander Hamilton (one of those who signed the American Declaration of Independence) said "dangerous ambition often lurks behind the specious mask of zeal for the rights of people".

These alternatives spring to mind because if world leaders really do believe in their morality, then I have to ask: How can it be moral to supply arms to Indonesia, which, over a period of twenty years or more, committed genocide in East Timor with support and arms supplied by Europe and the USA? How could it be moral to financially support a regime of a man like Pol Pot? How can it be moral to sell arms to African nations involved in slaughtering each others populations?

I guess you could say: Ah but at least they weren't fascists were they! Though the USA has never been reluctant to rush to the support of fascist dictators in South America. It's a wonder the USA didn't offer an arms deal to Austria on hearing the good news.

But of course, all that is ancient history - things are different now. A phrase that must strike a chord in the minds of parole officers all around the world.

If there is one thing history can teach it is that we too easily ignore the possible changes the future can bring. Who can say what new minds the future will bring, minds that will decide it's time for a new direction. This is not a problem in a world were power is spread democratically among many, it is a problem in a world were power is concentrated in hot spots by large federal structures.

Impulse Voting

It seems New Labour wants to have new voting. Within 5 years we may be voting from the comfort of our bedroom - or wherever it is you keep your computer. Or perhaps you'll select your new government on the shopping channel - after a short sales pitch from each party. There may even be loyalty card points for registering your vote, or perhaps I'm getting confused with something else.

There is a danger that electronic voting will make it too easy. Will you agonise for days beforehand on all the choices for and against each candidate, or will you find that you're the only person who voted for Norway's entry into the Eurovision song contest.

Before you get carried away with all this hi-tech excitement, take a look at what it means in the USA: Spotlight on Electronic Voting