Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

Monday, February 15, 2010

European politics - some basic info


Can you navigate the bureaucratic tangle of European power structures? This is my effort to get a grip on how the EU works now that the Lisbon Treaty has passed. It's very basic.

So the EU Commission is made up of 27 commissioners and is located in the Berlaymount building in Brussels. The Commission is the executive branch of the EU with responsibility for proposing legislation, spending and ensuring compliance with treaties. Jose Manuel Barroso has just started his second term (2010 to 2014) as the President of the Commission. Ireland's newly appointed Commissioner is Máire Geoghegan Quinn who is responsible for Research and Innovation (everything from Aeronautics to Water).

Then we have the European Parliament which is made up of 736 directly elected MEPs (members of the European Parliament). It meets in two locations: Strasbourg and Brussels. The current President is Jerzy Buzek (from the Czech Republic). It is the legislative branch of the EU. Ireland has 12 MEPS from 4 constituencies.

Finally (for this blog post in any case), there is the European Council that is made up of the heads of state or governments from each nation state. It meets twice every six months. Now that the Lisbon Treaty has passed it has a President - the delightfully named Herman Van Rompuy. The Council doesn't legislate. From what I can gather it sets the political agenda for the Union.

Well, as I say, that's just some basics. I hope to return to this topic in future posts. Have you got a question about the EU? or a comment?

The graphic above is of Justus Lipsius (or if you prefer Joose Lips). Joose was a Flemish professor who lived in the 1500s. The building that the EU Council meets in is named after him.

Friday, December 11, 2009

Fuck you said in Irish Dáil (parliament)


As a Green Party member I don’t know what to make of this. From a Joe Soap perspective it’s highly entertaining internet fodder, it’s refreshing. But there is a darkness to it. Is it more than just a laugh, is it a staging post in the country’s exasperation with politics? Could it conceivably get more people interested in politics because for once they understand the language a politician is using. Is it a low point in politics? It hardly seems that way when you think of the far more wretched things politics has brought us. Is it a harbringer of a tsunami of public anger in 2010 ? Is Gogarty a child lost in a sea of cynical adults, is he a muppet? Or is he a hero for being the antithesis of the smooth talking, PR groomed politician talking polite waffle? The joke on twitter is that he’s going for the 12 – 16 yer old vote ? Is that a good thing? Help me out here people, what should I make of this? Feel free to hurl abuse at me, Gogarty and the Greens. I reckon that’s only fair.

Read the full text of Paul Gogarty's speech here.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Laptops, digital media gadgets, Adbusters


The Congo River, Democratic Republic of Congo

Apparently the metal tantalum makes great capacitors for compact hi-tech items like mobile phones and laptop computers. I think its also known as tin-ore, cassiterite or coltan. There was a tantalum rush in Africa in the early part of this century. The price of tantalum was very high. One kilogram cost over a hundred dollars. You could sell a handful for around twenty dollars.

This is a link to an article by Greg Queyranne, a Canadian researcher focusing on conflicts in Central Africa. Thanks to Adbusters.

If you want to know more, you can watch this video.




Saturday, February 21, 2009

Somalia, Pirates, Tanks, Ukranians and Kenyans

Here's a video courtesy of Rocketboom which shows the end of a hostage situation in Somalian waters. Sounds like the commentary might be Dutch, but it is has subtitles. I don't quite understand the part about the Kenyans owning the tanks and the relevance of their relationship with Southern Sudan.


Friday, January 23, 2009

EU Audiovisual Library

So I took a look at the EU Commission's Audio Visual Services website. There's not as much video on it as I expected, not that I could find in any case. There's stock footage of the Argentinian Stock Exchange, archival footage from early EU conferences featuring lots of white suited men smoking pipes, cigars and cigarettes. The terms and conditions state that the footage "is offered free of charge for EU-related information and education purposes". The video below is a YouTube (or EUTube as the channel is called) promo for the audio visual services provided by the EU Commission.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Political lunch...

So... I'm on a mission to find out more about videocasting and internet tv. Here's a link to Political Lunch which I found on blip.tv.