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An occasional commentary on the fundamental things in life

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Latest diary entries by JonathanG tagged with "union"

So, I should probably do the polite thing and introduce you to my shiny new blog, but you're not really that interested, and I don't really want to waste yours and my time by writing personal nonsense that is both irrelevant and boring.
So, without further ado, a rant about apathy from the archives of unpublished material by me:

    Apathy is, and has been for a very long time, a big deal for Students' Unions and political parties alike. It's getting to the point where people are so apathetic, they don't know what apathy is. To quote an NUS publication, apathy is defined as "indolence of mind, indifference to what is calculated to move the feelings, or to excite interest or action". It's really easy to go down the route of "nobody told me", or "I didn't know", or "I don't understand it", but if you look past that, it's pretty obvious that a lot of people hide behind a carefully constructed wall of ignorance to protect them from tough decisions.   

    One of the more "Leftist" arguments to why apathy is so rife in general is that the economic boom of the 1980s produced a generation of materialist consumers, bred to buy and satisfy their every want. It has its appeal, but I prefer to hope that at least some students are socially aware. There is an awful lot of complaint without action now though, and it is a symptom of our new service culture, wanting everything now and cheap. We're really frittering away the greatest gift of the technology age here, the internet. It's the greatest tool for getting educated and getting your views out to other people. Most people use it to, let's face it, look at other peoples' bits, and funny cats with captions, in between checking your Facebook every five minutes.  But used correctly, it's your very own press office and presswire in one, if you know what you're doing.   

    I know a lot of students who are stung by that old chestnut of a stereotype, the drinking, stinking, beans-on-toast-munching, Diagnosis-Murder/Neighbours/Simpsons/This Morning-watching layabout. It's pretty obvious that most students aren't like that, but who among us can honestly say they've fully stood up and proven them wrong? Should we revel in a stereotype, especially one so damaging?It's only a small example, but it's true. Another example, for your consideration...

...If the Union decided to stop four sabbatical officer's positions and raise the price of snakebite to £2.50 a pint, what would get the most protests?
Honestly?
Exactly.
The sabbs do a hell of a lot for us as students, but heads would roll if drinking was affected, and that's just the way it is. It wouldn't take an awful lot to change it, but as the cash register manual says of the cash drawer, "Change comes from within." Before any organisation can encourage activism, we have to look within ourselves and find the guts to do something bold.

    If we look back in history, students across the world have laid down their lives for a principle, from Kent State in 1970, to the Burmese Student Uprising of 1988, to the famous Tiananmen Square Protests in China in 1989. Students have been involved in real democratic change in recent years too. In Ukraine, the Orange Revolution succeeded mostly due to student activism. I look at actions like these and wonder why we can't take the time to protest the biggest outrage of recent times, the Iraq War. If we even did one protest, every student as one, we could send a clear signal to the world. If only to honour the fallen students of the past, or show solidarity with suffering students in places like Burma.

    Taking action is tough, but it's worth doing. People often say "I can't make a difference, I'm o...

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about me

"Biomedical scientist, front page journo"

I'm a first year student on the BSc (Hons) Biomedical Science degree pathway, back from 2001, where I had a "funny turn" of sorts, long story and all that. But anyway, though I'm a first year, I'm a veteran of the uni, and I know a lot about a lot, and a ... (read more).

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BSc (hons) Biomedical Science

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