position:labour politician

  • Churchill Was More Villain Than Hero in Britain’s Colonies - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-02-16/churchill-was-more-villain-than-hero-in-britain-s-colonies

    The recent flap over Winston Churchill — with Labour politician John McDonnell calling Britain’s most revered prime minister a “villain” and prompting a rebuke from the latter’s grandson — will astonish many Indians. That’s not because the label itself is a misnomer, but because McDonnell was exercised by the death of one Welsh miner in 1910. In fact, Churchill has the blood of millions on his hands whom the British prefer to forget.

    “History,” Churchill himself said, “will judge me kindly, because I intend to write it myself.” He did, penning a multi-volume history of World War Two, and won the Nobel Prize for Literature for his self-serving fictions. As the Australian Prime Minister Robert Menzies remarked of the man many Britons credit with winning the war, "His real tyrant is the glittering phrase, so attractive to his mind that awkward facts have to give way.”

    Awkward facts, alas, there are aplenty. As McDonnell correctly noted, Churchill as Home Secretary in 1910 sent battalions of police from London and ordered them to attack striking miners in Tonypandy in South Wales; one was killed and nearly 600 strikers and policemen were injured. It’s unlikely this troubled his conscience much. He later assumed operational command of the police during a siege of armed Latvian anarchists in Stepney, where he decided to allow them to be burned to death in a house where they were trapped.

  • Quartier gouvernemental à Oslo : Ce qu’il sera, ou ne sera pas (après avoir eété en partie détruit par les attaques de Breivik en juillet 2011)

    0047 Projects

    http://0047.org/projects/view/22

    “A building is just a building” Labour politician Rigmor Aasrud, then Minister of Government Administration and Church Affairs, categorically stated a few months after the terrorist attack of July 22. She was talking about the heavily damaged Høyblokka, the actual target of the assault. And indeed, until the attack, Erling Viksjø’s 1958 Høyblokka, the vertical axis of Oslo’s government district, and his elegantly curved 1969 Y-Blokka, were largely perceived as regular office buildings; they not even were listed as heritage monuments.

    Even given the reservation that late modernist buildings are met with all over the world, Aasrud’s misreading of Viksjø’s edifices is remarkable. The building ensemble is not only one of Viksjøs masterpieces, a Gesamtkunstwerk carefully embedding artworks as an integral part of its structure; it is also a pivotal architectural image signifying Norway’s post-war social democracy, the epitome of the Labour party’s short-lived alliance with the avant-garde. It is all the more surprising that a Labour-led government was willing to dismiss this significant complex as “just a building”.

    #architecture #breivik #norvège #oslo