Today, some of the indi­gen­ous lead­ers at Camp Sov­er­eignty decided they didn’t want non-indi­gen­ous people in the camp after dark and some people expressed a desire that non-indi­gen­ous people stop help­ing out. As a result, the food not bombs people have packed up their kit­chen and gone home and many of the other organ­isers, some of whom are from Arabic her­it­ages or Indian her­it­ages and are not Anglo, have left also. That we even have to dis­cuss who is from what her­it­age is depress­ing in a way; surely the Anglo people who want to be at Camp Sov­er­eignty are not the enemy?

After yes­ter­day, when Aunty Sue was chat­ting with a Palestinian woman in a hijab and I thought we had an amaz­ing example of real mul­ti­cul­tur­al­ism func­tion­ing in a micro­cosm of shar­ing and wel­come, I have to say this is a gut­ting result from my perspective.

And tonight I hear on the news that the Gov­ern­ment is trying to push through a law that anyone who calls the ter­ror­ist hot­line could now have their phone, e‑mail or sms tapped. Yeah, free coun­try, great. Not only do we want a cul­ture of sus­pi­cion where you dob in your neigh­bour but report­ing someone will now, without your know­ledge, implic­ate you in their cap­ture in other ways. What if it was your son or your brother you were report­ing, out of fear they were get­ting into some­thing they didn’t under­stand and that you felt power­less to stop? The only good result to this I can see is that fewer people might use the ser­vice to anonym­ously slander someone on the basis of their appearance. 

And The Body Shop has been bought by L’Oréal and appar­ently Green and Black organic chocol­ate was bought by Cad­bury-Schweppes last May and I missed it.

It’s all much more fraught with com­plex­ity. I pre­ferred it when I was a teen­ager and had all the solutions.