Thursday, July 10, 2025

These FoolishThings . . . (1996)

The Scavenger column from the July 1996 issue of the Socialist Standard

Pornography

W.H. Smith admitted it had inadvertently sent Mr Shaheen copies of a magazine called Lipstick, unaware of its adult content. The spokeswoman added: “We stock far fewer of these titles than others, and they are a small part of the market. There is a limit beyond which we will not go, but we have to balance commercial and moral obligations.” Sales of adult magazines have risen by 10 percent in the past year. Guardian, 11 April.


Why BSE?

The deep reason for BSE and CJD is that the modern world has lost sight of what agriculture is for . .  In the Western world agriculture is designed to make money . . . About half the grain and more than half the pulses grown in the Western world feed livestock . . .  We could just eat less meat. It is produced in such vast quantities only for profit . . . Meat is sold and sold again because it is more profitable to feed 10 kilos of wheat to cattle and pigs than sell one kilo for papadoms. Colin Tudge, Independent on Sunday, 24 March.


“He loved Big Brother”

Job hunters face a new hurdle in their search for work—the value test. Increasingly, employers are checking candidates values to see if they fit the organisation’s goals and way of working. A candidate’s technical expertise and key competencies are almost taken for granted. Values represent the spirit of the company and are increasingly seen as the key to rising profits and maintaining a motivated and cheerful workforce. Financial Mail on Sunday, 26 May.


We said we’re sorry!

Shell mounted a robust defence of its activities in Nigeria yesterday, ruling out withdrawal from the country, and calling for an atmosphere of “reconciliation”. Chairman John Jennings attempted to draw the sting from attacks on Shell’s policy in Nigeria at the group’s annual meeting, agreeing to shareholder calls for a moment’s “quiet reflection” in memory of writer Ken Saro-Wiwa, a long-time critic of Shell who was hanged by Nigeria’s military government last November. Mr Jennings admitted publicly for the first time that Shell had bought around 100 handguns for police guarding the operations in Ogoniland, the Nigerian region where it had been accused of damaging the environment, and where Mr Saro-Wiwa’s campaign was based. He also admitted that Shell’s drilling standards in Nigeria were not as high as those applied elsewhere and that Shell had suffered more oil spills in Nigeria than elsewhere. Guardian, 16 May.


Fair shares

Share options and compensation pay-offs are set to earn West Midlands Travel bosses millions of pounds, it was revealed yesterday. The share options— agreed before the takeover of the Birmingham bus giant by National Express last year—entitled ex-chairman Don Colston to pay only £385 for shares in WMT’s new owner which are now worth almost £1.2 million. Former managing director Joe Duffy, who will receive almost £400,000 in compensation when he retires at the end of this month [April), paid about £562 for shares valued yesterday at £1.75 million. Evening Mail, 10 April.


Bleeding workers

Until now, employees at the Mechctronics plant in St. Helens Auckland, County Durham, have been allowed to donate blood at a nearby working men’s club every six months on the firm’s time .. . (Now) they have been told they can still go to give blood but must work an extra 45 minutes to make up for lost productivity. Evening Mail, 30 April.
The Scavenger

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