Posts Tagged ‘Blog’
Blog holiday
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on April 7th, 2009
You may have noticed the blog is on a sort of holiday. Back soon.
Sharing posts
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on February 19th, 2009
I have added the
Facebook,
Stumble Upon,
Delicious,
Digg,
email and
Google Mail links you can see below. I am especially chuffed with the Gmail one which I had to work out for myself. Clicking the red gmail icon causes a new window to open with an email ready written with the post’s URL in the body!
I have also added a subscribe link to the right hand side of the page that adds this site’s feed directly to Google’s homepage or Google Reader (as you prefer). Thanks to Dave Taylor for that part.
Mobile version of the site
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on February 7th, 2009
It may seem wildly optimistic, but it’s also intriguingly geeky; I’ve created a mobile version of my site using MoFuse.
You can see the mobile version here.
Blogroll
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on February 6th, 2009
I recently converted my categories to tags as per WordPress’s new preference. This brought my blog-roll to the top on the sidebar (look to your right!)
And then I wondered, have any on my blogroll moved away from good quality writing, have any stopped blogging, and shouldn’t I read some of these blogs from time to time in any case?
So I’ve steam-lined and trimmed my blogroll from to a rather more honest and succinct list. If you’re not on the list and think you should be, comment and I’ll consider you. If you’ve been removed, apologies. If you remain you’re still writing good stuff and/or I believe in what you’re saying.
Maybe I should review the blogroll more often too…
Other updates
I recently lost one of my domains — it seems that I had used an old email address and so I did not receive the reminder. Oh well, at least it wasn’t an important one…
Except, unfortunately, a large number of my 897 posts did have links that referred to that old domain. So I was delighted when I found a website that included the necessary SQL to find and replace. This has saved me a lot of heartache.
In-e-communicado
Posted by: Gav in Uncategorized on August 26th, 2007
I have been gradually moving into my new home. The latest thing to move across is my PC so for the next week or so I will be electronically incommunicado.
Tell anyone who complains about my lack of response to emails won’t you!?
Ronald Reagan said…
Posted by: Gav in Uncategorized on July 13th, 2007
“Hard work never killed anyone, but I figure why take the chance.”
I like that quote. I wish I lived by that principle. Even now, with a moment to myself, I feel obliged to post something to my neglected and, now, less and less visited website!
A year and a month
Posted by: Gav in Uncategorized on June 22nd, 2007
I have been a Councillor now for a year and a month and a bit. I have been through long periods in my life of thinking I know it all. I hope this honesty grabs you.
In between these long periods I have had periods of what I shall call ‘understanding’.
In the last two or three months I have been experiencing one of those periods of understanding. And, surprisingly (to me) these revelations have come entirely from sources outside of the Council.
I’ve come to question (amongst other things) whether religion is always a bad thing, whether some aspects of my politics could do with softening (but not Cameronising), whether consultation has value (I believe it doesn’t generally, the way it is carried out by civil servants), whether corruption is so engrained that politics has any hope, whether it is a good idea to take time over things (I now think it is more than I did) etc.
I hope to explain this a little more coherently later on. In the meantime, I would welcome comments on any issue above and I’ll hopefully learn as much from those as I have from a couple of friends recently.
And thank you to those friends who will know who they are.
England: Will it ever awaken?
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on June 19th, 2007
This from today’s Telegraph:
South of the Tweed, the backlash is starting
By Alan Cochrane
A weekend in England is all it takes; all it takes to confirm that “they” are not going to put up with “it” forever. “They” are the English and “it” is devolution.
Now, you may think you’ve heard this before; after all, people like me have been hunting for the English backlash ever since the Scottish Parliament opened for business.
And, frankly, it has been a long time coming. But coming it most definitely is. I was talking to a senior MSP yesterday and his assessment was an accurate one. “They (the English) seem to have gotten really annoyed about this student fees business.”
Last week’s announcement by Fiona Hyslop, the new SNP Education Minister, that, henceforth, Scottish students – and only Scottish students – would be excused their back-end payments for attending Scottish universities, appears to have been the last straw south of the border.
Perhaps it’s because of the manifest unfairness of it, certainly in a British sense, or maybe it’s because it primarily affects their off-spring – anything that hits your kids always brings a more emotional response – but the English taxpayers appear to have taken more exception to this bit of business than much else that’s happened in the last eight years.
And it has allowed them to add it to their long list of other “grievances” where the largesse of the devolved Scottish administration has given the residents on this side of the Tweed a better deal than those south if it. Things like free personal care for the elderly, free eyesight checks,
free bus passes and free access to better drugs.
All of this on top of what is seen as a small army of Scots in the Cabinet and, from June 27, a Scot as their new prime minister, without, it seems, so much as a by their leave.
Some English commentators claim that the incoming Nat administration in Edinburgh is bringing forward new acts of discrimination as deliberate provocation. They’re not. It’s not provocation, merely recklessness.
The Nats are determined to shore up their vote wherever they can – at the taxpayers’ expense, of course – and the students’ fees decision will do them no harm at all with the youth vote. Ditto with the so-called “grey” vote, following the announcement that free personal care allowances are to
be uprated. However, if in buying those votes, the Nats infuriate the English, then they’re not going to lose sleep over it, now are they?
All of which made my trip to Birmingham recently all the more interesting. There, in the tranquil surroundings of the house where Elizabeth Fry founded what we now know as the Quakers, I came face to face with the other side of the devolution coin – the English nationalists.
Mind you, the leaders of Campaign for an English Parliament are an incredibly mild-mannered bunch of revolutionaries. They are, also, extraordinarily polite.
In spite of all the slings and arrows that devolution has thrown their way, they bear no ill-will towards the Scots; they just want their own piece of the action. They acknowledge, as do most opinion polls, that the majority of Scots reckon that bones of contention such as the West Lothian Question should be addressed.
They have a long and hard fight on their hands, much of it down to indifference from the English media.
The reason I was in Birmingham was to make a programme about the demands for an English parliament for BBC Scotland, which is to be broadcast today.
Incredible as it may seem, there has not been even the slightest flicker of interest in this perfectly legitimate cause from the various arms of the BBC in England. Needless to say, however, one of the staunchest supporters of the Campaign for an English Parliament has been Alex Salmond.
I cannot imagine that this apathy from mainline broadcasters and newspapers will last, especially as every day of the Nationalist administration in Edinburgh appears to bring with it a new sense of outrage
from the ordinary voters of England.
- Home Rule for England is on BBC Radio Scotland at 11.30am today and is repeated at half-past midnight.
See, told you we’re not bad guys.
I would take issue with the author’s implied blame of Scottish Nationalists. The problem is most definitely Scottish and English British Unionists, not Nationalists of either country. The Scottish Nationalist Party should not be blamed for using the power it has been granted in favour of Scottish people — it is the lack of similar power for England that gets my back up.
And now be aware of another blogbreak of perhaps up to a week!
Pause in blogging
Posted by: Gav in Uncategorized on June 15th, 2007
Again I’ve lost the urge to write. We all know what we want: low taxes, genuine democracy, less central government interference in local government, freedom from the EU, secular government, non-socialist environmentalism, care for those in need, less government, fewer rewards for the lazy….
So what with my new job, new home and hopefully other good news shortly, there’s more on my mind than politics and none of it interesting enough to share with you. So I’ll return (probably tomorrow knowing me) but this message is just a warning that I may not be around much.
A Bright Speech
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on June 4th, 2007
Sam Harris is another in the growing number among us humans who believes that religion per se is dangerous. Listen to what he has to say:
If you agree, or even if you just know there’s no reason to believe in God, consider signing up (for free) as a Bright and spreading the 21st Century’s Enlightenment.





