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Home » on a high » More on Ford

More on Ford

 on a high, sorted  Add comments
Jan 022007
 

Reuters report on Ford’s historical legacy.

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 More on Ford  Posted by mil at 8:45 pm

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Revolution ’13: Managing Disruptive Change

  • Revolution ’13: a) on Capitalism and Piracy; and b) on a new kind of Communism

    Just had my mind blown.  If you watch only one video this year (and I generally don’t tend to watch any online videos), then please, please watch this one.  Amazing, amazing, truly amazing stuff. http://youtu.be/ja_kOmHBPVA I can’t begin to communicate to you exactly how much this five minutes of historical wordplay has suddenly made me see the world in a completely different way.  Earlier in the day, I was describing [...]

  • Revolution ’13: even this world of “hyper-knowledge” no longer necessarily equals power

    As regular readers of these pages will know, I find Twitter a very useful tool – both as an editorial filter of news and current affairs as well as something which freely helps to brainstorm ideas. Today, after a lot of the latter last night, I came to this conclusion: Is the #Twitter info-bubble the first time in history that knowledge *didn’t* confer power? #NHS #disabled #welfare It’s all here. [...]

  • Revolution ’13 (II): A Parallel #NHS For England

    I previously suggested we devise a parallel set of institutions to our existing corrupt and corrupting ones, with the aim of encouraging revolution – though of a bloodless kind – to take the place of a clearly failed social and/or neoliberal democracy. This morning, an NHS consultant tweeted as follows: Met a colleague in the corridor this morning. He thinks the NHS is doomed and we need to get out [...]

  • Revolution ’13: Time To Benchmark A New Democracy

    W Edwards Deming was a clever soul.  Here, you can find out more about what he achieved for the Japanese economy from the 1950s onwards.  And whilst he was a clever American soul, recognition for his total contribution to 20th century manufacturing was not, ultimately, terribly forthcoming from his homeland – at least, not in time to save, from one or other of its periodic slumps, what had become a [...]

A Mobile App in Search of Edgy Angels

  • Help Protect the Future by Changing Corporate Behaviours Forever

    Over the past couple of days, I’ve already posted twice on this subject.  The multitude of tax-avoiding companies which currently populate the planet is becoming manifest even for people as trusting as my parents: a generation, that is, which took its lead and ways of thinking from traditionally unquestioning sources such as the BBC and our newspapers. This tax avoidance, whilst legal, leads to situations: whereby wages of a minimum nature are paid to staff [...]

  • The Freedom app (or can anyone really be happy with how this world is turning out?)

    My Twitter moniker is “eiohel”.  It underlies everything I believe in.  Lower case corporate behemoths?  Are there such things?  Well.  If there aren’t, there damn well should be. And I’m here to prove it. My question tonight is whether anyone is really happy with how this world is turning out.  I intend to evidence that – in general – most people and organisations can’t be; that – even as we lob missiles at each other [...]

  • Memo to HMRC: Corporate Boycott app required!

    This is what the Guardian‘s poll claims about Starbucks’ UK operation: The coffee chain company has used legal tax-avoidance tactics to pay as little as possible, paying £8.6m in taxes on a reported £3bn in UK sales since 1998, and nothing in the past three years. Is this OK? At the time of writing this post, 93 percent of people say it’s not OK.  The other 7 percent are presumably employed by Starbucks’ clearly well-staffed [...]

Recent Posts

  • “Cheese!” I suppose we should say
  • How to rescue One Nation Labour from oblivion
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Posts From The Archive

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What I Write About

a con Amazon Big Society blogging Britain capitalism Chris Dillow Coalition Coalition capitalism Coalition cuts copyright corporations David Cameron democracy Ed Miliband Facebook George Osborne Google Guardian in a hole Internet Labour latterday capitalism Legal Aid LibDems New Labour New Toryism NHS NHS cuts on a high Paul Evans politicians politics publishing pyramid politics Rupert Murdoch social media social networks sorted Spain Tony Blair Tories Twitter unclassifiable WikiLeaks

From a very kind Dave Semple tweet:

... every revolutionary movement has its poets. You're just a poet writing in prose old boy ...

Something less revolutionary - me working on a PhD proposal:

How the knowledge economy's being hijacked by the social web; and Virtual obesity in technology corporations

My new Twitter killer, attenshn.com:

Mensch versus unmensch - the new hierarchy in politics

RSS My work blogsite – http://error451.me/

  • On #ORGConNorth
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  • Meeting up with my MP
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  • Why our knowledge society needs a “really good stuff” algorithm
  • Printer pain
  • On going to your public – even in state education
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Top Blogging

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  • Leveson's flawed framework and Murdoch's power
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  • “Cheese!” I suppose we should say » 21stCenturyFix.org.uk on The POV Machine
  • On an Internet of Things … whither a democracy of people? » 21stCenturyFix.org.uk on Defining corporate capitalism in just 30 words
  • Why we need more penny-whistle guys in politics » 21stCenturyFix.org.uk on Partisan Mil at Chester’s Labour Live event
  • Capitalism’s ultimate revenge: Coalition Britain » 21stCenturyFix.org.uk on Why Michael Gove needs Mr Sloppy
  • Capitalism’s ultimate revenge: Coalition Britain » 21stCenturyFix.org.uk on How meddling with history could backfire on the Coalition
  • Partisan Mil at Chester’s Labour Live event » 21stCenturyFix.org.uk on On privatising intimacy – the final and grandest privatisation of all
  • Partisan Mil at Chester’s Labour Live event » 21stCenturyFix.org.uk on A Crusade against the Monetisation of Life
  • The frontline the police really struggle with » 21stCenturyFix.org.uk on Were Hillsborough, Orgreave and Milly Dowler due to a badly policed state or a well-constructed police state?
  • mil on On loving Copland, Classic FM and the blessed common cold
  • mil on On loving Copland, Classic FM and the blessed common cold

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