Worldwide day of action against Vedanta Resources

PRESS RELEASE
GLOBAL DAY OF ACTION AGAINST VEDANTA RESOURCES PLC (27 JULY)

VENUE/TIME:- AGM OF VEDANTA RESOURCES PLC, THE LINCOLN CENTRE, 18 LINCOLN’S INN FIELDS, LONDON, WC2A 3ED, (nearest Tube- Holborn)
27 JULY 2009, 2.00 pm onwards

STOP THE CULTURAL GENOCIDE, ENVIRONMENTAL DEVASTATION, HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATION, DEADLY POLLUTION

The Global Campaign against Vedanta Resources plc will be protesting inside and outside the Annual General Meeting of Vedanta Resources plc at Lincoln Centre, 18 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London, WC2A 3ED on 27 July 2009 from 2.00 pm onwards. Simultaneous protests will be held worldwide on 27 July, in the eastern Indian state of Orissa and other parts of India and a series of demonstrations, public meetings and rallies will be held in Orissa, Kolkata, Mumbai and other cities from 27 July onwards.
Vedanta Resources is a multinational mining company, listed on the London Stock Exchange whose spectacular rise involves violating Environmental Laws, Human Rights Abuse, Financial scams & Political corruption in Zambia, Armenia, India and other countries where it exploits poorly regulated mining enclaves. Recently Vedanta has announced plans to start mining in the Niyamgiri hills of Orissa, India from October 2009 and it aims to increase operations by 6 fold by 2011. Vedanta’s mining in Orissa will have a devastating impact on the fragile Ecosystem of this fertile and vitally important forested mountainous region and the state of Orissa in general. It will lead to a Cultural Genocide of the ancient tribal civilization of the Dongria Kondh and Majhi Kondh tribes, who have lived ecologically sustainable & self sufficient lives for centuries in these mountains. Vedanta’s mining will also lead to severely toxic pollution, diseases, terminal illnesses, destruction of endangered wildlife, damage to the wild elephant population, devastation of crops and arable land and the poisoning and drying up of rivers and streams, which will have catastrophic effects on tens of thousands of people for whom these rivers are crucial lifelines in Kalahandi, one of the most drought prone regions of India.
The Global Campaign against Vedanta Resources plc is spread over several countries and includes over 150 solidarity groups, Grassroots movements, NGOs, activists, intellectuals, academics, students and professionals.
WE DEMAND THE FOLLOWING:-
1. Vedanta should IMMEDIATELY ABANDON PLANS for mining Bauxite in the Niyamgiri hills of Orissa.
2. PARLIAMENTARY INVESTIGATIONS in the UK and in India into Vedanta’s operations in India and around the world.
3. Vedanta, a UK based company, MUST BE MADE ACCOUNTABLE for the social, environmental and health repercussions suffered by local communities around the world as a result of Vedanta’s callous mining activities. Those who have been affected and abused by Vedanta’s activities MUST BE ENABLED to seek justice in their home countries and/or in the UK.
4. Vedanta Ltd, Regulators, the UK Government and Governments of the mining enclaves MUST IMPLEMENT MORE EFFECTIVE CONTROLS on Vedanta’s operations.
5. Vedanta’s Shareholders and other investors must be MADE FULLY AWARE of the true nature of this mining company they are investing in so that they can make a better informed decision on whether to WITHDRAW THEIR INVESTMENTS from this criminally destructive mining company.

BACKGROUND TO WHY VEDANTA RESOURCES PLC MUST BE STOPPED
After a highly controversial legal case lasting 3 years at The Supreme Court of India, which witnessed some outrageous distortion of facts and a major miscarriage of justice, in April 2009 the Indian Government gave clearance to Vedanta to mine Bauxite in the Niyamgiri hills of Orissa for the next 25 years. Vedanta plans to start mining Bauxite in October 2009 and aims to increase by 6 fold by 2011.
CRITICAL REASONS WHY WE MUST NOT LET VEDANTA COMMENCE MINING ACTIVITIES IN NIYAMGIRI and leave behind a trail of terrible ENVIRONMENTAL and HUMAN DEVASTATION includes the following:-
· Vedanta’s mining activities will have a catastrophic effect on the fragile Ecosystem of Orissa with over a thousand hectares of prime Evergreen ‘Reserve Forests’ being wiped out, rivers being poisoned, ground water levels falling. Already Vedanta’s Refinery, which has been built on tribal land in Lanjigarh, is critically polluting. Major rivers of Orissa, including River Bansadhara, has already been polluted at its source. Toxic wastes have ruined fertile agricultural lands, polluted air, contaminated drinking & bathing water, & caused severe illnesses in people & wildlife. Mining will compound these effects.
· Hundreds of the local indigenous population have been killed in work and road accident in and around this Refinery because of Vedanta’s criminal negligence. The Community has been violently split and is terrorised by thugs in Vedanta’s pay.
· Niyam Dongar is the most densely forested mountain in the Niyamgiri range. It is home to the ancient civilization of the Dongria Kondh tribe, who have preserved their sacred mountain, prevented deforestation, lived ecologically sustainable & self sufficient lives for centuries.
· Cultural Genocide is imminent with Mass Unemployment and Destitution as farmers, fishermen and forest dwellers will be displaced and abandoned in shanty-towns. Delicate social structure will be torn apart with the collapse of traditional Economic systems, Kinship system, Egalitarian power structures and Religious values. Already displacement and the invasion by an alien industry has led to a sharp rise in illegal liquor shops, fraudulent schemes, drunken violence, wife beatings, suicides, prostitution & serious fractures in the community. Cultural Genocide will also affect Majhi Kondh tribe and will culminate in the destruction of Niyam Dongar, the most sacred mountain of the Kondh tribe and their Lord of Law. The Kondhs perceive the mountains and the forests as their Gods. So their destruction is both an environmental and a cultural atrocity.
· These Bauxite-capped mountains are the reason for the region’s exceptional fertility and bio-diversity. Bauxite, which contains the Aluminium ore, soaks up rainwater, holds this water and releases it to numerous perennial streams and rivers, which are essential Lifelines in Kalahandi, one of the most drought prone regions of India. Removing this Bauxite will be catastrophic for the fragile ecosystem, endangered wildlife and for tens of thousands of people who rely on these rivers.
· If mining starts on Niyamgiri, at least 50 other major mountains are next in line! Already tribal people and ‘Dalits’ (Untouchables) have movements to protect Bapla Mali, Mali Parbat, Deo Mali, Gandhamardan and other mountains in Orissa and Andhra Pradesh. BHPBilliton, Alcoa, Rio Tinto, Jindal & Dubai-based companies are poised to set up Bauxite mines.
· In Dec 2000 police opened fire on tribal campaigners, killing three at the Utkal project. While an Inquiry into the police firing was holding up this project Vedanta made its move, building its refinery before applying for permission to mine! Vedanta has repeatedly violated Government Pollution Guidelines, illegally occupied village land, criminally started construction work without Environmental Clearance, dumped toxic pollutants into rivers and cleared ‘Reserve Forest’ land despite valiant efforts by villagers to protect their forests.
· Mountains of North Orissa are some of the last pockets of wild elephants in Eastern India. These majestic animals are being threatened by the rampant mining. Magnificent wildlife, forests, some of the highest waterfalls in India and many tribal cultures are in serious danger of being wiped out forever.

WORLDWIDE REACTIONS & MOVEMENTS
· In early 2009, in a breathtakingly beautiful non-violent protest over 10,000 villagers and concerned citizens held hands to form a 17 kilometre human chain around the Niyamgiri hills.
· On July 9, 2009 Amnesty International stated that “The Indian Government should immediately withdraw the clearance granted to a massive mining project (Vedanta) that threatens the lives and livelihoods of a protected indigenous community living in the Niyamgiri hills.
· Vedanta has been blacklisted by the Norwegian Govt Pension Fund, with its pension fund investments divested in 2007 citing “serious malpractice and contraventions of environment norms and ethics by the Vedanta management in the past wherever they operate” and “human rights violation”. Procedural violations in procurement of environment and forest clearance for mining were cited. The Martin Currie Scottish Trust Fund also withdrew their £2.37m investment in Vedanta in July 2008 on grounds of “environmental and human rights violation.”
· The Orissa State Pollution Control Board has issued more than 3 notices to Vedanta for violating pollution norms at its Refinery and the CEC committee of the Indian Supreme Court submitted several reports highlighting irregularities and corruption in Vedanta and recommending that Environmental Clearance for mining activities should NOT be give. Both Vedanta’s parent company- Sterlite and Vedanta’s subsidiary MALCO have been charged in court with the criminal violation of Environmental laws, callous dumping of toxic wastes and illegal construction.
· Worldwide uproar followed Vedanta being awarded the ‘Golden Peacock Award’ by the World Environmental Foundation (WEF) in 2009. This same award was awarded to Satyam Computers in September 2008 before being withdrawn in January 2009 after senior management and the founder chairman were arrested for fraud. Various concerned citizens wrote a letter to the jurors of this ‘Golden Peacock Award’ voicing their concerns and exposing Vedanta’s activities. In reply the jurors dissociated themselves from Vedanta and said that the prize decision was made beforehand by one Mr Mehra. Mr Mehra is a highly dubious London based corporate guru of whom ‘The Observer’ released an article in May 2003 called ‘The Contradictions of Madhav Mehra’! Hundreds of organisations and individuals wrote to the jury of the ‘The Golden Peacock Award’ and demonstrations were held at the Award ceremony in the state of Himachal Pradesh. Such was the public anger that even the Chief Minister of Himachal Pradesh and other Government officials refused to participate in this Award ceremony.
· In Vietnam, the tribal people of the Central Highlands are being invaded by the world’s top aluminium companies. General Vo Nguyen Giap – a war hero, now aged 97, who helped defeat the French and American invasions – is among a large group of the country’s leading citizens who are opposing this new invasion by mining companies. Scientists are prominent in the campaign. In Peru’s Amazon region opposition against oil extracting companies gained worldwide attention after a blockade by about 30,000 people was met by severe police violence on 5-6 June 2009, which killed at least 85 Indians. In Nigeria the assault on indigenous communities involved the outrageous ‘execution’ of writer and environmental activist Ken Saro Wiwa, who was non-violently opposing multinational oil companies. In the Phillipines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Brazil, Columbia, Ecuador, Burma, Tibet etc mining, oil and logging companies are destroying forest simultaneously with the livelihood of the indigenous peoples. Scientists believe that Swine Flu outbreak in Mexico could be due to the horrendous pollution spread by the big meat companies. In Western Australia, Erin Brockovich, the famous Environmental lawyer is representing the local community against Aluminium giant Alcoa after an outbreak of respiratory illnesses.
· We need to understand that the Financial Crisis, Global Warming & Pandemics are linked to these exploitive industries, which pollute callously, devastate crops and arable land, destroys communities & cultures, leads to the loss of rare animals & medicinal plants, death of rivers, infliction of sickness and terminal diseases. All for the sake of a few greedy years of corporate profits. We need to join with the Grassroots movements in India, Vietnam, Peru and other countries in opposing these monstrously destructive corporations and in choosing genuinely sustainable development, which will be genuinely beneficial for the local communities and be ecologically sustainable for many generations to come.

CONTACT DETAILS:-
GLOBAL CAMPAIGN AGAINST VEDANTA,
Samarendra Das- sdasorisa@hotmail.co.uk, sdasorisa@rediffmail.com
Felix Padel- felixorisa@yahoo.com
Agrotosh Mookerjee- whatculture@yahoo.co.uk
Phone- (+44) 07528435541
Miriam Rose- welliebird7@hotmail.co.uk

New Religious Movements and my personal experience

Most of those who know me know my history – I joined the Hare Krishnas when I was 19. I think it is time to talk a bit about that.

You might make jokes about growing up in East Germany and not being able to face too much personal freedom all at once after the system breakdown in ‘89. In fact, I loved Eastern spiritualism long before the wall came down. I’ve somehow been raised on the Weimar Classicism period of Schiller and Hoelderlin – my mum was a teacher of German language and literature and passionate enough to take me and my sister to Weimar on several Summer holidays to see the sights, starting with where Goethe met Schiller. (My sister hated it btw and would have rather gone to the beach, not surprisingly. I just soaked it up.)

Der Weimarer Musenhof

Weimar’s Courtyard of the Muses (1860) by Theobald Freiherr von Oer. Schiller reads in Tiefurt, Weimar. Goethe can be seen amongst the audience.

Duchess Anna-Amalia hosted the salons that helped form so many of Germany’s literary and philosophical classics. Mystic Hinduism was very much part of discussions in those salons and has thus had a part in what fed my young, idealist mind. So in many ways it was inevitable that in my teens, the most radical time in anyone’s life, I’d take the most radical path available to me at the time and become a fully committed Hare Krishna nun.

Now last Sunday (28 June) we had the the Ratha Yatra, the London version of the annual chariot festival which gave rise to the word ‘Juggernaut’ – Jagannath is the name of one of the deities worshiped in the Indian state of Orissa, and he is taken on a chariot ride to the seaside down the road from his temple every year in a huge spectacle with millions of visitors. In London, the annual parade draws somewhere between 5 and 10 thousand visitors, mostly Hindus. It is a lovely, colourful occasion culminating with a street festival on Trafalgar Square.

Chariot arriving at Trafalgar Square

Chariot arriving at Trafalgar Square

It’s the one chance the Hare Krishnas have (apart from singing in the street every day) to *sell*. Well – that’s a loaded word. Showcase themselves. Represent. Be inspiring. Because the daily singing in the street by a group of ‘crazies’ is easily ignored, as is having a random guy in the street trying to shove a book about yoga in your face. But a whole day first parading through central London, then having Trafalgar Square to yourself – what an opportunity for showcasing an idea!

I know they do wonderful things. None of the ideas showed. The mindblowingly 21 century cruelty-free dairy farm, run without fossil fuels and fully sustainable, with oxen-powered grain mill, opening to the public this year? Didn’t feature. The fact the Hare Krishnas are hosting other groups of Hindus to talk about food standards and production in a UN project involving religious communities in long-term food sustainability? Not a word.

Can't get the respect these days. Dougald and I

Can't get the respect these days. Dougald and I

Anyways. We had a fun day at the festival, watching people and interactions. The parade was great, lovely kirtans – but most people would only join the festival on Trafalgar Square, and that’s when it keeps disappointing. The cultural programme? I don’t know who curated that. Who made Jayadev the cultural ambassador? John Richardson, who’s claim to fame is that he was the drummer in the Rubettes? A guy who once managed to take over a lovely community get-together with his ‘visualisations’ that ended up having people nauseous from the hypnotic effects, then apologising and admitting he didn’t have a clue what he was doing? Hilarious. The fact a different sect of Hare Krishnas tried to hitch a ride? Very nice.

Dougald made an interesting observation in the aftermath.

He said there were 3 kinds of religions. A very abridged description of the 3 kinds is here

1. The ones who let you get on with your life while adding something worthwhile
2. The evangelical ones who are focused on conversions and need a stream of new converts to sustain themselves
3. The ones who don’t convert but are discovered almost by accident, and encourage you to think long and hard before making any commitments.

and I shall post the link to his no doubt much more eloquent blog post when it’s up :)

Of course, the problem with the Hare Krishnas, as any “new” religious movement which fits broadly into the second category, is that while the philosophical basis might be profound and true, taken out of its cultural references (wider Hindu culture) it simply cannot work.

Vaishnavas, the worshippers of Vishnu, are meant to be the pillars of stability in Hindu society (as opposed to the Shaivites, worshippers of Siva, the proponents of ‘we are all god so let’s all be powerful and enjoy’ who are the drop-outs and known for doing strange things). No Hare Krishna devotee I’ve spoken to is aware of this, and obviously not – in order to convert to Vaishnavism and absorb its values, you must have dropped out, broken with your own upbringing and culture on a very deep level, so you can’t see yourself as maintainer of dharma, stability and status quo, not with any conviction anyways.

There is something else quite unhealthy about even attempting such a break with your own tradition. There might be, in some cases, perfectly sane, idealistic reasons for such a break (yes, I am speaking of myself, clearly) – but in the majority of new recruits, we can assume massive personality problems. (n.b. I’m not really saying I wasn’t broken. In the interest of honesty, I can quite clearly say that if I had been whole and healthy at the time, I’d have joined, looked at it, tried to change it into something beautiful, and if that hadn’t succeeded, taken my leave and tried something else.)

For a new religion still desperate for more members, it is just not wise to turn away potential new members. As a result, there are many very broken people who form the ranks and as they move up in the structure and move into managerial positions without proper training in how to look after people, and in the worst case children, it’s hardly surprising that there is a long list of cases of mismanagement – some more severe and resulting in suicides, drawn out court cases, some ‘only’ as severe as causing a lot of frustration.

However the problem is deeper than that and describes a movement being run by new converts.

I think the problems started at the point when the movement exploded back in the late 60s and decided outer expansion was more important than real (inner) growth. Prabhupada had to delegate power to his new deputies – and radical, immature new converts taking on responsibility for the direction of such a movement – that can’t go well. At the rate the Hare Krishnas grew, in the hippy days with everyone just coming out of one drug-induced haze or another, and with George Harrison being such a huge supporter, it was inevitable, especially when the achievement of 108 temples world-wide in 10 years was quickly becoming the main criteria of success.

Same story for the books – some of the editions were such extreme rush jobs that the quality of the editing is extremely poor, with the argument that they could be re-edited later when there was more time. But now, there is hardly anyone who manages to change a single word without the entire intelligentsia of the movement having a nervous breakdown, because They want to change Prabhupada’s words!! the Gospel!!!

As for me, I was used up in the name of expansion and discarded just like many others – I still hold the

A random pic of me and my guru Krishna-Kshetra Prabhu at another Ratha Yatra. I just discovered it on a random blog site.

A random pic of me and my guru Krishna-Kshetra Prabhu at another Ratha Yatra. I just discovered it on a random blog site.

philosophy and many of the movement’s activities (especially the food distribution in India) in high regard and have a lot of love for my guru, who, himself a very active seeker, is a wonderful and balanced person, is teaching in universities all over the world and is constantly introducing methods to encourage his disciples to think and feel for themselves, while remaining in good standing in the Hare Krishna organisation.

Which should be impossible but he manages just fine, for the sake of being able to keep looking after his disciples who at last count number somewhere between 800 and 1000.

Dougald and Vinay, discoursing on religion

Dougald and Vinay, discoursing on religion

However, here I was, seeing the Hare Krishna festival through my friends’ eyes who came along to Trafalgar Square. Starting with the books… people trying to sell scientific books on why Hinduism is in line with latest scientific discoveries – but no real value to the conversations, and books cheaply printed in India. My view on that? Better not try then, because that’s getting us in line with very fundamentalist Christian preaching. Basically, the feel my friends got – and they are all fairly well-versed in Hindu thinking – was of an organisation which had become so devoid of real spirit that it was more fundamentalist than the Salvation Army.

There was no real creativity either in the books, designs or performances. But on the other hand, it is what happens when all that matters is maintaining an impossible status quo – being a devotee means you follow the four regulative principles and chant your 16 rounds daily and spend all the remaining time doing practical service, as a result spending too much time cutting yourself off from your lower chakras to have any energy left for creative thinking.

And if that wasn’t enough, there were other groups of Hare Krishnas who were competing for the visitors on the day! The ultimate irony – not just were they members of the same niche sect of Hinduism, started by Sri Chaitanya some 500 years ago but sharing a guru great-grandfather, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur, the guru of Srila Prabhupada who had come to the US to preach and had started the official Hare Krishna movement. And here they were, competing and pretty much ignoring each other, and then dismissing each other after the event.

And what happened to their sense of humour?

Radha-Krishna deities in the Krishna-Balaram Mandir, Vrindavan, UP, India

Radha-Krishna deities in the Krishna-Balaram Mandir, Vrindavan, UP, India

Essentially, they worship Radha and Krishna on the altar. In the stories we hear, Radha is married to somebody else and keeps running into Krishna while doing her domestic duties… Also, Krishna manages to dance with all the girls in one night (dance, mind you. Dance.) Another couple on the altar: Rama and Sita… again, Rama, what a man! I do think it’s nice to have a religion with proper males and females. I crack myself up every time I remember falling in love with the main actor while doing a spontaneous re-enactment of the story of Surparnaka meeting Rama from the Ramayana a few years ago – but that’s for another random religion post!

Somehow, the Hare Krishnas seemed to have lost their sense of humour a long time ago, along with the ability to really inspire. And that’s why this still affects me. How many people would benefit from adding a little drop of spiritual love into their lives? How would our interactions change if we realised we’re all part of some gigantic cosmic conscious joke? From realising we’re beautiful, joyful, powerful beyond matter? And how many people do get a drop of this, come to the temple and want to join, only to be sucked dry by the endless fundamentality of what they are being exposed to?

Have a look on twitter, or around blogs, or facebook and try to find inspirational Hare Krishna streams. Actually, don’t waste time unless you’re really keen on proving me wrong. I’ve looked and all I found was frustrated bickering or fundamentalist dry repetition of a proven formula, or vegetarian cooking recipes, or fundamentalists about to pick up a fight with the frustrated ones.

Women Power?

Here’s a discussion I’ve had on Twitter. Make up your own mind.

Post
the_anke Anke Holst Jul 07, 04:05 PM
really? @women_power? I can’t even begin to write down the amount of problems I have with that.

Post
Quote @theimp67 re. @women_power: And, oh. my. god. reading that blog, it’s like a bad case of social media buzzword / wankword bingo <- lol

Post
Annemcx Anne McCrossan Jul 07, 04:07 PM
@the_anke a problem shared is a problem halved – me too actually

Post
laurahyde laurahyde Jul 07, 04:16 PM
@the_anke agree totally re. your comment @women_power

Post
Phoebe_Phoenix Rebecca Roderick Jul 07, 04:35 PM
@the_anke Hi Anke. Couldn’t help but notice your comment about @women_power. Perhaps we can talk?

the_anke Anke Holst Jul 07, 05:07 PM
@Phoebe_Phoenix Yes, maybe that would be good. So far what I’ve seen doesn’t convince me of the concept. At all.

Post
Phoebe_Phoenix Rebecca Roderick Jul 07, 05:10 PM
@the_anke We only started yesterday! Give us a chance! Come join in. Let’s make it work for us!

the_anke Anke Holst Jul 07, 05:34 PM
@women_power the web should be the last place where we need to be judged by gender. And the word Empower makes me cringe (and not just me.)

Post
women_power women_tweeters Jul 07, 05:47 PM
@the_anke maybe because I’ve been in South Africa, empowerment has different connotations for me. Will have a think about what you’ve said.

women_power women_tweeters Jul 07, 05:37 PM
@theimp67 The former. It’s about creating a space free of unethical followers, all of whom are interested in empowering women on the web.

Post
theimp67 Paul I Jul 07, 05:48 PM
@women_power But why identify yourselves by gender, surely better to group round a common goal rather than a gender? @the_anke

Annemcx Anne McCrossan Jul 07, 04:50 PM
@the_anke by contribution, yes, by gender, don’t think so. Soft power has a part to play as an idea far more than as social clique, agree

Post
theimp67 Paul I Jul 07, 06:06 PM
@Annemcx @the_anke Once you start to identify yourself by an attribute, gender in this case, you turn it in to “them and us”

women_power women_tweeters Jul 07, 06:06 PM
@theimp67 @the_anke I could write a dissertation on empowerment! 140 characs just can’t cut it! Hey you guys have been great.

Post
women_power women_tweeters Jul 07, 05:58 PM
@theimp67 @the_anke so the title is less about having a women only group but more of a group directed at catering to women on Twitter.

Post
women_power women_tweeters Jul 08, 08:19 AM
But that’s what sleep deprivation does. Couldn’t sleep last night. was laughing. @the_anke ’s comments about my blog made me giggle!

Post
the_anke Anke Holst Jul 08, 08:23 AM
RT @women_power: Couldn’t sleep last night. was laughing. @the_anke ’s comments about my blog made me giggle! <- riiiiight.

Post
women_power women_tweeters Jul 08, 08:27 AM
@the_anke no seriously. I meant it. I did laugh. even at the time. we need to build this. and your conversation really helped.

the_anke Anke Holst Jul 08, 08:25 AM
.@women_power so now, rather than answering honest concerns I share with @annemcx, @laurahyde etc re. your concept, you choose to ridicule?

Post
women_power women_tweeters Jul 08, 08:31 AM
@the_anke @annemcx, @laurahyde If you don’t want to that’s also ok.But I wasn’t ridiculing you in any way.I thought your comments helpful.

Post
women_power women_tweeters Jul 08, 08:43 AM
@the_anke @annemcx, @laurahyde @theimp67 But I think we can work with that going forward!

My issues:

    The blog is full of meaningless platitudes like empowering women.
    On asking for clarification of this term, not only did I not get any clearer but also felt ridiculed.
    There is no clarification about the challenges we are supposed to be feeling which a special women’s corner is supposed to be helping with.

Please add your comments below. No, really. Do. I’ve got the swine flu so I’m supposed to be resting.

Dream Space

Steve Lawson and the rest of the amplified09 crew did some great social reporting from the Reboot Britain conference, where we all had a huge amount of really useful fun. Here’s Steve’s interview with me

Listen!