Writer, editor, author. The Magic Box out now: tinyurl.com/atam465n All Gates Open: The Story of Can, Electric Eden

Joined March 2011
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πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ“ΊπŸŽ₯ Why don’t you… just switch off yr television set and read about it instead? Pbk out now! With foreword by the excellent Mackenzie Crook πŸ™πŸ€˜πŸΎ(Detectorists / Worzel G) @FaberBooks @FaberSocial
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Rob Young πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί retweeted
18 Jan 2024
Timely Reminder to support adventurous music publications >>
The Wire's back issues also exist in digital format: reader.exacteditions.com/mag… Take out a print or digital subscription to The Wire to access to the fully-searchable online library of back issues... an essential resource for any music adventurer: thewire.co.uk/subscribe
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Rob Young πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί retweeted
Just heard the Home Secretary stand up in Parliament and declare that "the British people support the Rwanda plan". I'm sick of these guys telling me what I support. I do not support the "Rwanda plan". If you don't either, please retweet.
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Rob Young πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί retweeted
Replying to @Jacob_Rees_Mogg
This is just pure rubbish on what ECHR is about - and it is bizarre that you would not know it. The whole master-slave framing you are painting is ridiculous and deliberately misleading. These are rights first proposed by Winston Churchill and the European Movement - later codified by the likes of Sir David Maxwell Fyfe (a Scots Conservative). It is an assertion of common values that we set forward and encouraged others to sign up to, alongside ourselves. Those rights are fundamental and you are suggesting we jeopardise them *without* sign-off from the public. So it is an undemocratic move you are trying to force without explicit public support for such a move. What you are trying to throw away here is the Rule of Law. You have no interest in the sovereignty of Parliament - because in 2019, you tried to suspend the sovereignty of Parliament - lying to the Queen in order to do so - and it was only our courts, ultimately in the form of a unanimous decision by our Supreme Court, that re-established the sovereignty of Parliament against your will. You therefore have no philosophical loyalty to the "sovereignty of Parliament" about which you now espouse and only deploy a confidence trickster's faux loyalty to principles as and when they are expedient to your personal preferences and power. The ECHR is British in origin. It is our heritage and our standards. If you cannot operate by our British values, you should not be in our Parliament.
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Hey Derek, I’m afraid this is a ghost book! It was only ever a loose proposal, but the publisher too eagerly registered the item with Amazon way before it had been contracted or written. The idea was dropped for various reasons. I have asked @AmazonUK to take it down. Sorry!
Replying to @polyalbion
@polyalbion Hey Rob, we don't know each other (some good mutuals though!), but I'm wondering if you might have copies of your Labels Unlimited books you could sell me? I can track down the Warp one, also Rough Trade. But I'm *really* on the hunt for the 4AD one. Any advice/help?
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Rob Young πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί retweeted
Rishi Sunak told Beth Rigby "That's not what the Public wants." When asked about a General Election. Like if you want a General Election RT if you really want one. Liar Rishi Sunak has to go.
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Rob Young πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί retweeted
A great bit about the British landscape by @polyalbion in the @weirdwalk Ritual zine. Something well worth keeping in mind if you’re working on, say, something like a Liminal, Vaesen - Mythic Britain or Rivers of London scenario. Down, down we go…
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Wonderful album. And it’s never too late!
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Rob Young πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί retweeted
No Fixed Point In Space is Album Of The Month in the new @uncutmagazine which is on newsstands today. 4 page review and interview by Rob Young @polyalbion - really great
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Rob Young πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί retweeted
Replying to @GillianKeegan
The vast majority of schools will be unaffected by RAAC. For those that are affected, we are working non-stop to mitigate any disruption to education, and protect pupils and staff. For more information, visit πŸ‘‡ educationhub.blog.gov.uk/202… 4/4
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Rob Young πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί retweeted
Here's how the future is going to play out... (Long - please expand the tweet.) 1. The Tories will keep on wrecking things faster and faster as the GE approaches. They'll act like irresponsible teenagers who know they don't have to clean up in the morning after a wild drunken binge. Why? A) It's their last chance to firehose cash at their friends and cronies. B) It's an opportunity to further feather their own nests before they're out of office. C) It stuffs Labour even more - we'll return to this soon enough. D) The more chaos they cause and the more scandals they trigger, the less chance there is of any one case of wrongdoing being investigated. From a Tory POV, the best stuff to break is anything that's unfixable. For instance, the closure of all train ticket offices. Once those have been turned into coffee concessions and the staff fired or moved elsewhere, both the facilities and the expertise will be gone for good. 2. Regardless of actual policies, Labour will win the GE on a desperate tide of people wanting to Get The Tories out. However (and this will prove vital later) their future freedom to manoevre will be severely limited by the bright red lines they've been laying down on stuff like Brexit. Related aside: Remember, the losing party has a blank slate. The electorate thumbed their noses at the manifesto, so they have total freedom to bin it. ("Nobody liked what we had to offer, so we need to do something different.") But this isn't true of the winning party. Even though pledges do get broken and manifesto commitments forgotten, they are still constrained by what they promised to win office. 3. Labour will start trying to fix the stuff the Tories broke. It will prove very expensive. Mending stuff is always more expensive than breaking it. It will be slow going too. And Labour will be trapped by the need to be "fiscally responsible" in a way the Tories never would, because our mainly RW media is waiting to tear them a new one if they spend as much as a single brass penny without accounting for where it came from. Related aside 2: Is the political playing field level when it comes to British media? Absolutely not. It's totally unfair. But this is a known known, so Labour have to find ways to win - and win repeatedly - despite being hobbled by the press. 4. Labour will try to Make Brexit Work. The RW tabloids will tear bigger strips off them than usual, painting even minor concessions as a Great Betrayal. (If you're not paying attention, you need to realise that the tabloids pillory Labour every. single. day. So this will be a ramping up rather than a different attitude.) Related aside 3: Since anything Labour does to "undo Brexit" will be portrayed as a betrayal, no matter how insignificant, they might as well take huge lumbering steps rather than teeny tiny ones. It won't make the tabloids more rabid than they're inevitably going to be. 5. Make Brexit Work won't. Work, that is. You might as well try and put the toothpaste back in the tube after you brushed your teeth with it. Brexit is inherently unworkable by its very nature. The small improvements won't be nearly enough for Rejoiners, will infuriate still-Leavers, and will barely move the dial on Britain's Brexit problems. Related aside 4: Young voters who came of voting age since the referendum already break 86/14 in favour of Rejoin. By the time we get through a first Labour term, anyone under 32 will be overwhelmingly keen to re-enter the EU. 6. Meanwhile, Labour will also have to spend more and more and more to keep stuff from literally falling apart. Think sewers, water pipes, collapsing schools, crumbling hospitals. The legacy of Tory underinvestment has played havoc with already fragile infrastructure. Again, stern questions will be asked about where the money is coming from. 7. The rump of the Tory party, whatever's left after the GE wipeout, will sit on the sidelines laughing and jeering. "Typical Labour. Always spending money they don't have." They will point to every single broken thing, claiming they're all Labour's fault - and the RW media will amplify the message. 8. If they're very lucky, Labour will go into the GE-after-next with the overall situation in Britain slightly better than when they took office. We'll only be knee-deep in metaphoric (and maybe literal) sewage, rather than thigh-deep. 9. The Tories and RW press will continue their tag-teaming attacks. ("Same old Labour. Can't be trusted with the economy. Can't get anything working. Can't even fix Brexit, despite all their lofty promises.) 10. GE2: Electric Boogaloo. Labour are stuck. The taunts about their flagship Make Brexit Work policy hit home - because they're true. And that lubricates the way for all the other lies the Tories and the RW media are spinning about them to slip down like honey. If Labour pivot towards SM/CU/Rejoin to try to win GE2, they might as well tattoo "we wasted the last 5 years and prolonged the damage because we didn't know what the hell we were doing" on their foreheads. They may pivot anyway, because the alternative is even worse. This is where those bright red lines (remember them?) will come back to bite them in the fundament so hard, they won't be able to sit down for a month. The press will scream "U-turn" and again it will be absolutely true: a U-turn so big, it's visible from the Moon. Related aside 5: There's no Get the Tories Out vote in GE2. Why? Because they're already out. The impetus to keep them out won't win over disgruntled voters who already lent their votes to Labour once with gritted teeth, despite Labour not doing what they wanted on things like Brexit and PR. 11. Labour lose GE2. A one-term wonder, and they're done. The Tories do what they do best: they blame all Britain's ills on Labour, and start wrecking the country afresh with a clean slate. Heck, they're still bleating about the "No money left" letter today, so we know exactly how this stuff plays out. Related aside 6: From the standpoint of history, being PM is perhaps 100x more important than being Leader of the Opposition. A place in posterity for eternity is the grand prize that even very rich people can't buy (though their wealth can certainly help towards attaining it). So Keir Starmer won't be nearly as disappointed as you might imagine. If he makes it a full term, that's already longer than May, Johnson, Truss (!) and Sunak managed. His standing is assured. Put another way: his incentives are not our incentives. 12. Another ruinous decade or so of Tory rule. (We know how hard it is for Labour to win. They need the Tories to mess up so badly that a tide of outrage carries them over the finish line. That tide is unlikely to rise again over a term dominated by constant reminders of "Labour's failings" playing out 24/7 in the RW press and on RW TV and radio.) Deep breath. Have a coffee and a biscuit. You've earned them. We've seen the problem. Now it's time to tackle the solution. Scroll back up through the scenario above. Notice how Brexit runs through it, like a vein pumping poison. That's why Labour need to change their fundamental attitude towards Brexit, and they need to do it now - not just before the GE. Stop ruling things out. Not saying you won't do something isn't the same as saying you will do it. Read the previous sentence a few times - it does make sense. Think along the lines of "Labour will do whatever it takes to mitigate the damage Brexit is causing Britain". The actual message can be polished by the pros. It's the intent that matters. Without the red lines on SM/CU/Rejoin, anything becomes possible. By making the change now, it blunts the moaning in the media. Why? Because it dilutes the impact of the u-turn over a year or more, rather than concentrating it into the last month of intense scrutiny just before the GE. The other vital ingredient is PR. Simply put, PR is the only hope we have of achieving any sort of long-term stability. Why? Because many of the problems Britain faces will take 2, 3, 4 election cycles to fix. And they need fixing. But the only conceivable way of unlocking the time to fix them is to form long-term partnerships in the national interest. In other words, PR. PR rids us of the short-termism mindset that has dragged Britain down for decades. Though the exact balance in Parliament will change from GE to GE, even under PR, a coalition will almost certain be possible without involving the Tories or other RW parties. It is better to have a share of power forever than absolute power for a few years before the other lot come in and undo everything you worked towards. Related aside 7: Don't think of GEs in terms of a 5-year cycle. When the party in power changes, their first year is spent trying to pick through the mess and understand what's going on. And the final year of every 5-year cycle is focused on the next GE. So there are really only ever 4 (and more often 3) years of actual governing possible under FPTP in every 5-year election cycle. Summary: Labour needs to adopt a completely different attitude to Brexit (stop ruling stuff out, and make the change now) and move to introduce PR. Phew, we're very nearly done. Congratulations on making it this far. In parting: You may disagree with what you just read. You probably will. But please take a big step back and evaluate whether your disagreement is because it's just too horrible to think about the real world in the stark terms I painted above. Also, please consider whether your support for a particular party is blinding you to the reality of what they can hope to achieve in a short 5-year (really 3) period in office. Thanks for your interest, and have a great day. (P.S. If you found the above interesting, please RT to share this with others.)
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Rob Young πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί retweeted
This is great on the soundtrack to The Wicker Man; its birth, fall and rise. Just reading @polyalbion’s The Magic Box which has the Summerisle film running through it theguardian.com/music/2023/j…
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Rob Young πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί retweeted
If Labour are keen to let 16-year-olds vote because that’s pro-democracy… And if they’re exploring letting EU migrants vote, because that’s pro-democracy Then how can they possibly be against the most democratic electoral reform of all… Proportional Representation?
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It was fun to be part of this little archipelago of thoughts and journeys around islands and abandoned places. πŸοΈπŸ–οΈ
Great conversation Judith Schalansky and Cal Flyn, moderator ⁦⁦@polyalbion⁩ ⁦@calflyn⁩ ⁦@ForlagetPress⁩ ⁦@FuturelibraryNO⁩
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What you need
The Wire 472 is out now! thewire.co.uk/issues/472 Totally Wire-d! A 20 page special unpicking everything you wanted to know about Mark E Smith and The Fall by the totally Wire-d writers’ squad. Plus: Tessa Norton talks to new band House Of All Plus: No Home, Nondi_, Adele Bertei
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Paging @serafinowicz @robertpopper Time for a comeback for Lee Titt?
10 days to go! After Out of Town ended, presenter Jack Hargreaves saved many hours of film footage from destruction, some of which was lovingly restored last year to create these six episodes, Further Out of Town: Volume 2. Order now: bit.ly/41XF6p9 #tv #trivia #hd
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β€˜Anyone dealing with folk music in the 21st century is working with salvage, with flotsam and jetsam from ages gone.’ 🎻πŸͺˆπŸͺ—βš“οΈπŸ©Ά My @LankumDublin review for @uncutmagazine uncut.co.uk/reviews/album/la…
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A beautiful way to watch and rewatch this eerie masterpiece of English cinema. And there’s some writing of mine in the booklet. πŸ‘οΈπŸ‘οΈπŸ“½οΈπŸŽŸοΈ
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