There was a time when I was a regular commuter to work and I enjoyed listening to Thought for the Day on BBC Radio 4. This was before the morning commuter traffic got so bad that I needed to set off earlier, arriving at work earlier but spending less time sitting in slow-moving traffic. This meant I arrived at work before Thought for the Day was broadcast but was able to get ahead of myself, organise my day and with luck be able set off for home at the end of the day before the traffic built up once more.
Anyway, there was a time when I was a regular listener to BBC Radio 4’s Thought for the Day. Probably my favourite “thinker” was Rabbi Lionel Blue, whose wry take on the state of the world was very refreshing. I was led to think about this when I read that the BBC had retrospectively censored the broadcast by Krish Kandiah, a theologian who heads the Sanctuary Foundation, a refugee foundation. It seems that in his “Thought” he described Robert Jenrick as xenophobic.
Apparently Jenrick had said, ‘I certainly don’t want my children to share a neighbourhood with men from backward countries who broke into Britain illegally, and about whom we know next to nothing.’ According to Krish Kandiah, “These words echo a fear many have absorbed. Fear of the stranger. The technical name for this is xenophobia.”
Jenrick probably would not want to share his neighbourhood with quite a lot of men who support far right groups. After all he’d know next to nothing about those men either. I suspect he would make sweeping generalisations about council house dwellers, similar to those he makes about refugees.
The BBC has apologised to Jenrick … but not to the refugees!
Today is cooler than yesterday but as wildfires burn in the North York Moors national park - burning since Monday - as well as similar wildfires in other parts of the UK, firefighters are warning that we are hitting a record number of wildfires this year. “In England and Wales alone, crews have already tackled 856 wildfires this year, the National Fire Chiefs Council (NFCC) said – a third higher than the record-breaking totals seen in 2022 and six times the number recorded last year – warning that hot and dry weather means the figures will likely only increase.”
And in this article, Spanish journalist María Ramirez points out that heatwaves are an annual event in her country, something people expect to happen. But she tells us, people like herself from Madrid are finding it more difficult to escape the heat by heading to the north of Spain, as places like Galicia are also experiencing greater heatwaves than preciously. In fact, all of Europe is heating up. We need a concerted, international effort to reduce emissions and fight climate change before it is too late.
Now, here’s little bugbear of mine. My eyes were drawn to this headline:
‘We popped the baby in a flowerpot!’ Anne Geddes on the beloved photos that made her famous
I have no objection to photos of babies. In fact I like looking at photos of friends’ babies, just as I enjoy looking back at photos of family members as babies. What I object to is “cute” photos of babies in unnatural poses, sometimes babies only weeks old, their little limbs manipulated into ridiculous, possibly cruel and abusive positions. So the idea of “popping a baby into a flowerpot” for a photo-shot is anathema to me, even if said flowerpot has been lined with fabric!
Yet such photos have made Anne Geddes famous.
Here’s a link to an article about her career. Rant over!
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!