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      <title>Rockets on the Blockchain</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large"><a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AOH-58_firing_Hellfire_missile_during_Operation_Brown.jpg" title="By Sgt. Luis Delgadillo (US Army images) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons"><img alt="OH-58 firing Hellfire missile during Operation Brown" src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d2/OH-58_firing_Hellfire_missile_during_Operation_Brown.jpg/512px-OH-58_firing_Hellfire_missile_during_Operation_Brown.jpg" style="width: 512px; float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;" /></a>The recent stories of the <a href="https://www.rt.com/news/335515-hellfire-missile-serbia-us/" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">Hellfire Missiles turning up on a Serbian passenger airliner </a>and of Cuba <a href="http://www.cnbc.com/2016/02/14/cuba-returns-lost-us-hellfire-missile.html">returning a missing, albeit dummy Hellfire Missile to the US</a> got me thinking. Governments and arms manufacturers are far too murky in the ownership and movements of weapons and ammunition.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Now there may be some excuse for hiding munitions for reasons of security, but consider this. The argument for nuclear weapons goes along the lines of, "if the other side know we've got them they won't attack us". So point one, it should be a positive boon to promote and publicize a nations armory to scare the pants off the enemy. This is why nearly every country from Russian to North Korea, from Spain to Japan has <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Military_parades_by_country" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">military parades</a>.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">The nuclear non-proliferation treaty was introduced " <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_on_the_Non-Proliferation_of_Nuclear_Weapons" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and weapons technology, to promote cooperation in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, and to further the goal of achieving nuclear disarmament and general and complete disarmament</a>" which is a worthy aim. This involves weapons inspection and monitoring - point 2, what gets measured gets managed. So why not, given that we have the technology, extend the measuring a monitoring of weapons of mass destruction to weapons that are not <em>massively </em>destructive but can nonetheless make a right mess of a city block?</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Initially I can see arms manufactures poo pooing this idea, since arms sales has always been a bit cloak and dagger. However I really think that cleaning up the arms industry and making it more accountable may actually grow their profits.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Lets sketch a scenario as to how this might work, using our $110,000 Hellfire missile as an example. Suppose we legislate such that each missile manufactured has to be given a unique identity number that has an entry on a blockchain specially created for the purpose. When the missile is sold or resold, the transaction is noted on the blockchain so at any time we know who is responsible for the missile. Now suppose we have a means of determining where the missile eventually detonates so this too is recorded on the blockchain. There are a number of ways to do this. I'm sure the technology used to launch the missile records this data anyway, but if not it would be trivial (compared with the cost of the missile) to build in the functionality to transmit the GPS location of the point of the explosion. We then have cradle-to-grave tracking for the life and death of the missile.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Lets consider some of the implications of this. Firstly, because the damage caused by the missile is tied by the blockchain to the current owner, countries and arms dealers will be far less likely to engage in sales to nations with arms embargoes as the identity of the seller will be clear. The manufacturer can point to the blockchain and say nothing to do with us - this missile was sold illegally. Also the owner of the target, be it a country or even a surviving individual (perhaps the absentee owner of a destroyed building) will have redress. The blockchain will allow a victim to see who owned the missile and should the action be illegal, make a claim for damages. If however the weapon is used legally, the owner can use the blockchain to easily get an ROI on each missile. This could play a big part in reducing a nation's arms budget - costing death and destruction against initial outlay to identify the most profitable weapons.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">This may at first seem an extreme departure from the haphazard way warfare has been conducted in the past - call it the 'lob it and see' approach. When one thinks about it though, many countries track livestock to counter foot and mouth and BSE, so it seems perverse NOT to track an object such as a missile that costs hundreds of thousands of times more and is capable of wreaking such extensive damage.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">My example uses a missile, as these are weighty easily identifiable objects. In the future though similar blockchains could be set up for a whole manner of different types of armament, perhaps one day to the level of individual bullets.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">For the arms manufacturers, <strong>selling accountability</strong> opens up a whole new industry for them. In a way it justifies the sale of weapons in peacetime. They can make the claim that they are being responsible, providing an audit trail that protects innocent civilians from the misuse of their products. The Internet of Things, of which this is really a part, is being described as the next big thing, and security is central to the platform. If we can persuade weapons manufactures that to be early adopters of this technology can not only increase their profits but sanitize and improve the image of their industry, we just may make the world a safer place at the same time!</span></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 27 May 2016 11:20:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>How will Brexit affect Expats</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large">Here I am getting my fizzog on the gogglebox re the Brexit debate on Skynews this afternoon. If you don't want to watch the whole thing I'm on a 7:06...</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large"><a href="https://twitter.com/SkyNews/status/735139879202349056?s=03">https://twitter.com/SkyNews/status/735139879202349056?s=03</a></span></p>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 24 May 2016 20:05:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Amazon's Mechanical Turk Sucks Unless You're a Yank!</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large"><a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AJeff_Bezos_2005.jpg" title="By James Duncan Davidson from Portland, USA (Etech05: Jeff) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons"><img alt="Jeff Bezos 2005" src="http://andaluciasteve.com//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7a/Jeff_Bezos_2005.jpg/512px-Jeff_Bezos_2005.jpg" style="float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;" title="Emperor of Online Retailing Jeff Bezoz" width="350" /></a>Work has been on the scarce side recently, so scarce infact that I turned to Amazon's Mechanical Turk website with a view to making a little cash in time for Christmas.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">In case you are not aware, <a href="https://www.mturk.com" title="Amazon's Mechanical Turk">Mechanical Turk</a> is a website that offers work that humans can do that computers can't. It could be tagging items in an image or reviewing a website, taking a survey etc. The jobs don't pay very well. One afternoon, after four hours slaving away in front of my computer I'd made on average $0.56 per hour! It is regarded by many as an online sweatshop, though there is an argument that if you're smart and can figure out which of the higher paying jobs require less time, you can earn $10-$20 dollars a day, which is a living in a third world country. Again on the positive side there are no job interviews, you just grab a job and do it.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">So I jumped right in and started working away on these tasks, some of which are incredibly mind numbing. After about ten days I'd earned $30, which I had set myself as the target of my first money transfer.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">I had scanned through the instructions before I started working and read that I could either transfer the cash to my bank, or have it transferred to my Amazon gift certificate balance. I wanted to do the former, but when I went to do it, the only option was to have the money in gift certificates. I went through the small print, and sure enough, because I don't live in America (I'm a Brit living in Spain), a <strong>bank transfer was not available to me</strong>.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">So I transferred the money in to gift certificates. Went to <a href="https://www.amazon.com" target="_blank" title="Amazon.com">https://www.amazon.com</a> - $30 in my gift certificate balance - great!</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Then I went to buy something on <a href="https://www.amazon.co.uk" target="_blank" title="Amazon.co.uk">https://www.amazon.co.uk</a>, got to the check out - <strong>no gift certificate balance!</strong> Despite appearing as one company and having a single login/password for each international website, after reading the small print, <strong>Amazon gift certificates can not be transferred between one of their websites to another</strong>. Not impressed. I tried to order something from the US website and the postage was horrendous, so I may try and do a deal with a friend in America to buy something for them in exchange for the cash. <strong>It shouldn't be that difficult.</strong></span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">But it doesn't stop there. During my time on Mturk it dawned on my there was money to be made here as an employer. After a few days an idea struck me that I could distribute across multiple workers and sell on (I won't share the idea because it is still possible I'll go ahead with it). So I tried to sign up as a Mechanical Turk employer, rather than an employee. It turns out that... <strong>NO - IT IS NOT POSSIBLE TO EMPLOY PEOPLE ON MECHANICAL TURK UNLESS YOU ARE AN AMERICAN CITIZEN.</strong></span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Did you see what I just did there? I went into bold caps. That's because I'm getting angry, or as us Londoners say, "I'm getting the right hump"!</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Number 21 on Forbes list of billionaires, Bezos has become one of the richest blokes on the planet by using online globalization to his advantage. Amazon has been criticized for its use of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon.com#Controversies" target="_blank" title="Amazon dubious sales practices">dubious sales practices</a>, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_tax" target="_blank" title="Amazon tax treatment">sidestepping sales taxes in the US and abroad</a>, and more recently in 2012 being <a href="http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2012/apr/04/amazon-british-operation-corporation-tax" target="_blank" title="Amazon UK tax investigation">under investigation by the UK tax authorities for paying zero corporation tax on sales of £7 billion</a> by hiving off its profit to another EU country with a lower taxation rate. <strong>Yet on Mturk, you cannot take advantage of a global workforce unless you are a yank, you cannot move money around and you can't move your gift balance. </strong></span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">&nbsp;Times don't change. As ever there is a rule for the rich and a different one for the poor.</span></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><span class="font-large">
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</span></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 21 Nov 2014 17:14:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Wine goes up but inflation the lowest since records began.</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large"><img alt="Market leading cardbordeux" class="floatleftimage" height="550" src="http://andaluciasteve.com/Data/Sites/1/blogmedia/2013-09-22-18.11.24.jpg" style="float: left; margin-right: 10px;" title="Don Simon" width="414" /><strong>I’ve long been suspicious of the published inflation</strong>.<br />
<br />
I knew a lady in the UK who, one Friday in the month left her desk at the Department of Employment with a clipboard and a list of products that she gathered prices to compile the Retail Prices Index (RPI).&nbsp; She told me she had been doing this for over thirty years and that she was sure <strong>the game was rigged</strong>. Products that started to rise in value would leave the list and products falling in value would suddenly be added to it and monitored.<br />
<br />
I naturally felt some suspicion when I learned this week that the inflation rate in Spain has fallen to its lowest level in 52 years, in fact since the recording of the figure began. <a href="http://www.ine.es/en/daco/daco42/daco421/ipc0114_en.pdf">http://www.ine.es/en/daco/daco42/daco421/ipc0114_en.pdf</a><br />
<br />
Now if you talk to people in Spain about prices, you could forgiven for thinking this is a downright lie as nothing in our experience seems to ever get cheaper. Electricity has been creeping up every year, culminating in an announcement just before Christmas 2013 that the price of electricity would be going up more than 11% from the 1st of January making that a 119% increase in ten years. In the event a vast public outcry, spearheaded by the campaign #APAGÓN30D forced the government to step in and insist that this level of increase will not take place but instead a 4% increase will be levied – still far above the current rate of inflation.<br />
<br />
The price of gas bottles which are widely used in Spain, is seasonally adjusted, but any fall in price is usually countered with a greater rise. When I arrived in Spain just over ten years ago a gas bottle was under seven euros. The last one I bought cost a staggering 17.50€<br />
<br />
When you look at the figures that go in to making up the index, weightings are used so that the various sectors, transport, housing, clothing etc compete with each other to make a contribution. As you can see in the press release, all the sectors in which pricing has fallen have an increased weighting in the latest figures. There is no explanation as to why the weighting change, so one must assume it is the means by which the figures can be massaged by the government to give the best picture possible.<br />
<br />
One benchmark I consider significant changed this week. A carton of Don Simon red wine, (for years known as the 95cnet carton) rose from it’s previous figure of 1,10€ to 1,20€ in Mercadona, the leading Spanish owned supermarket chain. Don Simon is probably the most quaffed wine in Spain having a huge market share. I’ve even seen Don Simon home delivery trucks pumping wine into the plastic bottles of eager housewives, such is their presence the market here. <strong>Why Don Simon’s price should shoot up 10 centimos during the lowest inflationary period in Spain’s history is beyond me, but it’s yet another sign that makes me suspect Spain’s inflation rate isn’t anywhere near as low as is stated!</strong></span><br />
&nbsp;</p>

<p><span class="font-large"><img alt="Mercadona till receipts" height="447" src="http://andaluciasteve.com/Data/Sites/1/blogmedia/receipts.jpg" style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;" title="Rise in price of Don Simon from 1,10 to 1,20" width="450" /></span></p>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 17 Feb 2014 17:07:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Why Privacy Matters</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large"><iframe frameborder="0" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/H_pqhMO3ZSY" width="420"></iframe><br>Alessandro AcquistiAn engaging talk by <span class="watch-title  yt-uix-expander-head" dir="ltr" id="eow-title" title="Alessandro Acquisti: Why privacy matters">Alessandro Acquisti</span> about the nature of internet privacy and its possible impact on all our lives. I was particularly struck with the concept that advertisers now have the technology to get the images of our most closest friends on say, Facebook, morf them together and construct an advert that would be present by an avatar resembling them. Spooky!</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Folowing on from what Richard Stallman was saying in another video I posted the other day, is it worth being on Google Plus and Facebook, or is the risk to our privacy too great. I know a lot of people have taken to adblocker programmes that minimise the damage, but if we all did that, Google and the like would have to end providing services that are essentially free because of the adverts we consume.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Personally I think moving towards paid for services without advertising and without more privacy may be the future, at least for a concerned section of the population.</span></p>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 19 Oct 2013 18:33:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Stallman on Privacy</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large">Interview with Richard Stallman the creator of the free software foundation. He gives his views on Assange, Snowdon, big brother and why he doesn't have a mobile phone. The great thing about Stallman is he saw this coming. He's had this position for ten or fifteen years and has been largely ignored. Now all he has been saying has been completely vindicated.</span></p>

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      <pubDate>Sun, 13 Oct 2013 16:27:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Urban decline</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large">Several years ago I was living in a town called Cehegin in Murcia, in Spain, about an hours drive inland from the south coast.<br />
<br />
My neighbours son was the local vet and over a few beers one day he explained to me that he didn't just work in town, but he had a very wide network of farms that he visited.<br />
The farmers paid into a sort of insurance fund and he would vaccinate herd and inspect sick animals etc. He catchment area extended to the mountains of Albacete. I'd probably had too much beer, because when he asked me if I wanted to go with him on his rounds one day, I accepted. A few days later on one freezing cold morning I was getting into his car a 6am.<br />
<br />
Well we drove and drove. As the altitude increased, so the temperature decreased. People think of Spain as a warm country. Don't believe a word of it. Winters here have been know to go down to minus 36 centigrade!<br />
<br />
We passed a frozen waterfall and I noticed my companion was sporting a colourful woollen hat whereas I was stupidly bareheaded.<br />
<br />
Eventually we arrived at the first farm. Antonio the vet greeted the farmer and was soon in an enclosure doing unmentionable things so yelping goats.<br />
<br />
<img alt="Old farmhouse" height="263" src="http://andaluciasteve.com/Data/Sites/1/blogmedia/pict0490.jpg" style="float: right; margin-left: 10px;" title="Farmhouse for sale in Albacete" width="350" />The farmer took me to oneside and, with my limited Spanish, seemed to be offering me his farm for sale. The buildings including the sheds and animal enclosures must have totalled about five hundred square meters. Goodness knows how much land would have been included because he gestured as far as the eye could see. His asking price was 6000 euros.<br />
<br />
I was quite taken aback. It was a beautiful spot. The farmhouse was old but liveable.<br />
<br />
When Antonio and I were back in the car I mentioned the farmer's offer. He chuckled and explained, that the farmer is one of the last people left in what was previously a huge goat herding region. None of the children wanted to herd goats as there was no money in it so over the years they drifted off to Madrid, Barcelona or maybe abroad to find work.<br />
<br />
Soon the town has so few people, there is no money to pay for services and everything collapses. We drove past the town, which was on the other side of the river so we couldn't enter, but all was still. It had long since been abandoned. The farmer had to drive twenty miles to the next town for everything he needed, which was crippling any profit he had from the goat farm. He just wanted out.<br />
<br />
Today we're looking at a similar situation in Detroit, the largest American city ever to file for bankruptcy. Detroit's population has declined from 1.85 million in the 1950's to just 700k today. Deeply underfunded schools are being shutdown. People are leaving in droves.<br />
<br />
The cause is the same in both cases. An economic activity becomes uneconomic. Goat herding in Albacete, building cars in Detroit.<br />
<br />
The thing about capitalism is that it takes care of money but not the people who generate it. As long as we leave the care of people to market forces, we're really saying that people are an expendable resource that can be disposed of when no longer needed.<br />
<br />
My take on this is that profit is the expendable resource that should be used to take care of people. Today there is more profit than ever before in human history thanks to the automation afford by machines, computers and robotics. Instead of the fruits of those developments going to the benefit of mankind they are sequested by a tiny minority - the rich 1% whose only purpose in life seems to be to make more money and make the rest of us continually poorer.<br />
<br />
Unless we start to reorganise the worlds wealth, I do fear towns and cities across the globe will gradually disappear and be replaced by one big city - the only place left to work.</span></p>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Jul 2013 19:03:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Censorship has returned</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large">"I'm not an activist.&nbsp; My job is to show, not to judge ".<br />
<br />
The phrase reads a sign at the entrance of the exhibition "Fantôme Foyer" (ghost house) and is of photographer Ahlam Shibli, which Jeu de Paume gallery currently devotes a retrospective.<br />
&nbsp;<br />
The text, which begins with the title "Avertissement" (warning), was withdrawn after protests sounded.<br />
<br />
The museum had to close partially due to pump alarms and principal received death threats.<br />
<br />
The retrospective of the photographer Palestinian, opened in late May, meets six series, including the controversial "Death": 68 photographs of Palestinian guerrillas who gave their lives in their fight against Israel.<br />
<br />
Shibli photographed posters on the walls of Nablus, the largest city in the West Bank and where several Palestinian refugee camps.<br />
<br />
With "Death", the photographer wanted to show as dead guerrillas are still alive in the open and in memory of the population.<br />
<br />
The series has already been shown in other museums, the MACBA in Barcelona last.<br />
<br />
But only in Paris has sparked protests.<br />
<br />
In a letter to the Minister of Culture, Aurélie Pilippetti, the board of Jewish Institutions in France (CRIF) accused the museum of "exalting terrorism".<br />
<br />
The council criticized especially text accompanying the work, in which the artist uses the term "martyrs" to qualify the suicide bombers.<br />
<br />
Since then, at the entrance of the exhibition can be the sign that the photographer explains that snapshots in color and black and white are not used for advertising or glorifying terrorism.<br />
<br />
However, there have been threats against the museum and the principal.<br />
<br />
In mid-June, the France-Israel held a demonstration outside the center and demanded the closure of the exhibition, scheduled for September 1.<br />
<br />
"Censorship is back," headlined the French press when the facebook profile of the Jeu de Paume gallery was closed as early as March.<br />
<br />
The museum published there one black and white photo on the occasion of the exhibition "Laure Albin Guillot (1879-1962), l'enjeu classique".<br />
<br />
In the picture you see a naked woman.<br />
<br />
Only sex was covered with a white towel.<br />
<br />
According to the museum, the facebook page was closed 24 hours.<br />
<br />
Later, the woman's chest was covered with a black stripe.<br />
<br />
The ban on publishing nude photos form part of the rules of the American social network.<br />
<br />
"I do not distinguish between a work of art and a pornographic image is not only dubious, but especially a dangerous mix," then reacted the gallery.<br />
<br />
In fall 2012, the Paris Institute of the Arab World (IMA) withdrew a video installation by Moroccan artist Mounir Fatmi on which was the writer Salman Rushdie sleeping with a clock in the background.<br />
<br />
The artist wanted to show her the silence of Arab intellectuals after the "fatwa" against British-Indian author, on whose head the Iranian revolutionary leader, Ayatollah Khomeini, offered a million dollars.<br />
<br />
Meanwhile, the reward is USD 3.3 million.<br />
<br />
As explained at the time the artist to the media, climate generated after the movie "Innocence of Muslims", which sparked strong protests in several Arab countries, had led to self-censorship of the museum.<br />
<br />
Only a week before, had to withdraw Fatmi cultural festival "Le Printemps de Septembre" in Toulouse, his installation "Technologica" under pressure from the Muslim community.<br />
<br />
Due to a technical problem, the verses of the Quran could not be projected onto a facade, but on the floor, and a woman walked over it without realizing it.<br />
<br />
"The thing that baffles me is that happens in France and in the Maghreb or in Saudi Arabia," said the artist.<br />
<br />
<em>This content was originally published by Journal TRADE at the following address: http://www4.elcomercio.com/cultura/arte-censura-Francia-exposicion-Obras_de_arte_0_962303916.html.</em><br />
<br />
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      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Jul 2013 16:37:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>How to become a king</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large"><img alt="wikimedia image of Josiah Harlan" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5d/JosiahHarlan.png/200px-JosiahHarlan.png" style="float: right; margin-left: 10px;" />Who has not wanted to be king? Not a king now, of course, our monarchies deliquescent and dull, but the brave monarch of a remote and fabulous realm earned by the force of courage and lust for adventure horizons. A king of those who made themselves wielding the gun in wild places that challenge the imagination, leaving the burden of everyday life, affection and security.<br />
<br />
Among the handful of brave men who sought the kingdom of their dreams and were crowned with his own hands on thrones of jungle, mountain or desert stand, of course, James Brooke, who became the White Rajah of Sarawak, and Charles de Mayrena, which was proclaimed king of the sedang in the jungles of Indochina. Less well known, there were minor adventures and achievements of the Quaker and freemason Josiah Harlan, who left Pennsylvania with only bare hands in 1823 to conquer the dangerous lands of Afghanistan and become ruler of the principality of Gohr, in the Hindu Kush. Harlan got there on the back of an elephant: these were different times.<br />
<br />
At the origin of his incredible adventures are a broken heart<br />
<br />
The amazing adventures of Harlan, obsessed with Alexander the Great, was one of the elements that inspired his famous Rudyard Kipling story The man who would be king, based on John Huston film with Sean Connery and Michael Caine. "We leave here to be kings" Dravot and Peachey said the narrator of the story. Armed with ambition and 20 rifles, met their fate in Kafiristan to lose the throne,&nbsp;then respectively life and sanity. Harlan, who said that a sharp sword and a bold heart&nbsp; supersede the laws of inheritance, could not keep his kingdom but survived to return to the U.S. and live new adventures.<br />
<br />
During the Civil War, he organized his own regiment of cavalry, Harlan's Light Cavalry, to fight the Confederates, the same man who had led armies in Afghanistan, served as military adviser Ranjit Singh, the Lion of Lahore, and adopted the code Pashtuns of honor!<br />
<br />
Harlan's life, told in detail by Ben Macintyre in his splendid biography Josiah the Great (HarperCollins, 2004), gave a glimpse of the most outrageous adventurer and explored a romantics twist. Could you ask for more? Scion of a family of pious and wealthy Philadelphia Quakers, Harlan (1799) embarked as a sailor bound for Eastern ports leading into the heart of his beloved Elizabeth Swaim, with whom he planned to marry.<br />
<br />
In Calcutta he got a letter informing him that the fickle girl had married another. In a fit, our man decided to never return to the U.S. and gave the search for adventure, fame and fortune.<br />
<br />
Harlan moved to northern India and entered the service of the exiled Afghan king Shah Shujah, who conspired to regain his throne. Thus, the U.S. was involved in the dangerous great game of European powers for control of Central Asia. At the same time, was placed in a position to take advantage of quarrels to gain personal power and, who knows, catch a title. "There are realms available, requiring only initiative, energy and luck" wrote Harlan, who added a phrase to remember: "Each in his own estimation is a king".<br />
<br />
He left Kabul to destabilize the reigning Dost Mohammed and prepare the invasion at the head of a small army of hustlers and desperados. If getting the return of their King this would make me the vizier and then we would see. In this&nbsp; Harlan's ambition amaze you almost as much as his courage. In the march towards Kabul, dressed dervish, had to deal with bandits, tribes cruel quicksand and even a riot. Dost Mohammed was unimpressed and saw Harlan as only as an unlikely tourist. After many vicissitudes, the U.S. concluded that a revolt was impossible and returned to India.<br />
<br />
He then moved to Punjab to get the service of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. The American Medical hypochondriac made the debauched eyed maharaja general in his army, and was appointed governor of Gujrat. It was then that he became involved in the war between Afghan and Sikh and decided to ally with Dost Mohammed, who had tried to depose before. The emir of Kabul, who was cruel but not spiteful, made him commander of his troops. After the victory over the Sikhs at Jamrud, presented him with a gold-plated sword and charged a punitive expedition against the infamous Murad Beg, khan Kumduz an Uzbek slavery of the worst kind.<br />
<br />
He led an army of 4,000 Afghans, the U.S. went to the great opportunity of his life riding on elephant. Harlan rode the beast through the Hindu-Kush and during their journey through the Hazarajat in 1839, sufficiently impressed Prince of Ghor (or Goree or Gawr) that he proposed that he transferred sovereignty to Harlan who assumed security of the kingdom. He wrote a paper in which Harlan undertook to create, prepare and command an army and in return he and his heirs claimed the crown.<br />
<br />
The adventurer had his dream fulfilled.&nbsp; He returned to Kabul Ghor thinking to settle in and then it all fell apart: the British had invaded Afghanistan. And they did not suffer fools gladly: Harlan was a type that had become doubtful through Afghanistan, so he left the country with paper declaring him king still in the pocket. The America returned to his homeland, but not before passing by Russia where surely intrigued to see if the Tsar helped him settle in his throne. In 1841 he was in Philadelphia where he asked to be called modest overall and King Josiah Harlan.<br />
<br />
In October 1871, planning to sail for China to provide military services to the emperor, Harlan Sahib slumped dead on a street in San Francisco. They say in Ghor found only a crown but also a young Hazara&nbsp; and his unrequited love for Eliza Swaim. Maybe that was so eager to return. We know what it takes to win a kingdom, but it is sometimes more difficult to conquer a heart.</span></p>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Jul 2013 11:25:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>What's the opposite of a Baby Boom?</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large">In a press-release that got far to little coverage last week, on the 10 July, the Max Planck Institute in Germany announced a demographic research paper demonstrating that there had been a Europe-wide fall in fertility during and as a result of the 'great depression' in Europe. <a href="http://www.demogr.mpg.de/en/news_press/press_releases_1916/economic_crisis_lowers_birth_rates_3250.htm" target="_blank" title="Economic crisis lowers birth rates">http://www.demogr.mpg.de/en/news_press/press_releases_1916/economic_crisis_lowers_birth_rates_3250.htm</a></span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">(I leave you to study the stats and thumb through the graphs)</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Perhaps this should come as no surprise. Sensible people are going to try an put off having children until they have money in their pockets. With European joblessness hitting 12.5% in May 2013, there has never been a worse time to procreate.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Yet here is the thing, this high unemployment figure would not be so bad had Europe been set marching on the beat of the austerity drum. A falling population means declining markets, and in fact more austerity because it is more difficult for the next generation of tax payers to provide pensions for the elderly.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large"><strong>Austerity isn't working - how long will it take to get that message across?</strong></span></p>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 15 Jul 2013 14:27:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>US Bugging for Terror or Money</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large">New NSA leaks revealed by the British media organisation the Guardian indicate the extent to which monitoring has been done to allies of the US, not just it's potential enemies.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large"><a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jun/30/nsa-spying-europe-claims-us-eu-trade">http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jun/30/nsa-spying-europe-claims-us-eu-trade</a></span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">German online news-source <a href="http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/nsa-spied-on-european-union-offices-a-908590.html" title="">Der Spiegel said documents and slides</a> from the <span class="gia-popupTerm gia-active-term">NSA</span> whistleblower <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/edward-snowden" title="More from guardian.co.uk on Edward Snowden">Edward Snowden</a> indicating that the NSA bugged the offices of the EU in Washington and at the United Nations in New York.The would have been meetings largely to do with trade.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">It also said they enacted an operation from Brussel's NATO headquarters in order to infiltrate phone and email networks at the <span dir="auto">Council of the European Union</span>'s headquarters in Brussels.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">To me this is where the breach of trust exhibited by the American's shows its most ugly head. There are indicators here that the information being fished for is commercially sensitive. The Council of the EU controls an annual budget of over 100 billion euros. Having inside information as to where that money is going is of great value to US companies wishing to market into Europe. What safeguards are in place to prevent such information being used by either the govrnment to influence policy or even being sold on to the private sector?</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">The answer is none which is why it is so dangerous. We must pressure the US now to limit the global reach of it's power to snoop.</span></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
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      <pubDate>Sun, 30 Jun 2013 19:59:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>I loved Jurassic Park</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large">Like so many people I was entranced when Jurassic Park hinted that there will come a time when extinct species will be reanimated. The book and film suggest this will be a bad thing. I've always had a theory that your views on evolution reveal a lot about your politics.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Consider for example that someone breaks into your house and steals something. If the government of the day gave you an option to terminate that persons life so as to stop future burglaries, would you think that is a good or a bad thing? It's interesting because there is no evidence that this person has any genetic code that makes them a burglar nor what degree of social stress or environmental upbringing let them to the action for which you could execute them.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Right wing people tend towards eugenics because of a simplistic view of evolution where nature does her work, the weak are culled and the strong survive.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">This is probably how it has been for all of time, the fittest have survived because the have been victims or victors or opportunity. The thing about humans in the 21st century is that we have the power to change that. Our purpose should not be to seek the ultimate survival race but instead chase the ultimate diversity. We need to look at all providing an environment for as many of the variations presented to us by DNA as we can find and populate the universe with the most appropriate lifeforms.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Capitalism really should not be killing the poor in the third world - it should be creating lichens on Neptune.</span></p>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 27 Jun 2013 20:55:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>My First Telecommute</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large">It was a Saturday, twenty years ago today that my life changed forever.&nbsp;</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">I'd been working since 1984 for the British Government as an IT manager, and at the time I was inc charge of a small network of SCO Unix boxes, supporting a userbase of about three hundred people. Various admin chores needed to be done when everyone was logged out, things like making tweaks to the password file or tuning the tcp/ip settings. Because I worked in Kensington and lived twelve miles away in Surrey it mean't a journey of about an hour and a half each way. I didn't mind getting the overtime but the commute on a Saturday really used frustrate me because I hate wasted time.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">I was aware that being tcp/ip based, I could log in remotely to my network. This was pre-web my network wasn't connected to the internet. Being a government department, security was of absolute importance and I didn't think I'd ever get permission to dial up and log on.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">The a device fell into my lap that changed everything. It was dial-back MODEM. If you youngsters don't know what a MODEM is then it is a device for connecting computers together over the phone by modulating and de-modulating the streams of bits.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Anyway the important thing here is dial-back. This particular brand (sorry can't remember for sure - think it may have been US Robotics) had a feature that allowed you to program in a phone number so that when you dialed in from outside, the modem would call back on the number specified. Incoming calls were otherwise blocked. Access to the network could be set to be only via the call back.&nbsp;</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">I felt a deal coming on. I thought it through for a day or two and presented my sales pitch to my boss at the time. Here's roughly how it went:</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">"Listen I've had an idea." I'm fed up with the Saturday commute, especially when the train fills up with Millwall fans, so why don't I use this here callback modem to make a connection to my PC at home so that I can work remotely? It's completely secure because it can't accept any incoming connections, and it logs the times of the calls. That means you have an accurate record of the time I'm actually working and another plus is you don't have to pay me travel time!"</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">He bought it! I couldn't believe it. The following Saturday was 26 June 1993 - I connected, the modem called me back, and I sat working at home in my pyjamas. It was so cool! It felt like it was the future. It was.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">After about a year of doing this, I was happy, my boss was happy and everything was good. Then there was some sort of top down security review and I was banned from doing it, but by that time I'd already set a path to accept voluntary redundancy and go into the private sector.&nbsp;</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">On and off now I've been working at home for many of those intervening years, but nothing has matched the buzz I got on that first special Saturday.</span></p>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 26 Jun 2013 15:55:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Capital Eugenics</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large">Thanks to Hitler we tend to forget that until he made the concept unfashionable by the systematic murder of a whole spectrum of ethnic minorities, that eugenics was a highly and widely respected social philosophy for many years.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Following on from Darwin's theory of evolution, his cousin Francis Galton first championed the cause and giving the name <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugenics" target="_blank" title="Link the relevant wiki item about eugenics">eugenics </a>to his work. His central premise was that the survival of the fittest should apply to humans as well as animals, and perhaps give a a prod to speed it up a bit. His baton was carried by many governments in the twentieth century who avidly sought to cull numbers by enforce programmes of birth control, genocide, and programmes of ethnic cleansing.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Of course the error here is clear to any reasonable person. The 'prod' is a judgementalism - one human making the decision to end anothers life is always subjective so is wrong. People must have equal opportunity to succeed or fail by their own efforts, and any measures to interfere with that, any human intervention that favours one group against another creates an unlevel playing field which is morally repugnant.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">I believe eugenics is still going on, and capitilism is it's weapon. The increasing gap between rich and poor that has taken place over the last thirty years or so is neither an accident, or a natural consequence of greed, but a deliberately orchestrated plan that has a goal.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Our overlords know that automation has a single and inevitable outcome. No more jobs - at least none for the masses. We're seeing at the moment a program by google to do away with car drivers. What is the logical conclusion of that - how many millions of people all over the world will that deprive of work.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Elswhere, the building trade is soon to be overhauled with machines that 3D print directly from architects plans. This will effect millions more. Most manufacturing will be decimated by 3D printing, even fast moving consumer goods when food printing is cracked.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">The thing that worries me most about this issue is that the capitalists who have made their money from the labours of the poor no longer have a use for them. They are unlikely to wish to fund vast social programmes so I see only two ways the situation will pan out. Billions of people will get increasingly poor and quietly allowed to die, or as we're seeing with Syria at the moment, an almost deliberate effort will be made to trigger a world war that will eliminate vast numbers of people unneeded by the ruling elite.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">What we need to do urgently then is to add capitalism to the dustbin of history where it belongs and make a new start where the efficiencies of automation are shared by all and not the top one percent. I think it will be a much better place to live.</span></p>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 15 Jun 2013 17:04:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Propellor Safety</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large">Recently a story hit the headlines that really upset me. It was of the two people who died and the others who received life changing injuries as a result of a boat propeller. If you not familiar with what happened here is a <a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2325924/Bank-holiday-speedboat-death-Unused-safety-cord-caused-deaths-Sky-TV-boss-daughter-8.html" target="_blank" title="Mother who lost husband and daughter in Padstow speedboat tragedy has leg amputated as it emerges safety device which could have cut engine was not properly attached  ">link</a></span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Basically the family enjoying the ride fell overboard, the kill switch was not engaged and so the boat started to circle around them and eventually the propeller of the outboard motor cut them to peices. I thought it was a terrible story that stayed with me for a long time.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">I know nothing about boats but while watching a really old James Bond movie and seeing a propeller I was suddenly struck by a thought. Why don't boat propellers have guards. It's too obvious! If you saw an electric fan in an office there is no way you would expect it not to have a guard. Just because the prop is underwater does it logiacally make any difference? I thought not, so I did a quick search on Google to see if I was missing some fundamental point- perhaps they collected seaweed or otherwise malfunctioned with a guard.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Infact the reason boating propellers don't have guards is far more sinister. The industry resist it. According to the <a href="http://www.propellersafety.com/" title="The Propeller Guard Safety Centre">http://www.propellersafety.com/</a> there has been a long running debate where the manufactures have thwarted attempts at legislation and come up with some amazingly stupd studies (that people can drown if they get sucked into a guard - like that is worse than getting hacked to bits).</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Like many things in the world, this is plain old capitalisms fault. It would drive up costs to add a guard, so the idustry will resist for as long as it can, and in the absence of legislation (which the manufactures lobby against) people will continue to die needlessly.</span></p>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 11 Jun 2013 19:42:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Libor to be put in Control of Euro Regulator</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large">The <a href="http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/d12b671e-cde9-11e2-8313-00144feab7de.html#axzz2VM7aohYz" target="_blank">FT </a>has just published an interest story. Apparently they have seen a draft european regulation that seeks to remove the Libor from London and put it under the control of a new regulator based in Paris. Apparently this is the beginning of a bigger project to oversee the pricing of all manner of commoditities and even possibly property.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">In my view this is the beginning of the end for Britain's old boys network. For over four hundred years, London has been a financial centre that has led the world. Through much of that time there have been occasional scandals such as the south sea bubble. Charles Dickens covered scandals that we would recognize today in&nbsp; <em>Nicholas Nickleby&nbsp;<em>and</em> <em>Little Dorrit</em>.</em> However there has always been a sense of 'honour among theives' in the city that seemed to prevent things going too far. In the last forty years or so that gentlemanly spirit seems to have been replaced by pure greed.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">The city will recoil at what is clearly an insult, and though the proposal may never get voted in it represents a slap in the face for UK chancellor George Osbourne who has been battling to restore the Libor's tarnished reputation.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">The question is will Britain try to stay in Europe in an attempt to maintain the status quo or leave Europe in an attempt to develop an independant trading profile like Switzerland and try to maintain in an attempt to retain its old boys network. My guess is either way it's damned. Mrs Thatcher bet the farm on the UK financial sector and now that is viewed by the world as rotten to the core with greed and corruption there is nothing else for the UK economy to cling on to.</span></p>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 05 Jun 2013 17:56:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Spain's New Reform Program</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large"><img alt="Rajoy recently addressing congress" height="232" src="http://andaluciasteve.com/Data/Sites/1/blogmedia/191212rajoycongresoar1_tn496x329.jpg" style="float: right; margin-left: 10px;" title="Image Copy right Ministry of the Presidency (CIF S-2811001-C) and used under terms of their license" width="350" />The Spanish government has announced a new National Reform Plan, which will be sent to Brussels with the goal of seeking a two year extension to the deficit target required by the EU. Here is a brief summary I've gleaned from the Spanish newpapers, El Pais and El Diario and La Verdad.<br />
<br />
The changes were announced in a press conference this afternoon and will be described in more detail to congress next week.<br />
<br />
The government conceded that it lost 1.3 million jobs since taking office and that it does not expect to see any new ones for the next two years. Job are expected to continue disappearing this year and will only start to recover in 2015.<br />
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Changes to pensions were announced included extended the retirement age, increasing the years in which contributions are paid and decoupling the pension rate from inflation.<br />
<br />
Vice President, Soraya Sáenz de Santamaría described eight of the new measures of reform. Among them, the government will extended for an additional year the rise in income tax, announced further increases in excise tax, an additional rise of societies tax (via elimination of deductions) and a tax on bank deposits.<br />
<br />
No new spending was mention, but emphasis was placed on the steps forward that would be taken in the liberalisation of professional services, a more appropriate taxation for entrepreneurs, improving public administration by removing administrative barriers through a thorough reform of all levels of government, funding for SMEs, more energy reforms and the development of markets.<br />
<br />
Fortunately since I'm a blogger and not a newspaper reported I can say humbug. Even in Franco's day he provided jobs for people by an extensive programme of dam and road building. To me there seem few crumbs of comfort here for the poor people of Spain to be rejoicing about.</span></p>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 26 Apr 2013 13:36:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Spanish unemployment over 6.2 million</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large"><img alt="Spain - Number One in European Unemployment" src="http://andaluciasteve.com/Data/Sites/1/blogmedia/gracias.jpg" title="Gracias - Spain unemployment over six million" width="500" /></span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">I saw this on Facebook today and the owner said share to the world, so here it is. <strong>Six million, two hundred and two thousand, seven hundred people</strong> are officially unemployed in Spain right now. 240,000 - yes that's <strong>nearly a quarter of a million</strong>, lost their jobs in the first three months of 2013 (according to the national office of statistics).</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Thing to note here is that the Spanish don't have much in the way of unemployment benefit. One has to pay in to the system for at least a year to get three months ub and you have to work five years to get the maximum duration which is still only a year. Then you don't automatically qualify for some other social security benefit. There are low benefits for families with children (cerca 400 euros monthly) or other odd benefits such as 'sobre 45' a benefit of twelve months duration that you can get on a year on year off basis if you are over 45 years of age and have previously paid into the system and qualify on various other criteria. The upshot is though there are a load of people in Spain who don't get any money at all for being out of work. They depend on family, friends, soup kitchens, bins and the back of restaurants and crime. They also work in the black economy.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Spain's black economy is huge. It's not as is often portrayed as an ingrained corrupt characteristic of the Spanish people. It's not as is often said of the Greeks, that people have a distaste for paying tax. In Spain, it seems to me that the main problem is that the system is skewed to deter people from working legally. There is not level at which VAT (IVA) is not applied to businesses in Spain, no allowance as in the UK. The equivalent of national insurance contributions in Spain is a flat rate of 240 euros per month, a horrendous burden for a single person starting out in business alone.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">The tax rate is reasonable but filled with traps that catch the unwary. One way to pay depends upon you agreeing a level for a year. People I know have done that and been driven out of business when their income fell.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">As such black money is very widespread and very popular. I've seen hundreds of itinerant agricultural laborers milling around at the bottom of town, waiting for farmers to load them into the back of a truck to pick fruit in the summer sun all day for a few euros and hour. I've seen offices, not of small businesses, but chains, which have two sets of books, one for black money, one for white, both of which go to the accountant. I've known employers to declare the minimum wage to get an employee on to the social security system and pay that employee half the declared amount in cash, and the employee says nothing because it's the norm - they say they need the work and everybody does it!</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">This situation gets worse all the time as more overly bureaucratic legislation comes down from northern Europe. The government implements something that the public servants dish out, the managers of firms either ignore or choose to deal with and if the do incur a cost, pass it down to the helpless employee. Just today I've learned that from the first of June, no property can be sold or rented without an energy certificate conveying it's carbon footprint. Will this sell more houses in a desperate property market? Or will it delay prevent sales, delay salaries and drive even more estate agents out of business? Watch for the unemployment figures in the last quarter of 2013 and I fear you'll see proof that it's the latter.</span></p>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Apr 2013 20:11:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Spain Announces Easing Of Austerity</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large"><img alt="Pic http://www.lamoncloa.gob.es/IDIOMAS/9/Presidente/Fotos/2013/20130409_PdGGCS_UHP.htm 23/04/2013" height="190" src="http://andaluciasteve.com/Data/Sites/1/blogmedia/ar09052013senado02_tn496x329.jpg" style="float: right; margin-left: 5px;" title="Mariano Rajoy" width="250" />The<strong> austerity</strong> news is coming thick and fast. Barely two week after the Reinhart/Rogoff paper was discredited, politicians have been making noises that the end of austerity is near. Now the <a href="http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/f539b874-ac31-11e2-a063-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2REgA3Zr7" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" title="Spain to Ease austerity">FT</a> has reported that Spain will be the first government to announce an easing of the measures currently in place.&nbsp;</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">In an article that follows the pattern of many other announcements by Rajoy, the idea is 'mooted' by government sources before the official announcement to test the water.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">The article says plans will be unveiled to reform to the pensions system, labour market, service sector and fiscal management.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Of particular interest are measures the liberalise the protected professions of which Spain has 174 that have barriers to entry due to specialist entry qualifications. These professions are backed by powerful lobby groups and it will be a battle to get such measures through.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">I'll blog more on Friday when the official anouncement comes out but this sounds like the first good news for Spain in a very long time.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large"><a href="http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/f539b874-ac31-11e2-a063-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2REgA3Zr7" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" title="Spain to announce easing of austerity">http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/f539b874-ac31-11e2-a063-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2REgA3Zr7</a></span></p>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 23 Apr 2013 20:19:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>More fuel on the austerity fire</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span class="font-large"><img alt="© European Union, 1995-2012 Used under license" height="133" src="http://andaluciasteve.com/Data/Sites/1/blogmedia/barosso1.jpg" style="float: left; margin-right: 10px;" title="José Manuel Barroso" width="120" />Further to my earlier post that Bill Gross of Bond Fund Pimco has come out against austerity, (<a href="http://www.andaluciasteve.com/the-game-is-up-for-austerity.aspx" target="_blank">http://www.andaluciasteve.com/the-game-is-up-for-austerity.aspx</a>) another important anti-austerity statement has come from Brussels.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large"><strong>José Manuel Barroso</strong> who heads the European Commission, in a story again from the Financial Times said at a press conference that while he defends austerity as being broadly right, he says it has "reached it's limits"!</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">Reading further down in the statement of 'what he actually said' on the commission web site (<a href="http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_MEMO-13-368_en.htm" target="_self">http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_MEMO-13-368_en.htm</a>), he appears quite critical of the economists behind austerity, saying "I know that there are some technocratic advisors who tell us what is the perfect model to respond to a situation, but when we ask how we implement it, they say that is not my business."</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">My take on that statement is that he's saying the guys (and gals) who came up with this crazy plan <strong><em>did not tell me what to do</em></strong> and I ended up looking like a <strong>right plum</strong>.</span></p>

<p><span class="font-large">He goes on to lay blame at the gate of "management, technology, policy, wrong or good decisions, policy and politics". Erm, being the head of the commission,<strong><em> isn't that kind of like his responsibilty</em></strong>? <strong><em>Isn't it the job of Barosso</em></strong> and his elk on the fat cat salaries to figure out what the right policies are and implement them?</span></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 23 Apr 2013 17:54:00 GMT</pubDate>
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