Well taxation would seem to work

Britvic to change recipes for more of its drinks to avoid sugar tax

Company says legislation on sweetened drinks is one of biggest risks for business as it announces 7.3% rise in pre-tax profit

Britvic plans to change the recipes for more of its drinks in order to avoid the sugar tax, which is expected to be introduced in the UK in 2018.

Government plans for the tax were confirmed in the Queen’s speech on Wednesday. The Britvic chief executive, Simon Litherland, said the company was aiming to cut the calories in its products by 20% within four years

 

Sadiq Khan accuses PM of taking tactics ‘from Trump playbook’ | Politics | The Guardian

New London mayor deplores attempts ‘to turn ethnic communities against each other’ during Zac Goldsmith’s campaign

Source: Sadiq Khan accuses PM of taking tactics ‘from Trump playbook’ | Politics | The Guardian

Sadiq Khan, the new Labour mayor of London, has launched an extraordinary attack on David Cameron and his defeated opponent, Zac Goldsmith, accusing them of trying to turn different ethnic communities against each other to stop him winning in the capital.

Writing in the Observer after becoming the most powerful Muslim politician in Europe, Khan says the prime minister and Goldsmith deployed tactics “straight out of the Donald Trump playbook” – a reference to the anti-Muslim campaign of the Republican hopeful in the US.

Khan wrested control of the capital from the Tories after eight years under Boris Johnson, in what turned out to be a comfortable win. He said he had hoped the campaign would focus on issues such as housing, transport and air pollution. “But David Cameron and Zac Goldsmith chose to set out to divide London’s communities in an attempt to win votes in some areas and suppress voters in other parts of the city,” he said.

The campaign was very negative, smearing him with the radical innuendo. Dirty stuff and actually truly ridiculous. Cameron in the Commons using PMQ with a planted question to slag Khan off. Typical piss-poor Cameron.

Brussels- the latest attack

The recent attacks by ISIS/Daesch have take place in Belgium. Aside of the violence and death I have left a bit cold or depressed. The reaction has been typical with more fear, more calls to violence and more grist to impose fear and loss of liberties.

I found Simon Jenkins article again insightful.
One would think that politicians and policymakers would come up with more thought out reactions than to talk of war and more security.

We need to look at ourselves more in what we do currently and how we should respond.

Paranoid politicians, sensational journalists – the Isis recruiting officers will be thrilled at how things have gone since their atrocity in Belgium

Source: The scariest thing about Brussels is our reaction to it | Simon Jenkins | Opinion | The Guardian

‘Those who live under freedom know it demands a price, which is a degree of risk. We pay the state to protect us – but calmly, without constant boasting or fearmongering. We know that, in reality, life in Britain has never been safer. That it suits some people to pretend otherwise does not alter the fact.

In his admirable manual, Terrorism: How to Respond, the Belfast academic Richard English defines the threat to democracy as not the “limited danger” of death and destruction. It is the danger “of provoking ill-judged, extravagant and counterproductive state responses”.

The menace of Brussels lies not in the terror, but in the reaction to the terror. It is the reaction we should fear. But liberty never emerges from a Cobra bunker.’

Flag result

The result was announced as a ‘news flash’ across our tv screens last night- real drama- I think not.

In the end there was no emotion or real awareness of all this process, it had seemed to fade into the background. A 67% turnout though was good one could say.

I agree with the article below written by a Kiwi in London. It was a superficial process that ddi not involve the true wider issues of New Zealand’s constitutional  position and the process was very badly done.

The motley opponents of the Kyle Lockwood-designed alternative, which came out on top in an earlier run-off referendum, made unlikely bedfellows. Among them were, yes, many conservative-minded voters, set against any idea of jettisoning the emblematic link to the mother country. Alongside them was another group eager to shake off the colonial vestige gobbling up a quarter of the flag, yet unable to stomach the alternative. For them the mishmash Lockwood flag – variously compared to a beach towel, a Weetabix packet and the logo for a chain of budget motels – was such an eyesore that they were driven to plump for the unsatisfactory but less hideous incumbent.

Others were against the alternative flag because they opposed the man most closely associated with it: the centre-right prime minister, John Key. Egged on by the opposition parties, who almost universally denounced this Key legacy project as a distraction, and a waste of NZ$27m, their objective, more or less, was to give the prime minister, unaccustomed to losing anything much, a bloody nose.

Do not fall into a trap

A thoughtful perspective highlighting the risk of our reflex actions.

Terror can only succeed with our cooperation | Simon Jenkins | Comment is free | The Guardian

The warlike response to the Paris massacre by western governments, the media and the rest of the world has answered the dreams of Islamic State ‘The French are bombing the Isis captial Raqqa, doubtless proving that bombs from the air kill the innocent as effectively as guns on the ground.’

Think what your enemy wants you to do, and do the opposite. No maxim of war is so ignored.Since last Friday’s killings in Paris, the world has answered the dreams of Islamic State. It has drenched their deeds in fame, glorified its perpetrators with vilification and defined them as warriors not murderers. Deeds of the most squalid horror have been “nationalised” then internationalised. The whole world has been drawn into Isis’s web of fear. Its wildest fantasies have been realised.

The potency of terror lies not in the act but in the aftermath. The act is death and destruction, horrendous in itself. The response is what gives it political traction. As with Osama bin Laden on 9/11, Isis wants the world to go berserk, declare emergencies, tear up freedoms, persecute moderate Muslims and bomb Muslim cities. By capitulating to these desires, the west has vastly increased the power of the terror – and the likelihood of imitation.

Source: Terror can only succeed with our cooperation | Simon Jenkins | Comment is free | The Guardian

Response to violence

Of course the events in France are making lots of headlines. Much of the response to the events is in terms of more violence. There have been French airstrikes in Syria. Francois Hollande talks of destroying IS (Etat islamique), that France is at war, that the number of police will be increased and that there will be no reduction in the armed forces.

There is currently a state of emergency in place that gives greater powers to the state for, I believe, a period of three months. President Hollande wants to change the constitution to give more powers permanently.

Etat d’urgence et article 16 : pourquoi Hollande veut-il réviser la Constitution ?

Le Monde.fr | • Mis à jour le

François Hollande veut réformer la Constitution en s’inspirant du comité Balladur de 2007, qui proposait d’inscrire l’état d’urgence dans la Constitution.
François Hollande veut réformer la Constitution en s’inspirant du comité Balladur de 2007, qui proposait d’inscrire l’état d’urgence dans la Constitution. PASCAL ROSSIGNOL / REUTERS

Le chef de l’Etat a évoqué, lundi devant le Congrès, une vaste révision de la Constitution pour « permettre aux pouvoirs publics d’agir conformément à l’Etat de droit contre le terrorisme de guerre »François Hollande veut réformer la Constitution en s’inspirant notamment du comité Balladur de 2007, qui proposait d’y inscrire l’état d’urgence. Une source gouvernementale a évoqué la création d’un un régime constitutionnel d’« état de crise »et d’un « visa de retour »pour les Français ou résidents en France qui seraient « impliqués dans des activités terroristes à l’étranger ».

Brings to mind(taken from John Naughton blog):

“Those who surrender freedom for security will not have, nor do they deserve, either one.”

― Benjamin Franklin