BIG NEWS: I’m now the Chair for the Warsash Residents’ Association

I’m extremely pleased to announce that I am the new Chair of the Warsash Residents’ Association. I’d like to start by thanking the members of the association for making me feel so welcome and the members of the committee for giving me the opportunity to help out in my home community. I feel it is also important to thank the former chair, Chris Bridges, for all his hard work as Chair for the last year.

I’m very happy to be in a position where I can give back to the community I’ve grown up in. Warsash is my home – it’s where my heart lies. I hope to raise the profile of the Residents’ Association and engage the whole of the Warsash community into what is happening in our local area, to keep everyone in the know and not just a few.

Not only am I the youngest Chairperson in the Association’s 82 year history, but at 19 years old I may very well be the youngest chairperson in the entire country!

I’m getting very hopeful for the future.

Thanks for reading,

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Miles

Democratic Revolution

Some time has passed from the famous Brand-Paxman interview and I can’t help but comment on the response and debate it has triggered across the country.  I myself hold the view that the only way to get things done is to fight the system by using the system, but how can we if we can’t clearly see who is doing things for political gain, or doing things to genuinely help better society?  My response is, look at the people in your area. If you can see people in the local paper, online newsletter or just out and about doing things for the community who then turn out to be a candidate in the next local/general/euro/whatever election then you’ve got to ask yourself a very basic and fundamental question “to what gain is this person doing this?” 

I can PROMISE you that what I do in the community comes from loyalty to where I was brought up. For too long I think that people have been trodden on, walked over and spat on by political elites. The issues are being told to us, by the media or by politicians who just want to make a quick buck off public opinions. I believe that people who genuinely take their time (no matter how inconvenient it may be to the people in the area) to go out and talk to residents in the area, no matter if they can or can’t vote yet, about what concerns them are the people who should be considered “true politicians”. 

Whether we like it or not we live in a representative democracy, every so often we must do our duty as citizens and vote to our hearts content. It may very well be “the lesser of two evils” but with each cross on a ballot we are expressing our opinions without having to tell a single person. Each cross is a written bullet, fired towards whoever is in power (or in some cases in opposition) to tell them “I don’t like what you’re doing” and with that written bullet we can annihilate an entire Government without actually killing a single person. I remember hearing something similar by former Labour MP Tony Benn, who if you know me or read the Portsmouth News piece about me, is my inspiration for getting involved.

The thing that bothers me is the fact that in secondary schools there are lessons called “Citizenship”, now these lessons are supposed to educate people on how society functions and what people can do to help out and how the system works, and indeed how people can shape it. Now… did we ever learn that? I can tell you now that in my time in Secondary Education not once did I know what “First Past The Post” was or even that there were 650 MPs sitting in Westminster. We spent our time quite literally chatting about who was seeing who and watching films, a pure WASTE of taxpayer money and indeed valuable time. 

I propose that we replace Citizenship lessons with Electoral Studies, something where people at a young age can learn about how they can shape society and how they can really “stick it” to the man! This is something that I have discussed with friends, family and indeed my own teachers. It’s something that people have reacted warmly to when I propose this idea and in fact something that Michael Gove should consider if he’s serious about making education better. In my opinion he has desecrated Education, I’ve stood on the picket lines with my teachers (present and former) and they have all given their experience of the last 3 years of this Coalition government and how much they have been, screwed, by the Ministry for Education. 

It’s not fair that even teachers, people who have devoted their lives to shaping the minds of the young and inspiring a whole generation, are feeling alienated and disenfranchised with the system. It’s something that has been bothering me personally and quite frankly I’ve decided to try and defend the system, because it’s not too late. We can save it, we can really do something. I’m not saying “YES WE CAN” like a certain US President and then end up killing people with drone strikes, I’m not saying “We must stop the bankers” and then give them a huge bailout. 

I’m saying is that, we need to get involved, really tell the people at the top that we’ve had enough. I’m only involved myself because I feel that if we are united in believing that there’s something wrong, then why don’t we do something about it? Why can’t we just pull together despite the cynical attitudes and the pessimistic viewpoints of our democracy and fire those who we feel have wiped the floor with us by going back on promises and things they’ve campaigned on!

Like in my previous post, I said “get involved” and there is a great deal of caution when it comes to that phrase. People seem to be under this illusion that it means “Stand as a candidate” or “Join a political party” and I don’t necessarily mean that (although that being said it’d be nice to see some new faces at local meetings now and again) I mean keep your ear to the ground about local happenings, find out who has said what and find out, before the official list is published, who is standing in your area. It’s all about accountability and if you choose not to vote, the turnout declines further and further. The day when turnout is below 20% nationally is a day when things start to seem a little authoritarian and we get screwed even harder. It’s something we have GOT to avoid. It’s something we must fight against and band together.

I feel I’ve said enough but I’m open to hear what you’ve got to say.

Thanks for reading,

Miles Grindey

 

Fighting for tomorrow

I came back from a Green Party meeting last night feeling really inspired and feeling like there was going to be some sort of change in the next year. All my life I’ve heard people complaining, suggesting how they’d do things, what they feel is wrong with society and when I turned 18 earlier this year I decided that I was going to do something about this.

When I was 11 I remember meeting like minded people (I kid you not) who were fed up with the current local government (Tory dominated) and how we’d do things differently. Fast forward to seven years later and I’m getting involved, but are they? The answer is no. They are not, but they aren’t the only ones who aren’t.

The local area has many opportunities for people of all ages to weigh in on local issues, ways to get involved and do something like the Western Wards Community Action Team (CAT) meetings or Warsash Resident’s Association. The problem however is that the main turnout for these events are usually retired pensioners. Not everyone in the area is aware, what we are missing at these events are parents, teachers, doctors, nurses, teenagers, basically the rest of the population.  I reckon there isn’t enough in terms of awareness of these events, if I were a Councillor for the area I would actively go to schools and talk about the electoral process and how with a single vote you can destroy a government without killing a single person, contrary to what Mr Brand believes.   

I do whatever I can with the resources I’ve got to get people involved, and to really (in the words of Jack Black in ‘School of Rock’) “Stick it to the man”. There’s a common misconception going around that when someone says “Get involved” it means “Stand for an election”. Now I would love it if there was hundreds of people queuing up to be a paper candidate, but at this point in time we just need people – members or not, supporters or friends to help us show the political elite what we mean when we say we, the people, want change!

I would argue, ideally, that people should ignore the media spin on politicians. That not everyone who is on a ballot paper isn’t just in it for the money/power but some, like Aristotle would argue, some are in it to make a difference and genuinely make life better for everyone.

I will be standing for election again in Warsash next May, where the Local & Euro Elections will be held.  We can make this idea a reality.

 

Thanks for reading

 

Miles Grindey