Wednesday 19 August 2009

Who the hell is Nigel Woodcock?

Well, I've lived in and around Hulme for more than 25 years now, having moved here from the South of England in the early 1980s when I came to study humanities & social science at MMU (or Manchester Polytechnic as it was known then). I obtained my BA (Hons) degree in 1986 and then in the late 1990s I studied for a PhD in American politics & sociology, which I finally obtained in 2003 after a long slog.

I've lived in Hornchurch Court since1992 and I've been the Secretary of our residents' association since it first started up more than five years ago. Many people locally know me as someone who is always quick with a joke but who takes politics and life seriously. I am lucky in having a job that I love, which is teaching Politics and Sociology A-levels at the Shena Simon campus in the city centre.

I share with many others a great dismay at the abandonment of principles by New Labour, having canvassed for the Labour Party back in the 1980s - when it was still a socialist party! It is regrettable that Labour has been hijacked by neoliberals and I can't work out why ANYONE would still want to vote for them. Except of course for three dreadful words: "The Tory Party". This lot will make new Labour look like... well, OLD LABOUR, I guess, given their total lack of principles. They will say anything, promise nothing and deliver even less. Under our lousy electoral system (first-past-the-post, or FPTP) every election is a two-horse race between the Big Two - so in this respect I can understand why people vote Labour out of sheer desperation.

So reforming the electoral system is a key issue - we need to ditch FPTP ASAP which is why I'm backing calls for a referendum on introducing some form of PR - see http://www.voteforachange.co.uk/ and sign up for free. I've just joined this week.

In the recent past I've been involved in the Save Birley Fields campaign, which is now entering its final phase, so it seems. I also attend the Leaseholders' Panel which liaises with City South Manchester or leaseholders' issues. I bought my flat in Hornchurch Court several years ago once it was evident that the whole block was about to be privatised. This has since taken place - a classic bit of neoliberalism as the whole of Hulme's council housing stock was handed over to a corporate entity at a bargain basement price in order to hide public debt from the public accounts. This was a shameful episode which should have been fought against by Labour not carried out by them!

I am a busy, hard-working lecturer and it would be a big change for me to become a local councillor (a "part-time" post that pays £18,000 per annum), but I'd like to think that I'd do a bloody good job. Certainly, I'd do a better job than the Labour party wannabes that we have currently representing us. Although I regard Mary Murphy as a cut above the other two, they generally have zero prospect of influencing the "Labour machine" which runs Manchester like a fiefdom.

I am the Environment Rep for the UCU lecturers' union at Manchester College. Sadly one of the first things I will be doing this year will be to go on strike as we are trying to save the union from being crushed by a particularly ruthless management. I take no pleasure from conflicts such as this, but at the same time I am willing to stand up to bullies and what I like to call "F-GAS" (the Forces of Greed and Selfishness).

In Hulme and elsewhere we desperately need Green Party representatives who can really advance a Green agenda where it counts - in council chambers, in Parliament, within local groups and public forums. Hulme is the only place in Manchester which has previously elected a Green candidate to office, and last year we were just 50 votes short after Labour really pulled out the stops and maximised their postal votes. We only need 25 of these voters to switch to us and we can overturn this result in 2010. Electing a Green again in Hulme will send out a clear message to the major parties that we demand a new approach to politics, before it's too late for us all.

If I am not going to be that candidate then I'll be delighted to throw my full energy behind Steve Durrant's campaign, as I have done in the past.

Many people will know me from the Hulme Residents Online Group (HROG), where I'm a frequent contributor (if you've not already joined then please do so). Through this forum, for instance, some Hulme residents are attempting to coordinate opposition to MMU's plans to destroy the last vestiges of open green space that helps to keep us sane. I am convinced that the primary motivation behind these plans is greed. The uni will be vacating some marvellous listed buildings in Didsbury when they move to the Birley Fields campus, and these buildings will be sold to developers to be converted into private accommodation and fat, juicy profits. Just as we have recently seen in Blackpool with a Tory Council, here in Manchester we have an entrenched Labour hierarchy that has developed cosy relations with developers. The result is the same - the steady erosion of green space. The residents lose out every time.

Please attend the Hulme Alliance meeting on Monday 7th September at the Claremont Centre, which I'll also be attending. We need to get this ball rolling...

thanks for reading. Regards and best wishes, Nigel.

28 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. Hi there Nigel, Yet another good Hulme Blog. Like the £18,000 a year part time.... Nice work if you can get it!

    auntie_biotic. Best of Hulme

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  3. Please attend the Hulme Alliance meeting on Monday 7th September at the Claremont Centre, which I'll also be attending. We need to get this ball rolling...

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  4. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  5. Please attend the Hulme Alliance meeting on Monday 7th September at the Claremont Centre, which I'll also be attending. We need to get this ball rolling...
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  11. After briefly reading law in Columbus, Ohio, Hayes moved east once more to attend Harvard Law School in 1843.[16] Graduating with an LL.B, he was admitted to the Ohio bar in 1845 and opened his own law office in Lower Sandusky (now Fremont).[17] Business was slow at first, but he gradually attracted a few clients and also represented his uncle Sardis in real estate litigation.[18] In 1847, Hayes became ill with what his doctor thought to be tuberculosis. Thinking a change in climate would help, he considered enlisting in the Mexican–American War, but on his doctor's advice he instead visited family in New England.
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  12. Hayes's boyhood home in Delaware, Ohio
    Through both his father and mother, Hayes was of New England colonial ancestry.[5] His earliest American ancestor emigrated to Connecticut from Scotland in 1625.[6] Hayes's great-grandfather, Ezekiel Hayes, was a militia captain in Connecticut in the American Revolutionary War, but Ezekiel's son (Hayes's grandfather, also named Rutherford) left his New Haven home during the war for the relative peace of Vermont.[7] His mother's ancestors arrived in Vermont at a similar time, and most of his close relatives outside Ohio continued to live there. John Noyes, an uncle by marriage, had been his father's business partner in Vermont and was later elected to Congress.[8] His first cousin, Mary Jane Noyes Mead, was the mother of sculptor Larkin Goldsmith Mead and architect William Rutherford Mead.[8] John Humphrey Noyes, the founder of the Oneida Community, was also a first cousin.[9]
    [edit]Education and early law career
    Hayes attended the common schools in Delaware, Ohio, and enrolled in 1836 at the Methodist Norwalk Seminary in Norwalk, Ohio.[10] He did well at Norwalk, and the following year transferred to a preparatory school in Middletown, Connecticut, where he studied Latin and Ancient Greek.[11] Returning to Ohio, Hayes entered Kenyon College in Gambier in 1838.[12] He enjoyed his time at Kenyon, and was successful scholastically;[13] while there, he joined several student societies and became interested in Whig politics.[14] He graduated with highest honors in 1842 and addressed the class as its valedictorian.[15]
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  13. Thanks for sharing this with us. It's a real treat to see such history kept alive. My wife and I went over to St. Charles, MO this last weekend to see the Lewis and Clark celebration. You had much better weather!
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  14. Of course, I support Koenig Krieg and BAR for SYW battles ... but that's me :)
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  15. Thanks for sharing this with us. It's a real treat to see such history kept alive. My wife and I went over to St. Charles, MO this last weekend to see the Lewis and Clark celebration. You had much better weather!
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  16. Nice write up, you mentioned the game played with the guys who did a Napoleonc set of rules. I have those rules and quite like them, could you please give a run down on how this set played.
    Thanks
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  17. Misery is optional.


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  18. After reading I do not think that they actually fought in a battle just garrison duty so I was thinking maybe another regiment of IR-Kurprinz to flesh out the whole brigade or another Curiassier regiment or both. One final thought was that I would redo the flags in Cavenderian and add a Cavenderian Regiment or Squadron.
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  19. It sounds like it would make for an interesting mini-campaign. I'm looking forward to your report and pics. Good luck with the English Civil War figures. It's a period I wouldn't mind getting into myself, having fought several games at my old club using Armati rules. I'm also horribly tempted by Peter Pig's 15mm Sudan figures, but that's another story... ;)
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  20. It sounds like it would make for an interesting mini-campaign. I'm looking forward to your report and pics. Good luck with the English Civil War figures. It's a period I wouldn't mind getting into myself, having fought several games at my old club using Armati rules. I'm also horribly tempted by Peter Pig's 15mm Sudan figures, but that's another story... ;)
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  21. good to see the weather has warmed up:) and the danube... i saw it last year and my illusions of it were shattered when i saw this grey snake winding across land. hope to see your painting of it anyway:)r.
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  22. Nice write up, you mentioned the game played with the guys who did a Napoleonc set of rules. I have those rules and quite like them, could you please give a run down on how this set played.
    Thanks
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  23. aving accepted the position, Roe had little time to set his affairs in order, as the official party would soon be leaving on the Parmelia. He then set about the purchase of equipment for his own requirements and for the surveying office. The Roes embarked upon the Parmelia on 3 February 1829.
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