Author: Leigh Banks

I am a journalist, writer and broadcaster ... lately I've been concentrating on music, I spent many years as a music critic and a travel writer ... I gave up my last editorship a while ago and started concentrating on my blog. I was also asked to join AirTV International as a co host of a new show called Postcard ...
The kingdom of the man in the shadows isn’t there if he doesn’t want you to see it …

The kingdom of the man in the shadows isn’t there if he doesn’t want you to see it …

If Bob Dylan doesn’t want you to see him, then you don’t.

He’s not there …

And believe me the depleted army of Paps in California rarely chase celebs like him down the street any more anyway

It works far more simply than that. And it benefits the celeb, the Paps and, of course, the fan who still wants to know what his star is doing in his ascendancy or his dotage.

Nowadays celeb’s ‘people’ let the Paps know when their charge is going to be hitting the streets, whether, like Janis, it is noon or midnight.

Of course there’s always the off chance that an itinerant lens-man might spots a celeb’s car going somewhere. To the supermarket for instance.

But the days of the stalking paparazzi are a thing of the past.

So, to this article below …

When the story and pic came out (a) to celebrate Bob’s 80th birthday (b) when interest in him had been revived by the success of Rough and Rowdy Ways (c) when Bob was about to announce he was going to champion the cause of prostate cancer (d) when Shadow Kingdom was … well … standing in the shadows and (e) another bootleg album was on the way … it is pound for a penny that Bob and his people knew exactly what was going on and what they were doing.

And the Paps were grateful because, compared to the 80s and the 90s, they are having a lean time of it. Now they had a pic of a very popular funky cool pensioner indeed.

And they had a story!

And the story still running – was Bob wearing a wedding in that picture or not? Has he remarried? And who is it?

This is not prurient press interest in a little old man … this is the power of Bob’s celebrity and his deterioration to keep on keeping on until his day is done…

And don’t forget that ring on his finger isn’t a new thing, he’s been spotted sporting it at live performances for the last decade at least. Just nobody bothered to ask the question.

Here is the original story taken from publicity:

HAS BOB MARRIED AGAIN? WELL, THE ANSWER MY FRIEND IS BLOWING IN THE BLING!

SEE THE OTHER PHOTOS OF BOB AND THE RING BY CLICKING THE LINK AT THE END OF THE ARTICLE

Our favourite man of mystery Bob Dylan gave the world a birthday present! And something for his fans to think about!

And I for one love him for it!

Just days before his 80th Bob took to the streets of his happy stomping ground, Santa Monica, wearing, shades, a garish black and white shirt, cargo pants, big boots – and wait for it …

He’s also wearing what to all intents and purposes looks like a wedding ring!

But does it have the ring of truth to it? Take a look for yourself by clicking the link at the end of this article. We couldn’t bring the photos directly to you because they are exclusive at the moment.

Well, as a writer covering Dylan for many years for regional and national newspapers in the UK, I would remind everybody that Bob is not only one of the greatest artists in the world, he is also a king of chameleons.

And if he doesn’t want you to see him, then you don’t. He can quite happily disappear from the public eye for years except for his public performances.

Good on him, it adds to the legend behind his genius, part of the back story which began more than 60 years ago when he ‘killed off’ his parents.

The media, both social and traditional, is awash with stories about him at the moment, so why wouldn’t he join in and give us something to talk about at this milestone in his amazing career? Publicity is the life-blood of a superstar’s life…

He is a man dedicated to his family and he might well have decide that his rollicking rolling stone life needs a bit of stability and he could have tied the knot again behind closed doors at his 6,000 square foot mansion in Malibu. He’s certainly had a lot work carried out there in recent years. Santa Monica is less than 20 miles from his home near the Pacific Ocean.

Bob has put in a trampoline, a small water tower and a basketball court along with a small cabin with a boat in the backyard. Horses and dogs roam the property

In 2014 reports said Bob had split with a third wife, Darlene Springs after a brief marriage that was never acknowledged or confirmed.

One thing is for certain though, the enigmatic star has been quarantining in LA since the COVID-19 pandemic.

Santa Monica is a place close to Bob’s heart – he has a boxing club there and it is rumoured that he has even had a synagogue built behind the cafe in the picture above which some say he also owns.

All we can say is thanks Bob for so many decades of fabulous entertainment both on and off the stage.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9589187/Bob-Dylan-seen-LA-time-decade.html

#bobdylan #santamonica #marriedagain

Precious memories as Bob goes back to his ‘hidden’ springtime in the 80s

Precious memories as Bob goes back to his ‘hidden’ springtime in the 80s

And So Dylan keeps coming back … all the way

To so many, Bob Dylan’s career in the 80s was drear and unfocussed … but there was a springtime and it happened in New York.

And here it is, documented as part of the never-ending bootleg series.

In some ways Bob Dylan in the 1980s was completely alternative, more than most of us ever noticed. He did a series of alternative versions of his already massive back-catalogue, he used an alternative voice, an alternative sartorial style and alternated between being hated and ridiculed.

And yet is so many ways, the truth is that the 80s was a brilliant part of his sometimes glittering, sometimes tarnished ballroom of a career.

In a way he was more alternative than he was perceived way back in the Sixties when he was branded like ‘pants and shirts’ as the voice of a generation and a folk hero.

Well, he was a folk hero for a bit, yes – and it’s still used as a ‘scratch’ biog by writers and bloggers who never noticed he actually moved like warm mercury in to blues, rock, country, folk, bluegrass, spiritual and Sinatra-style crooning.

And now, as Shadow Kingdom showed, he is plugged in to the cyber world of the covid-ridden PRESENT..

But from Empire Burlesque to Down in the Groove, Dylan seemed to be drifting to far from the shore of his audience – and yet his concerts, on the whole, were brilliant.

And now we are going back there with Springtime in New York, from 1980 – 1985

This next part of the bootleg series offers loads of alternate takes, unreleased numbers and rehearsals.

I for one want to back there…

Available as a 2 x LP or 2 x CD set, or a five-disc deluxe set, and will be released on September 17th.

https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/we-sheltered-from-the-storm-as-bob-stepped-out-of-the-covid-shadows-to-regain-his-kingdom/
https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/dylan-is-my-musical-god-but-my-god-some-of-his-shows-havent-been-music-to-anyones-ears-or-have-they/

We sheltered from the storm as Bob stepped out of the Covid shadows to regain his kingdom

We sheltered from the storm as Bob stepped out of the Covid shadows to regain his kingdom

We missed the show! But thanks to everybody who chipped in to tell us how it went!

It took a world pandemic to halt Bob Dylan’s Never Ending Tour. A greasy little spiky bug brought one of the music world’s greatest endeavours to its knees after 33 years.

It began in a pavilion in Concord, California, and went on round the world like a heady dose of blues, rock, country, folk, bluegrass, spiritual and Sinatra-style crooning for 3,066 concerts.

And in 2020 coming up 80 he was all set to fulfil dates in Japan, North American, and Europe.

Then Dylan was off the road.

And so, like ancient troupers, the travelling showmen, the bards and the itinerant actors, he found a way of keeping keeping on.

Once he’d plugged in to electricity – now he plugged in to the cyber world and went global again within a year.

He embraced new technology when people of his age end up embracing a zimmer frame…

Called ‘Shadow Kingdom’ it saw Bob in an intimate ‘club-like’ setting in his first concert performance since December 2019, his first performance since the release of ‘Rough And Rowdy Ways,’ which hit the Top Ten in 17 countries, and hit #1 on Billboard.

So, what was it like?

Well, as a music critic on some of the UK’s top titles and a radio host, I missed it because we got caught in one on Central Europe’s new and scary weather cycles… we had to take shelter from a storm in the High Tatras Mountains.

And by time we finally made it home beneath midnight’s broken toll and majestic bells of bolts struck shadows … the most anticipated concert in our Covid world was over.

So, we asked people on this site to be our reviewers and this is what they had to say:

Olga

Just watched it – brilliant, all sung in a bluesy style, amazing!

Dw

I loved the selection of materials he chose, the background setting, the audience and smoke filled room. The clock which was broken at 10.12, crooked window shades, bar tables. The two gals at his shoulders with “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight” were perfectly poised. All of it was stellar

Helen

I really enjoyed the concert I really did however it was advertised as a live stream that was not a live stream that was a video but I love my Dylan and I enjoyed it anyhow a bit disappointed but.

Patricia

Love everything Bob Dylan is involved in

Richard

Fun. Lovely sound. Nice to have no drums. Some impressive arrangements. Not much melodic singing? He coulda released excellent recent rewrites of GSS, STOF. Can’t wait to get it on my Walkman.

Cin

Pure genius!

Pete

The stream was very bad in Dublin on my desktop and we have FO cable

Former newspaper man Geoff Martin, from London said: “Shadow Kingdom is (ironically) a more illuminating and thought-provoking document than footage of a ‘live’ concert could ever be.

“And probably a much more interesting artistic concept for Dylan, who has already given us more ‘live’ performances than he would care to count.”

The Independent newspaper said this: Dylan’s first broadcast performance since 1994,” saw him take a selection of early career deep-cuts back to a monochrome rum shack in 1940s Alabama, backed by a masked, melancholy bluegrass band and watched by tables of disinterested cowboys and soul girls.

And the Big Issue said: “The songs were spectacular, restored and revitalised with the Dylan on display was at the top of his game.”

So, anyway, we missed the Shadow Kingdom, but we’ll catch it later. In the meantime, thank you everybody for taking the trouble to tell us what it was like.

#shadowkingdom #bobdylan #streaming #neverendingtour #veep #brilliant

As the century turned the CSA were already pushing us over the edge … 20 years on we are still killing ourselves because of them

As the century turned the CSA were already pushing us over the edge … 20 years on we are still killing ourselves because of them

UPDATED STORY

It was 3am.

The millennium had turned. And we’d done it … we’d got the first picture of the first baby to be born in the new century on the front page.

Tamera, from East Finchley, was now forever famous. She arrrived on the fourth chime of Big Ben, 15 seconds into the 21st century.

It had been a big night for me, I was night editor and handling one of the biggest news events in a hundred years … the old century handing itself over to the new in a flurry of fireworks, nostalgia and new life.

As the final editions hit the streets me and my staff shook hands and made spread bonhomic best wishes. After all we were hard-bitten journalists and didn’t go in for grand displays of affection.

There were no parties, no celebrations. No. We’d done our job and now we all went our own ways.

Most of us went back to our dormitory lives with the little wife and 2.3 kids.

Except for the likes of me … I went home to my empty cottage in the middle of nowhere and poured myself a lethal-sized drink and downed it. I intended to begin the new millennium asi meant to go on.

Pissed.

I wasn’t drinking to forget. I was drinking to avoid feeling anything. Besides, I needed to sleep because, in the morning I would drive a few miles down the road to see if I could catch a glimpse of my youngest daughter. She might be in the garden or I might spot her in the lounge window playing with her ‘new daddy’.

Then I wanted to drive 60 miles to Manchester to catch up with my other two children. They were older so might be actually sleeping off their own excesses … or might not even have made it home.

I switched on my old computer, allowed it to whirr and crunch, buzz and cough. Eventually it came back to life. I checked my emails, yep the usual sizeable chunk of my night-worker wages had gone from my account.

But I could get by, I told myself. I took a slug of my lethal drink.

Then I typed in Naccsa, Book of the Dead. It appeared before me and the haunting began again.

59 dead because of the CSA.

John Johnson, 40, from Hucknall in Nottinghamshire. He sent a note to the CSA before electrocuting himself in February 1999.
Tony Tipper, Derbyshire, was found dead in a fume-filled car in August 1999. He was also being chased for cash by the CSA.
Garrett Williams, 37, from Leicester, took his own life after arguing with his girlfriend over money for their children.
Father-of-two Anthony Clemson, from Wolverhampton, hanged himself after he was informed he owed nearly £8,000 in arrears when his case was finally investigated by the CSA.
And father-of-seven Michael Aston, 48, killed himself after receiving a bill for more than £10,000 from the CSA.

Almost 22 years ago?

Things have changed since then, of course. The agency has changed its name from the relatively child-friendly Child Support Agency to the much more robotic and metallic Child Maintenance Service. At your service eh? Who’s service?

And the suicide figures have changed too. For the worse.

The family court system is a juggernaut of terror, a Genghis Kahn of incomprehension and lack of care, given a Damoclesian sword to wield over the heads of parents – mainly dads – who for whatever reason ended up in a broken relationship. Or, in my case, two.

Craig Bulman, a seasoned campaigner against the child support system, said: “Parliament cannot continue to ignore this issue as it constitutes corporate manslaughter / crimes against humanity an investigation must be carried out as children are losing parents as a result of systemic wrongdoing by the Child Maintenance Service.”

Divorce applications are rocketing across the UK and a leading British law firm, Stewarts, says it has logged a 122% increase in enquiries. Citizen’s Advice also reported a spike in searches for help. 

Figures suggest that the basic cost of raising a child in the UK from birth to 21-years-old is £229,251.

***

So, back to the turn of the century:

Stoke Station, Sunday 3pm, jet-lagged in the rain. A bad day to have to go into the office, particularly when the car’s broken down…

I’d just got back from a business trip and my executive stress was about as sharp as my suit.

A slow train coming around the bend and it was already twenty minutes late, I can remember thinking, surely Richard Branson would have more fun with a Hornby Double “0”   in his loft.

It seemed unbelievable that less than 24 hours had passed since I’d climbed into the Business Class section of a 707 in a heatwave that had Raleigh-Durham airport in meltdown.  And now here I was …

The train crawled up to me with a kind of insolence and I embarked on a journey that was to change my life.

This creaking example of Mr Branson’s finest – rickety-crap, rickety-crap – suddenly decided to make good time and we rocked and rolled in the direction of Birmingham. So, I decided to use the journey to sift through the week’s-worth of mail that had gathered behind my door while I was away.

That first one was enough … I hadn’t expected anything like this…

After all, Tallulah and I had an arrangement – and I’d stuck to it rigidly since before our daughter was born. I know we no longer saw eye-to-eye, but I didn’t deserve this.

If it was true, then I realised, on that rickety train – and she realised in her little dormer bungalow in The Midlands – that life as I knew it was over.  A typical male reaction, I know. Emotional. Beer and wine money gone. What’m I going to do? You can hear the wail of a man supposedly getting his just desserts, even though he’d been paying for his child way before she was born.

This letter arrived in a large buff envelope, like bills used to. But the clue was there, in the deadly black stamp on the flap, the ultra modern Department of Works and Pensions in Dudley, West Midlands – millions to operate and failing to meet its targets by millions too.

I slipped the rest of my mail back into my briefcase and read the impersonal computer-generated missive over and over again. And the same question kept going through my mind:

Why had she done this?

One thing was clear though, the CSA didn’t care why she’d done it … all they wanted was my money and by the bucket load.  I’d filled in the forms months ago, but I thought it was merely a formality. I was paying for my child, once the good burgers of the CSA understood that, they would simply tell me to carry on as I had been doing. A bit naive I know.

But surely, they had made some horrendous mistake. Foolish is the man who believes in fair play, however. No, it was there in bold black Helvetica letters on white paper – they had almost trebled my maintenance payments overnight and in doing so had put me more than £3,000 in arrears.

But what hurt most at that moment on the swaying, hissing train was the reason for it happening. My ‘exotic’ life-style. That’s how Tallulah had described it –  my ‘exotic’ life-style. Namely, my all-expenses-paid business trips abroad. I’d made four in the eighteen months we’d been apart. Somehow she’d known about them all.

But what she had never understood was that I was a very provincial morning newspaperman – not a media baron – and these trips were simply a perk of the job.

We split up two years after our child was born.  In an attempt to treat our separation, at least, with a semblance of dignity we had worked out what I could afford to pay, taking into consideration the repayments on my £70,000 mortgage, bills and, not least, the £120 a week it cost me to travel to work.

The money we agreed worked out a little less than her ex-husband was paying for her first child, but he earned approximately £10,000 a year more than me. We also took into consideration her own income from her beauty products business and the fact that she was still able to – legally – claim substantial childcare and other benefits.

Midnight. Stoke Station in the rain. I finally found a taxi and made it home where I proceeded to do what men do. I got drunker than I’d been for months.

Welcome to my breakdown. I think it began the very next morning but took a few weeks to get a proper hold. That morning I woke up jet-lagged and with a hangover from hell. But what was worse was this feeling of floundering in a sea of anger and fear, this definitely wasn’t alcoholic remorse, it went deeper, right down inside of me like my emotions had been poisoned.

Oh, I carried on for a while, repaired my car out of my almost depleted savings and started paying the CSA’s demand. After that was paid along with my mortgage, my Council Tax, my water rates, a small loan, one credit card bill and my travel-to-work, I had less than £30 a week to live on. And there were obviously no benefits I could claim, it is decreed that single men must fend for themselves.

I also began a fruitless battle to get the CSA to see sense. But as far as they were concerned, they’d already seen it. As Helen at the CSA’s headquarters told me: “All we do is take away your pleasure money sir.”

That particularly incensed me as I had heard through the same grapevine as Tallulah that she had just booked an all-inclusive break in Mexico. She had also bought a new car on the strength of her newfound wealth.

It’s worth noting here that if I had had a child living with me, (Note: This part of the story was written in 2002) the CSA would have allowed me £26 a week for that child’s upkeep before making their assessment. Why then did it cost so much a week for my share in the upkeep of our child?

I telephoned Dudley again and they told me to ‘stop moaning and get on with my responsibilities’.

Oh, I carried on for a while, four months or so but my circumstances were dire. And as my bills became more and more foreboding, so did my mind.  I was literally losing it. My doctor said it was understandable, losing my daughter, my partner and not knowing from month to month if I could pay all my bills.

On the surface, in the office, everything seemed to be the same well-oiled engine but I knew the timing had slipped. Everything was working – but firing in all the wrong places. I knew my job was suffering and to make matters worse we’d just got a new editor. How things seem to conspire.

The broom the new editor was sweeping with was certainly bigger than my by-now battered ego. In morning newspaper terms, it was the nights of the long knives. Like with a car that is going wrong, all I knew to do was switch off. Shut down, cut off the power.

I know now that I’d fallen into a panic that was to last for two years. Day in. Day out.

A year into this state of mind I was diagnosed with reactive depression, which didn’t make me feel better at all. It started more warning bells sounding.  I realised, at the moment of diagnosis, that I had been officially written off as suffering mental health problems and, as my doctor warned me, this would make it difficult for me to find work in the future. Nobody wants to employ the nutter, simple as that.

I began to see these problems as endless precipices yawning before me and it was so easy to step off any of them at any time. There is no doubt about it, there is an indefinable security in the bleakness at the bottom of any one of them. But long before this diagnosis, I’d given up on going to work and gone on the sick.  You see, even though – before diagnosis – you don’t know what you are suffering from but you do know you can’t actually get up and go to work. There’s somebody else in the office in your driver’s seat.  He looks like you, he might even still act a little like you. But you don’t trust him.

And the new editor is sweeping cleaner and cleaner in ever decreasing circles around you. You know that this other person, the one in the driver’s seat, won’t open letters and refuses to answer the telephone.  You are floundering in this cold, dank, dirty fog that has become your mind and this fool who is pretending to be you is sitting there blotting out the only chink of light.

After the diagnosis things took a turn for the worse.   The company, understandably, saw it as a chance to get rid of me. Who can blame them? I hadn’t been in for more than a year. So, I got a small pay-off and, because I’d just turned fifty, a paltry pension.

However, my income was deemed to be too great to qualify for housing benefit, council tax allowance or, indeed, free prescriptions for my anti-depressants. More rules you see.

I felt too poor by now to   even self-medicate. To all intents and purposes, I was ruined. I was mentally ill and I couldn’t afford to live.

That’s when I started to take a look at my life and what it was actually worth. Not a great deal. I had become a bad debtor and, because of my illness, I could hardly think any more. But, with what little logic I did have left, I saw I could be far better off dead. I had insurances and an endowment that might pay off my mortgage. At least I could leave my children from my first marriage provided for – and I could set up a trust fund for my new daughter.

Welcome to my death wish…

It is documented that at least 100 men have taken their own lives as a direct result of the CSA getting their assessments wrong. NACSA, a small, but national, organisation fighting the CSA, publishes what it calls the Book of the Dead and says that the list will still grow despite the Government’s claim to have introduced new and fairer assessments.

The dead road I chose was a slow one, maybe because I was secretly hoping for some kind of redemption along the way.  I found the money to drink a lot more by stopping eating and other measures like not paying my bills. Funny thing, isn’t it, that poor people can always find money for drink. Then, the irony of it, I discovered I couldn’t drink myself to death – the hangovers hurt too much.

So I tried to become positive and look for help by researching men’s groups. That’s when I encountered the Achilles Heel of man-dom.  Men themselves. There is no help for men, there is no support system, no real benefits, no sympathy. And it is our own fault. A clear case of man’s inhumanity to man.

But we shouldn’t complain, men normally simply accept it as the law of nature.  Men accept that they are the hunters who gather and then are eventually gathered from. It’s the way of the world.

Self-medication is very often all we have left and I had abortively been overdosing every day. In a haze of booze and insecurity I contacted the UK Men’s Movement, a volatile organisation that is proud of its macho anger.

Because of my professional credentials I was put straight through to its chairman, a real Rambo of men’s rights.  His zealousness was admirable but he swamped my problems as he demanded that I put my talents to good use and co-ordinate a press campaign with him.

His parting growl of ‘shit or get off the pot’ summed him up.

Finally, I found NACSA and its little Book of the Dead. Forgive me if this brands me a male chauvinist pig but I was more than a little surprised to be contacted by a woman.

Now here is the First Lady of men’s rights, a charming middle-aged mother   who began campaigning after her new husband was almost ruined by the CSA.

She discovered immediately that the CSA had got my case wrong – and that they actually owed me money. There had been an horrendous mistake, like I’d told them two years ago. But they had denied it, threatened me, in my incapable state, with endless paperwork and adjudicators. They had almost killed me.

Now they were going to pay.

But there was a brick wall between me and the faceless operatives of the CSA. My head was no longer strong enough to batter it down.  I wrote letter after letter, I made phone call after phone call, I demanded, I threatened and I sulked.

And months later I got a letter of apology from the CSA saying they would compensate me ‘for inconvenience and error by the agency’. The cheque they enclosed   for my reconstituted life was just £75.  It didn’t even take the top off my credit card bill.

Well, perhaps that should have been the end of my story. But it isn’t.

I met a woman and just like in true romance, we had a lot in common, including the CSA.

She was about to loose her £250,000 home on the borders of Shropshire because her husband, a self-employed salesman who had run-off with his business partner, refused to contribute towards the upkeep of their two sons and their home.

Angelina was forlornly trying to meet the bills on her four-bed detached village property from the money she earned in a tiny stationery store.  It  was an uphill battle and eventually the bank decided to foreclose over   debts from her husband’s business which were secured against the home.

In despair, Angelina finally went back to the CSA, believing that they would get money from him so that she could service the debts until the house was sold.

Within a month the CSA unapologetically came back to her explaining that they had dropped the case because her husband was self-employed. It was too difficult, they said, for them to discover how much he earned.

The house was sold at a knockdown price and Angelina received state benefits of £85 a week to support herself and her sons who were in full-time education. Her ex has never contributed a penny and has never been approached again by the CSA.

Meanwhile, I was subject to regular investigations by social services and the CSA who have accused me of working as a part-time fireman, of buying and selling cars and of working markets with a friend of mine who suffers from diabetes and circulation problems and has rarely left his house in the last two years.

Well, am I just a whinging bloke who has shirked his responsibilities? Or am I, my ex, my daughter, my new partner, her sons – and ultimately the taxpayer – all victims of  a bureaucratic steamroller which has for decades been allowed to rampage through the wasteland of broken relationships and flatten what little is left?

There is no stopping it when it starts rolling at you – you can fling everything it demands in its path, you can fill in the forms, show them your wage slips, reveal your bank account, details of your past and your future, the state of your health, the state of your mind, details of your new partner’s earnings, her wage slips, bank accounts.  But it won’t stop them.  Every move I make, every change in my circumstances, every penny I earn, I have to report to them so they can re-assess me. This could happen month-by-month.

Somebody who works for an employer dare not earn overtime – or get a second job – it cooks the books too much and takes too long to sort out. A week’s overtime can have you paying at a new higher rate for months. And it is the devil’s own job to get a refund.

The men’s movement put it this way: “The practical effect of CSA harassment of fathers is that they eventually acquire an entirely new set of values that are utterly detrimental to the well-being of society.  They go into the black economy, they fiddle the Social.

“Fathers who fight hardest for their kids often suffer the most psychologically, especially middle-class ‘believers’, the type who bought into the whole bourgeois ideal – they believe the system is there to help them. They soon finds out it isn’t.  Businessmen hide earnings. They lose the incentive.

“The working-class guy goes on the Social and works in the black economy. Wife, CSA and kid get nothing. This is what happens and it’s to no one’s benefit, not the State, the ex, the man, and definitely not the kids.”

In fact it is now a far more dangerous organisation to become involved with. In the past one of the few ways to get the CSA off your back was to wait until your ex-partner came off benefits, then there was a chance that you and she would make a private agreement.

But because tax credits – the most predominantly claimed benefit – is not actually considered to be a benefit at all under the rules, most are now considered private clients and there is no escape.

NACSA said: “Nowadays, most parents with care want to involve the CSA because they know what damage they can do to their ex partner. It’s not just a case of getting the ex off benefit – its getting her to agree to come out of the system.

“Under the old rules the mother’s income would be included assuming she had sufficient to contribute. Under new rules, the mother’s income is disregarded.

“See that’s how it works – and fails. Women who are greedy and   want to punish their ex have the weapon and ex-partners who are fighting tooth and nail to keep contact with their children, and would never dream of not paying towards them find it difficult. But just looking to be treated fairly.  This is a Government-organised battle of the sexes.”

#csa #cms #familycourts #childsupport #maintenance #children #familywars

So, which are you? An ex-pat or a migrant? Is there a difference and does it matter?

So, which are you? An ex-pat or a migrant? Is there a difference and does it matter?

In recent days on sites like this, people who have chosen to live abroad for whatever reason have been expressing their dismay at being described as ex-pats.

Some say the word expat is loaded with innuendo, insult and whiffs of old spice and colonialism. They see it as a sniffy term conjuring up white linen suits, panamas hats, G&Ts, punkahwallas and privilege in the blistering sun.

It’s a very British word, an insulting cut above being an immigrant or a migrant or even a foreign worker.

So I began to ponder what makes one person an expat, and another a foreign worker or migrant?

And I realised the distinction matters, because the difference in definition can become racist and dehumanising.

It is a way of defining sets of people … one aloof, well-off and nationalistic despite their abandonment of their homeland.

The other – migrants – can be seen as suggesting somebody on the run, a boat person. Broken families at definable borders.

Well, I have spent many decades of my life crossing borders so that I could work in my chosen job. I am a writer, editor and broadcaster.

There is no doubt that in the UK immigration and the movement of workers across borders were two of the defining political issues of the Brexit referendum and in the US, jobs and immigration were at the forefront of President Donald Trump’s sad victory.

And there is no doubt that my job as a travelling writer has become more difficult. Forgetting about Covid for a moment, it has just become harder to get about.

Academics have spent years trying to categorise people like me. Are we ex-pats or migrants, immigrants?

https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/i-pity-the-poor-immigrant/

Dr Yvonne McNulty who has been trying to define the terms for at SIM University in Singapore. says: “It’s not about the colour of your skin, and it’s not about the salary that you earn.”

A business expatriate, she says, is a legally working individual who resides temporarily in a country of which they are not a citizen, in order to accomplish a career-related goal no matter the pay or skill level.

But Chris Brewster, another researcher, says she’s wrong. Migrants, by definition “are people who intend to go and live in a county for a long time and they’re not allowed to. They have to go home when they’ve completed their assignment.”

However, Malte Zeeck, founder and co-CEO of InterNations, the world’s largest expat network, with 2.5 million members in 390 cities around the world, says: “It’s all about the motivations behind their decision to move abroad.

“There are many types of expat with many different reasons to do so,” Malte says: “For an ex-pat, living abroad is rather a lifestyle choice. not borne out of economic necessity or dire circumstances in their home country such as oppression or persecution.

“Immigrants are usually defined as people who have come to a different country in order to live there permanently, whereas expats move abroad for a limited amount of time or have not yet decided upon the length of their stay.”

So, in fact I think that calling yourself an ex-pat is just a way of describing yourself as somebody who got lucky and moved abroad.

https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/why-we-went-1500-miles-from-portugal-to-costa-blanca-by-taxi/

Yes, it has old cultural implications but so do so many things in the rich world of developing language.

So, what do you think? Do you want to be known as an ex-pat? A migrant? An immigrant? An itinerant worker?

#expat #foriegn #migrant #immigrant #lifestlye

THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY – WHY DO WE STILL HATE PEOPLE FOR THE WAY THEY LOOK?

THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY – WHY DO WE STILL HATE PEOPLE FOR THE WAY THEY LOOK?

And why have I had to disguise certain words in this article to avoid the robots of social media taking it down because their AI brains just didn’t understand it?

George Floyd wasn’t a good man, no doubt. And on that particular night Marcus Rashford wasn’t the best footballer.

But why are they attacked for their skin?

They came from worlds thousands of miles apart … one from the back streets of Manchester’s notorious Wythenshawe estate. The other from the rough St. Louis Park in Minneapolis.

Marcus became a star and a campaigner … George became a truck driver and bouncer.

Horrifically, as we all know, George died under the knee of a vicious man of authority, a man granted a gun to protect himself and others.

The City of Minneapolis settled a wrongful death case with George’s family for $27 million. They can now be considered rich.

Marcus Rashford is rich by any definition. He is said to earn $13 million (£10m) in a year.

The picture (above) of George Floyd was sent to The Society by the family of Karin, aged 13, who lives in Stropkov, Slovakia.

Karin was watching TV when a news broadcast high-lighted what had happened to George. “It made her very sad,” a family member said.

And a few days ago, a young boy wrote to Marcus. He said: “I hope you won’t be sad for too long because you are such a good person. Last year you inspired me to help people less fortunate. “I’m proud of you. You will always be a hero.”

Out of the minds of babes eh?

And yet still the scoffing laughing hyenas of hatred stalk our streets.

Normally, these people preface their mindless grievances by saying: “I’m not a r*c*st but…” and then go on to explain exactly why they are.

Jadon Sancho, aged 20, and Bukayo Saka, aged 19, also received vile online abuse after missing penalties in the Euro final shoot-out.

But, why does kicking a ball badly deserve a kicking of your psyche and dignity and your human rights too? And why does passing a bad banknote deserve having your life crushed out of you by a man in big boots and a uniform?

 Boris Johnson has told the trolls hounding the three young England players to “crawl back under your rock”. He said: “To those who have been directing racist abuse at some of the players, I say shame on you.”

The Met Police have vowed to go after the trolls. Deputy Assistant Commissioner Laurence Taylor said: “We’ve launched a post-event investigation and will actively pursue and investigate offenders and criminal offences.”

Let’s hope that they find them and prosecute them for hating people for nothing other than hatred itself.

This hatred has nothing to do with jobs, patriotism, housing, benefits or crime. It is to do with the pack mentality of vicious animals who attack for pleasure, not survival. And claim they are doing it for Britain.

No they are not.

#patriotism #housing #blm #marucsrashford #georgefloyd #Jadon Sancho #Bukayo Saka #Eurofinal

It’s confirmed, Euro double covid jabs don’t count back in UK and not even the embassy will help you….

It’s confirmed, Euro double covid jabs don’t count back in UK and not even the embassy will help you….

UPDATE: The British Embassy in Bratislava confirmed that ex-pats wanting to return to the UK will have to self-isolate when they reach ‘home’.

The emergency department at the embassy at the heart of Bratislava’s old town said categorically that ‘after July 19th‘ anybody who had their full set of covid vaccinations in the EU will have to self-isolate when they return to the UK’.

The embassy – there to help British nationals having problems in foreign lands – also said it was not in a position to help ex-pats in Slovakia who are finding it impossible to get a copy of the EU covid ‘passport’ which would allow them to travel across Europe on their way back to the UK.

A spokeswomen at the embassy said: “We can’t help with that, you’ll just have to keep trying the Slovak health ministry yourself.”

She was also unable to supply an alternative telephone number or a contact at the ministry.

Yes, we are the forgotten ones, abandoned in the foreign climes of our former ‘friend’ Europe, trapped by one of the most outrageous and pernicious bits of penny-pinching legislation in decades.

In the left-hand corner, us ex-pats … in the right-hand corner, the British government.

And the left-hand corner comes out fighting– Jab! Jab!

Then the right-hand corner slips in a hook – AND IT’S A KNOCKOUT BLOW!

Yes, we are British citizens and we’ve had our full set of jabs, the problem is we’ve had them in on the wrong continent. And that isn’t acceptable to Grant Shapps, the UK’s transport minister.

And guess where he is redirecting the blame to? the NHS, that’s where.

So, as the rest of our fellow citizens in the UK get a ‘passport’ to the pub and the parks and Penzance, us ex-pats are likely to be stuck in a sweltering second rate budget hotel in a lovely seaside town called Folkestone.

And it’s going to cost us thousands. And we’re going to have to pay for loads of tests too. And they are estimated at about £300 per average family …

It is worth noting that these tests are free in lots of Europe. But not in the UK, because you have to have NHS-recognised tests which cost a fortune. Which is a bit of another misnome because all of us ex-pats have spent decades paying in the the NHS, and I’ve always believed it was free at the point of access.

Now the British in Europe site, which describes itself as a coalition of citizens in Europe, has written a furious letter to Grant Shapps and the British government about people like us who have ended up in this outrageously untenable situation.

Here is some of what they have to say. And we here, at The Society, wholly back them.

“Dear Minister

It appears, although this remains to be clarified, that UK citizens fully vaccinated abroad and living in amber countries are not included in a change of quarantine policy.

We would like to know the epidemiological and legal bases for this decision as we can see no medical or legal reason for it based on the publicly available evidence of the protection against Covid-19 offered by the vaccinations authorised by the EMA and MHRA.

Any UK resident who has been vaccinated with the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines has received a dose made in the exact same production facilities as a UK citizen living in an EU amber country. And a great many recipients of the Astra Zeneca vaccine in the UK have received doses manufactured in the same plants in the EU which supplied our doses. The vaccinations are the same, the medical and public health impacts are the same, yet the quarantine policy is not.

This policy is epidemiologically illiterate (most of the amber list countries have a 7-day case rate lower than that of the UK) and the communications around the policy are confused and misleading. As I write (accessed at 08.07.2021 at 1459) the UK embassy in Luxembourg states:

TRAVEL UPDATE: From MONDAY 19 JULY 4am British fully vaccinated adults travelling to the UK from amber list countries will not need to isolate including those on clinical trials – another step to fully reopening international travel. Children under 18 will not need to self-isolate.
Luxembourg is on the UK amber list.”

https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/how-covid-is-closing-the-book-on-democracy-we-meet-a-man-on-the-street/

Yet journalists are being told by Number 10 that this is incorrect and the new rules do not apply to British citizens living in amber countries.”

Well said, the British in Europe.

And this is the BIG question they ask Grant Shapps: “Do you agree that this policy will make it extremely difficult for UK citizens resident in EEA amber list countries to travel back to the UK to see family, in many cases after a period of absence of well over over a year, as we face yet another serious wave of Covid-19, and that the policy should be revised urgently to apply to UK citizens vaccinated abroad?”

And don’t forget Grant, old chap, many of us came over to Europe to work for British companies, so continued paying into the UK through taxes etc … and many of us need to come home because Covid has killed off our jobs, work and businesses and many of us are feeling the pinch.

And now we are facing bills of thousands to come home.

PS

At least a thousand Italy supporters were to be shuttled into the UK to provide an officially sanctioned Azzurri chorus for the Euro 2020 final against England.

The UK government has eased the rules for these supporters and a massive amount of VIPs.

They could attend the match without Covid quarantine.

But there were terms and conditions to allow the fans travel in and out of the UK, which so many people either don’t know or are choosing to ignore.

They had to remain in a bubble, segregated at all times, with no contact with the general public, and they had to quarantine for five days upon return to Italy.

The rules for the VIPs were looser, with a “limited cohort” spending the entire week in London and those attending matches allowed to stay in designated hotels and travel in designated private transport.

Mum-preneur Sara opens HQ for pampering and empowerment after covid and loss of ‘Aussie Mamma’

Mum-preneur Sara opens HQ for pampering and empowerment after covid and loss of ‘Aussie Mamma’

https://www.mammashq.com.au/

A salon with real heart has been dedicated to a Perth mum who died of breast cancer last year.

The owner of Mammas HQ, Sara Banks, has called the salon’s crèche The Orchard Room in tribute to Eileen Orchard who lost her cancer battle in December 2020.

Sara said: “Eileen was my Aussie Mamma. She came into my life when I moved next door to her in Bayswater in 2016. Eileen supported me in so many ways from making a curry for me each Wednesday after I returned to work  from maternity leave, to being my on-hand support through redundancy and so many other things I am eternally grateful for.

“I promised Eileen I’d name a room after her at Mamma’s HQ.  The Mamma’s HQ crèche will be welcoming, vibrant, creative and colourful just like Eileen was.”

Eileen

 ***

Sara has been on a long road to reach Mamma’s HQ, one of heart-break and inspiration after losing a job due to Covid which created worsening domestic abuse and leaving her penniless with just a suitcase and a box of toys in a Perth refuge last May. Within 12 months Sara rose from the depths of destitution and has ended up a mumpreneur single mum.

Mammas HQ puts Perth’s Mums and children first, and is the first of its kind in Western Australia (and possibly Australia too). 

MAMMA’S HQ, 10 Gregory Street, Wembley, Perth

https://www.mammashq.com.au/

Sara said, “One thing I’ve learnt in the last 12 months is just how important self-care is and that self-care takes many forms that we may not even realise. We all need to make time for ourselves, time to see friends, have you nails done, your hair, have a glass of wine and a chat. When you become a Mum your time is even more precious than it was before and Mammas HQ will fill the gap to enable mums to relax and get some me time. “

Sara says: “I’ve always been good – without knowing it – at taking the time to pamper myself with a face mask or going to my local salon to get my nails, hair and other beauty treatments done.

“This is definitely something I found more difficult to do with when I had my son two years ago and after a very unrelaxing trip to my local hairdresser with him at 3 months old I realised there was a gap in the market for a beauty and hair salon with childcare under one roof. “

” I also knew that if I ever opened a business it would have to have giving-back as part of its ethos. That’s why Mamma’s HQ is a social enterprise, it not only gives priority employment to Mums, enables Mums to bring their children to work and use the creche, 10% discount to single Mums and clients have an option to donate to a fund to provide women who have escaped domestic violence with training in hair and beauty skills to work at Mamma’s HQ that they can also do in their free time to supplement their income and become self-sufficient. 

“even with all of these social policies Mamma’s HQ will still provide a luxurious and relaxing service to clients, including a glass of bubbles on arrival.” 

10 Gregory Street, Wembley, WA 6014

 Tel: 0450-20-70-70

OPENING HOURS

(by appointment)

Mon – Tue: 10am – 6pm \ Wed – Fri: 10am – 8pm  
​​Saturday: 9am – 7pm  \  Sunday: 11am – 5pm *

#mammashq #perthsmallbusiness #openingsoon #perthmammas #mammashq #perthsmallbusiness #openingsoon #perthmammas

#Mammas #me-time #pampering #allbymyself #changes #beauty #hair #makeup #divorced #splitup

Is justice finally just around the corner for Keith? His brother’s thoughts…

Is justice finally just around the corner for Keith? His brother’s thoughts…

Alan Bennett, the brother of Keith – victim of Hindley and Brady – has shared these thoughts.

All we can say at The Society is well done Alan and as always we are right behind you.

Alan wrote: “I received an email from the Home Office with an update on the progression of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill. In particular the part that is of main interest to us as Keith’s family and, hopefully, for other families in the future that are in a similar position to us regarding missing loved ones. The main part was as follows: The Bill has passed through the House of Commons and the process will now start again through the House of Lords, expected to take place between September and December with the hope that initial stages may be completed before.

When the Bill was in Committee stage, the Minister for Safeguarding and the opposition’s shadow Policing Minister noted their support for the measures intended to help the police find human remains and expressed their hope that those measures would be able to provide some support for Keith’s family.

So, things are moving along although frustratingly slowly, but still moving along. That can only be a good thing.

Once again, thank you all for your care and support for Keith and his family over all those years and continuing to the present day. It is always very much appreciated and makes the fight for justice that much easier to endure and gives us the boost to keep going.”

https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/bradys-killing-streets-what-it-was-like-growing-up-in-shadows-of-evil/
https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/as-new-crime-bill-lumbers-on-keith-bennetts-brother-asks-how-police-can-be-denied-access-to-murder-clues/
https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/how-a-barbers-shop-conversation-about-moors-victim-keith-helped-lift-brothers-battered-spirits/