Aw, diddums

Spotted in today's Observer: B&B law sparks bible backlash.

'We've had a lot of correspondence from Christian B&B operators who don't want to be forced to accept Satanists, Muslims, gays and even unmarried couples as guests,' said a Home Office official. 'Protestants have been writing in saying they shouldn't have to admit Catholics because they have an issue with their religion, Catholics saying they didn't want Jews under their roof and objections from followers of other types of faith.'

I've lived in an area of Scotland with very heavy Rangers/Celtic rivalry, so I am under no illusions about Scotland's sectarian shame; I also know that Jesus, at least how he's portrayed in the New Testament (consorting with prostitutes and Roman tax collectors), wouldn't think the same way.

This whining about "people you don't like" making use of your services really is just childish; it's scary that people providing a public service (B&B rooms) feel they can discriminate how they like for no particular reason. What very much interests me, however, is this section of the article:

The new protection for gays and lesbians is partly inspired by the case of Tom Forrest, the proprietor of the Cromasaig B&B in the Highlands, who, in 2004, refused to let two gay men share a bed in a double room. Forrest has condemned the new regulations as 'atrocious'.

Google can tell you quite a lot about a person. This is his personal website, note horrible design and link to a "petition" against the Equality Bill; this is the website of his B&B, note only slightly less horrible design, a gag about discriminatory single supplements, that they "accept UK based dogs" only, and another petition link coupled with, incredibly, a Martin Luther King quote. This is the story: he refused a gay couple, one of whom works for VSO, even the chance to book a room because "he didn't condone their perversion".

Forrest then, according to quite a good Sunday Herald article, and a gay media monitor:

…church-goer, Tom Forrest used The Observer as a platform to air his views on gays: “At the end of the day, a poof is a poof and I will not have that kind of sexual deviant staying in a double bed in my house. Nobody – not the tourist board, or tourist police as they should be called, or the trash who have been bombarding me with emails all week – will tell me who I can or can’t let into my house”.

As for Stephen’s work with the VSO, Forrest pouted: “I used to contribute to VSO for years. But I’ve stopped because they’re out there fighting against AIDS in the world and it’s mainly his sort of creature who’s spreading it around”.

What an absolutely lovely man; what's scary is that he's not even the worst uninformed homophobe in Scotland. Thankfully, his unfriendly guest house and his shitty web design are in the middle of nowhere; but incredibly he's got over 80 signatures on his petition, the thankfully late John Tyndall of BNP founding infamy wrote an article applauding him (which I'm not linking to), he's still crowing about the equality bill, and VisitScotland fed his martyr complex by kicking him off their website.He's also doing the traditional far-right thing: making up probably phantom gay 'supporters', whilst referring to them using even viler terms in interviews (most recently: "in the same category as paedophiles".) People shouldn't encourage him.

However, there is hope; the Guardian did a look at UK B&Bs around that time and discovered that only one (on Jersey) refused them. It does look like Forrest is, thankfully, in the minority now. There's an irony for you.

About time too

Capita boss quits over Blair loan (BBC News)

Odd that he’s quit now, with surprisingly little media coverage about his indiscretion (of loaning £1m to the Labour Party ‘under cover’, quite possibly to be written off later.)

Especially when there’s so many things he should have quit for –

And that’s just what I can find on a Google search for “capita +failure”. I’m sure Private Eye (which refers to them continually as ‘Crapita’ for this and other failures) has more. They’ve just kept on getting contracts, and no-one knows why… until now, that is.

The problem with the WordPress theme changer

…is that it changes live rather than giving you a preview. Grr. I’ve just gone through eight themes and find out big disadvantages in each of them…

In any case, I’ve settled on andreas09 for now: it at least uses up your entire browser window, as opposed to the last one I was using (I don’t mind a little whitespace, but I have a 1280×1024 screen and too much whitespace is seriously irritating.) This one should hopefully be a bit more permanent.

Movie Catch-Up #2: “V For Vendetta”

V for Vendetta is splitting audiences right down the middle. Alan Moore took his name off after reading the script. David Lloyd, on the other hand, quite likes it. Peter Bradshaw in the Guardian gave it a thorough hammering, Philip French in the Observer felt it was clever, handsome but “pompous”, but most of the participants at Harry Knowles’s film festival (where it was first shown) unreservedly loved it.

I’m with Philip French, and in this review I aim to explain why. Major spoilers after the break for those who haven’t read the comic or seen the movie; necessary, unfortunately, for a discussion on where the movie both succeeds and fails. Continue reading “Movie Catch-Up #2: “V For Vendetta””

New theme

I think this one is preferable to the previous one, to be honest – it may be very simple, but it works, and it’s not as cluttered as the other one. Enjoy.

Movie Catch-Up #1: “Capote”

I’ve been a bit lax on film reviewing lately, so before I go up north again and in order to celebrate the new blog I bring you Movie Catch-Up Week, in which I see the movies of the day and post up reviews. First up: “Capote“, in which Philip Seymour Hoffman single-handedly wins the viewer over to an intensely dislikable character.

Minor spoiler warning (I generally try not to, but here it’s necessary) after the break. Continue reading “Movie Catch-Up #1: “Capote””

Welcome to “The Hard Sell”

This is the fourth incarnation of my personal blog, and the first hosted on wordpress.com.

I used to write my blog by hand, and it got annoying after a while. I persisted, though. Now, the disadvantages are becoming clear: I can’t do many of the things that bloggers everywhere take for granted, even with the automated Thingamablog solution I used for the previous blog. The most important, for me, was being able to post from places other than my broadband connection.

So I considered a number of options:

  • Upgrading to Blueyonder’s higher web tier and installing something – no MySQL, so no MT or WordPress hosted
  • Blogger by FTP – can’t FTP to my site from outside the provider’s space, and Blogger’s apparently quite unreliable lately…
  • Paying for a hosting provider – bandwidth limits a go-go

Thankfully, I discovered wordpress.com. Sure, I can only use one of their provided styles – and the site might change a bit until I find one I really like – but otherwise, it’s exactly what I needed. It provides easy access from anywhere, it moderates comments, it’s WordPress, it doesn’t force adverts on you and it’s free. So I went straight for it, and I must say I’m liking it more and more.

And the obvious question: what is “the hard sell”? Simply a comment on our society as a whole, something that everyone has been taken in by, me and you included. Also, it’s the title of the perennially redrafted novel I’ve been writing for a very long time. Hope you enjoy the blog.