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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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After the Brexshit heaviness of last couple of weeks I thought we could do with a mini time out (this situation clearly ain’t resolving anytime soon) and briefly indulge in something light and frothy, and what could be more frothy than a fashion show, despite it being the display of an industry that somewhat ironically takes itself very seriously.  I have never been to a fashion show before and amazingly, all the cliches were present and correct. It really was remarkably like being in Zoolander and although there were no ‘blue steels’ on offer, the models favouring the ‘i’m like totally depressed by world events which just happens to accentuate my cheekbones’ look, I did see quite a few Mugatus (see yesterday’s pic).

People queued for over an hour to get in and it only lasted 15 minutes total, but based on the limited attention span of the crowd who did their utmost to keep their eyeballs off their smartphones, that didn’t seem too much of a problem. It was actually rather enjoyable, cool clothes from the KTZ range (kind of apocalyptic designer urban street wear, might be just the thing in these volatile times) cool soundtrack as curated by Belgian duo Nid & Sancy and a captivating crowd that just demanded to be looked at. Fashion is a world rewards the bold & the beautiful and clearly everyone here were winners. It is also a world that lives entirely independently of the real world, contained in its own impenetrable bubble, which right now, with the world in turmoil, is an incredibly appealing place to be.

With so much genuinely important things happening across the globe at this moment, it becomes harder  & harder to convince ourselves that the trivial things we do in our lives are important, but if we don’t, we won’t be able to do them, so we pretend and get on with it, which is always a toughie, but right now it requires an enormous amount of internal convincing. We should really look to the fashion industry at this time, as they make this conundrum of existence seem effortless.

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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MYLDN special: The best banners at the March for Europe

Me and my camera in my home town, my protest rally, my march for europe

march for europe-1 march for europe-2 march for europe-3 march for europe-4 march for europe-5 march for europe-6 march for europe-7 march for europe-8 march for europe-9 march for europe-10

 

march for europe-12 march for europe-13 march for europe-14 march for europe-15 march for europe-16 march for europe-17 march for europe-18 march for europe-19 march for europe-20 march for europe-26march for europe-21 march for europe-22 march for europe-23

march for europe-25march for europe-24

What do the british do in a crisis? We pun

And so we marched and we cried:

We are the 48 and we are not going to allow hate to dominate

We are the 48 and we do not care where you are from, what you look like, who you are, where you were born or what religion you are or what sexual orientation you are.

We are the 48 and if you live here and you contribute and want to integrate and be a part of our society you are welcome.

We are the 48 and we want to tell you that Britain is ‘Great’ because of all the nationalities that live here, not in spite of them

We are the 48 and we will not accept the legitimacy of a campaign won on fear, lies and xenophobic propaganda

We are the 48 and we will not service the plans of self-serving politicians who gamble with our lives and our country

We are the 48 and you might think us just sore losers but to stand back and do nothing whilst our country and its values go down the toilet would just make us bigger losers

We are the 48 and we want Britain to be part of the solution not the problem

We are the 48 and we know what happens to this continent when we turn on each other and we will not let it happen again

We are the 48 and this is not over.

 

 

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Me and my camera in someone else’s town, my EU, my Madrid

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This week’s photographs are all from the magnificent city which is Madrid. (to see full gallery click here).

One of the things that appealed about Madrid is it didn’t feel like it had been ravaged by high rents and gentrification. It felt affordable and the centre was still bustling with locals who lived there. It just had a great vibe. Buzzing but relaxed. Such a beautiful combo. There was a headline in London’s Metro newspaper a while back which stated that it was cheaper to live in Madrid and commute to London every day than it was to live there. So within moments of being there I loved it and fantasised about moving there and up until last Friday, that was a possibility. But not anymore.  The snapped subjects featured all seem to have the same accusatory look on their face: what the hell have you done? And I can’t but ask the same question, as indeed are half the population.

When I first heard result there was just one phrase which ran through my head. Country Suicide. It didn’t feel like there has ever been a more self-destructive act by a nation in peace time history. Everyone’s now boshing out their opinions as to what exactly happened, experts, pundits, politicians, you name it, we’re all wracking out brains trying to work out how exactly we catapulted ourselves into this horrendous mess.

You could blame David Cameron for recklessly and arrogantly calling this referendum as a power play within his own party with no concern for the potential repercussions for this country.

You could blame Boris Johnson for recklessly and arrogantly joining the ‘Leave’ campaign as a power play within his own party with no concern for the potential repercussions for this country.

You could blame Nigel Farage for stoking the flames of racial hatred, fuelling people’s irrational fears about immigration and using outright lies to convince people to vote ‘leave’.

You could blame newspapers such as the Mail and the Sun  for stoking the flames of racial hatred fuelling people’s irrational fears about immigration and endorsing outright lies to convince people into voting ‘leave’.

You could blame the Remain campaign for using scaremonger tactics and only presenting negative consequences for leaving Europe rather than present it as a positive force in our lives.

You could blame the inefficacy of the establishment telling people who have nothing that they will be worse off and expect it to have an impact.

You could blame the Elite for suggesting that ‘trickledown economics’ worked when they made sure it was only ever themselves that profited  leading huge sways of the population to use their vote to cry out  ‘fuck you’ in a burst of anti-establishment rage.

You could blame the current Government for presenting the bizarre paradox of offering our nation the right to choose then telling us how to vote.

You could blame the current Government for the confusing proposition of calling something that they didn’t want and then expect a nation, a majority of whom they have squeezed dry with austerity cuts and whose voice they have systematically ignored throughout their time in office to then get behind them.

You could blame the Remainers whose sense of complacency to a general lack of activity in comparison to the Leavers.

You could blame the Leavers who just voted to show their discontent against a vast array of factors without even knowing what they were really voting for. (I spoke to someone who voted Leave “to keep the ‘”Pakis and the Chinese out”. Mate, the clue’s in the title, they’re from Pakistan and China which, for the record, are in Asia not Europe)

You could blame the Leavers who just voted as a protest thinking Remain would definitely win.

You could blame the older generation who voted in an attempt to reclaim the country of their youth, regardless of the fact that it no longer exists and regardless of the fact that it will affect this country for generations to come when they are no longer even here.

You could blame the apathetic youth for not voting (only 38% turnout in 18-24s compared with 80% of over 65s) or taking an active stance in the society they live in which effectively allowed the result to be defined by an older generation.

You could blame the racists of this country who used this referendum to turn on immigrants and blame them for all the ills in our society (obvs never heard that one before)

You could blame the fact that the population of this country were never consulted or explained the reason or consequence of huge influxes of immigration leading to hostility and a sense that their world was being altered against their will.

You could blame Corbyn for not doing enough (he gets blamed for everything else, why not this too?)

You could blame the London bubble for turning their back on the rest of the country who have been ignored and marginalised for decades as capital city prosperity and opportunities were denied to them creating rising resentment and massive inequality.

You could blame all of these people and you would be mostly be right on all counts but but being right is not going to get us out of this mess. Truth is, there are so many factors & players involved to create this perfect shit storm that no-one is really totally to blame and we are all ultimately responsible.

Recriminations will get us absolutely nowhere. We have to now find a solution together. We’re just gonna have to eat shit and deal with it. The tragedy is that  this has caused a  huge divisive gulf to open up between different sections of the population, full of blame & resentment against each other. Whereas an undeniable proportion of ‘outers’ voted driven by a mistrust of foreigners there is now a massive mistrust amongst each other. Which way did you vote? What side are you on? The most fucked up thing is uptil this point we felt relatively together as a nation but it turns out that was clearly an illusion.

The worst thing of all is that, we have galvanised the far right in other European countries to fight for their own independence and to promote racial hatred. What a horrendous thing to be responsible for. Modern Britain, until this result, stood for inclusion and tolerance and a chance at a decent life for all. Refugees, who had risked their life to get out of their war torn countries did not want to stop until they got to Britain because we represented real opportunity to start anew  and not be held back and marginalised just because you are an immigrant. The saddest thing is that now, we will become known as a country that want immigrants out and this is from a country that led the fight against Facism and everything it represented in World War 2. If Facism went on the march again and another world war broke out you now even have to question what side would we be on?

As the quote from The Dark Knight states: You either die a hero or live long enough to become the bad guy

We cannot become the bad guys. Its too twisted.

 

p.s when am I going to wake up?

 

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Me and my camera in someone else’s town, my city break, my madrid

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Me and my camera in someone else’s town, my city break, my madrid

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MYLDN special – ‘London Stays’ Rally

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london rally

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Throughout the EU referendum campaign Europe was never really presented as something positive. We were only told about the negative impacts of leaving. But in the last 48 hours a spate of racist attacks have happened all over the country and I was at this rally in London tonight and it became clear what Europe stood for. It stands for unity not division. It stands for love not hate. It stands for tolerance not racism. Inclusion not exclusion. It stands for solidarity amongst those who seek to destroy the peace that has been maintained since the last great war. Maybe this is knowledge that comes too late but now at least we know what we are fighting for.

We must not allow racism to become acceptable in this country. We must stop it in its tracks. If you let it in it will take hold of our nation we will see facism rise and racist behaviour become the norm. We cannot stand by and watch this happen. We are now divided as a nation and an ideological war has begun. Those who propagate fear and hatred against those who stand for a united nation for everyone.

Evil happens when good people stand by and do nothing. So if you see or hear any form of racist attack, verbal or physical, you must do everything in your power to stop it. We have to shut them up and shut them down now or suffer the consequences. We must all stand alongside the immigrant populations who live here and make them know they are welcome and that at least 48% of the entire population do not want them to suffer prejudice and we do not want them to go.

We cannot become a haven for the far right to grow. That will only end one way and we cannot let that happen. No-one ever thought it could go back to that and its barely in the history books and its already happening again. The days for political apathy are over. We cannot let our country be hijacked. We cannot become a symbol of intolerance to the world. This cannot be our message. We must let them know that is NOT what we stand for.

I stood out in the rain this evening with everyone else and cries of ‘love not hate’,  ‘EU we love you’ and ‘Fuck you Boris’ made us all feel a little bit better and the horror show shit storm we are now in had a glimmer of light amidst the dark shadowy clouds. This is not over. This is just beginning.

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Me and my camera in someone else’s town, my city break, my madrid

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Me and my camera in someone else’s town, my city break, my madrid

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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#MYLDN (761) – EU Referendum Special

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Here’s my 10 pence worth..(it will take you bout 5 mins to consume but reading this will change your life forever! (my attempt at clickbait featuring wild and provocative claims to hook you in but maybe, just maybe…)

The population of Great Britain will be voting today on the EU referendum. There were a multitude of factors involved in deciding whether we should stay in Europe or not but sadly like most things in modern politics it seems to have boiled largely down to just one thing: immigration and the threat it poses. This fear obviously discounts study after study which shows that EU migrants have had an overwhelmingly positive effect on the British economy and that strained services with waiting lists are much more likely to be a result of austerity budget cuts than an influx of Europeans…but when did facts ever decide political opinion?

A vote to leave feels like the gestural equivalent of Trump’s plan to build a wall to keep  out the Mexicans. The main problem with this approach is that both U.K and U.S populations are already heavily comprised of immigrant populations so if you are saying that you don’t want immigrants coming in to this country you are essentially saying you’d probably rather the ones that are already here weren’t here either. And would the logical conclusion not be that, at some point, if they were successful in their current aims, they would one day want to get rid of the ones that are already reside here too?

Maybe our geographical existence as an island has effectively created a conceptual approach to living which just won’t go away. ( A note to those who think they have any sense of entitlement to this territory: even the Anglo Saxons who are considered the native population weren’t from here – fyi we were all migrants once)

The fact is that the days of isolation are over – we live in a global community, we can’t turn back the clock, the Britain of before no longer exists. And even if we could reclaim that more “purist” society of yesteryear, would a return to it not be a step backwards, a step away from progress? We can’t remove ourselves from this situation in the vain hope that it will improve things for us. How? By sticking our head in the sand and becoming the United Kingdom of Ostriches? Has that ever worked?

We need to all cooperate with each other to solve the problems of the modern world. The refugee situation is not going away and if we think we can just turn our backs on it and hope it improves we are gravely mistaken. It made me utterly ashamed to be British to see that our Mps recently voted against allowing 3,000 refugee children into this country – I mean, how out of whack is our country’s moral compass  that our representatives could ever come to that conclusion? And we think we are the good guys??

And as for a more long term threat, the ravages of climate change which will only intensify will require massive cooperation & unified action to have any hope of dealing with it. Only by seeing that we are all the same and in this together will we find a potential solution. This will, however, require us to move beyond the basic social structures of ‘in groups’ and ‘out groups’ that have dominated humanity since the beginning. We are predisposed to fear ‘the other’ and thousands of years of evolution have only made a bit of  a dent in this overly cautious approach to living.

In these sensitive times this is a hard thing to admit, but we are essentially hardwired to be racist. I learnt this in the book ‘The Organised Mind’ (which I have mentioned before and its full of mind blowing insights about how our brains operate) by neuroscientist Daniel J Levetin and scientifically explains why we feel the way we do about people from other backgrounds. He demonstrates that our brains essentially hold “an innate predisposition toward making trait attributes of out-group members which develop into stereotypes which are very difficult to abandon once established”. In short, we are born to be prejudiced.

He goes on to say we tend to be “innately suspicious of outsiders, where an outsider is anyone different from us” and also tend to prefer members of our own group. This is because there is a neurobiological bias in an area of the brain’s prefrontal cortex where neurons are fired up when we think about ourselves and people who are like us. This brain partitioning activates the perception that “we” are better than “they” even when there is no rational basis for it. We have a stubborn tendency to misjudge outsiders and assume that members of our own in-group are complex individuals whilst overestimating the similarities of out-group members.

Also, we have to bear in mind that the integration of different cultures is a  relatively new phenomena for the human race. Several hundred years ago you might meet 200 people over the course of your entire life and they would have all been from the same ethnic background and mostly from your local neighbourhood. Now you will pass 200  people within 2 minutes of walking down Oxford Street. People were naturally weary of strangers back then and a lot of that of mistrust still lingers.

Levetin goes on to say that ‘racism is a form of “negative social judgement that arises from a combination of belief perseverance, out-group bias and categorisation error”. Basically, we judge an entire culture on the actions of a few. This is driven by our over-zealous brains that always choose avoidance over any potential risk in order to maximise our survival chances. Their efforts must be appreciated as they just want to protect us but  is, in fact, the cause of a lot of the hatred and violence in the world.

The analogy he uses is that if we eat a piece of fruit and we can get sick, the brain assumes incorrectly  that all pieces of this particular fruit are bad and to be avoided. This is how we make generalisations about entire classes of people. He demonstrates this even further with the following argument that suggests we can jump to the following false conclusion about an entire population or race or religion based on individuals acts.

1.0) the media report that Mr A did this

1.1) I don’t like the thing he did

1.2) Mr A is from the country of Awfulania

1.3) Therefore, everyone from Awfulania must do this thing that I don’t like.

This is sadly how our brains work and explains an awful lot in terms of people’s entrenched views . We need to accept these biological dispositions in order to understand our own thoughts and behaviours so we can do something about them. Sorry to get quite so sciencey but when there is so much xenophobic hot headed bullshit being hurled around we are in desperate need of some actual facts, driven not, by fear & false assumptions, but by rational thinking and scientific research. We need to counter balance the nonsense and the hate stoking frenzy being fuelled by the media (one perfect case in example of their blatant divisive nature: the mainstream media chose not to cover a demonstration in London by Muslims against terrorism. See here. This might have helped  but better for them for us to be afraid than informed. Why? Simple. Cos fear sells.

The basic truth is this…there are good and bad people in every society on Earth. No exemptions.  There is not a greater proportion in any one group and in any one country. The violent extreme is always a tiny fractious minority amidst the moderate masses, regardless of the politics,race or religion driving that society.  Can’t we just accept this and move on?

Isn’t it time to bypass this neurological dysfunction and as I have stated before, see the overwhelming similarities between humans and not the skin deep differences? I know we have to overcome some heavy duty brain wiring which has been entrenched for millennia but it is do-able as a lot of us have already evolved beyond this perspective. Even though the rise of the far right in Europe is very apparent but to polarise into our respective racial groups is just one approach and a deeply retrograde and destructive one.

The alternative is to group ourselves not by race or religion but by people who want integration and peace as oppose to people who want conflict and isolation. Its still in-groups and out-groups, it just isn’t driven by the colour of your skin or where you came from or what god you worship.

You have until 10pm tonight to vote…

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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