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| | The future for crofting | | 12:04am today | | It is an ancient tradition passed on from generation to generation and safeguarded by Acts of Parliament since the end of the nineteenth century, but crofting has become increasingly fragile over the past 50 years, with the number of crofts decreasing and a rise in absentee owners. |
| The embryos bill | | 12:04am today | | Science tells us what it is possible to do but society must decide what is the right thing to do. That is why it is up to MPs to decide which parts of the government's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill should reach the statute book. There have been massive scientific advances since the current legislation governing this area became law in 1990. Rationalists argue that the bill is merely a catching up exercise, but it is not that simple. The science involved is so advanced and the average level of scientific understanding in Britain so limited that it is difficult to have an informed debate. Additionally, this area comes up against some pretty basic philosophical questions about what it means to be human and whether there are ethical limits in the quest to cure disease. |
| Aid to Burma | | 12:43am Monday 12th May 2008 | | All the ingredients for a public health catastrophe were moving into place in Burma yesterday. The coconuts that many of the survivors have lived on since the cyclone struck nine days ago were running out, as was the diesel that powered the few rescue boats. Floodwater full of the bloated bodies of people and animals threatens an outbreak of cholera among people whose resistance to disease is dangerously weakened by exposure and lack of food and drinking water. Everywhere, stagnant pools are perfect breeding grounds for mosquitoes, threatening outbreaks of malaria and dengue fever. Most of the eastern Irrawaddy delta, hard to reach at the best of times, remains submerged and tropical storms are forecast for tomorrow. |
| Alexander’s woes | | 12:43am Monday 12th May 2008 | | The Alexander Technique is a popular hands-on alternative therapy defined as working to inhibit "harmful personal habits" that interfere with the functioning of the whole self. It involves a process of blocking one's "too quick and unthinking reactions". The Labour leader at Holyrood seemed bent on inventing her own version last week. The Wendy Alexander technique seems to consist of something approaching the opposite of the original. It appears to involve throwing caution
to the wind and precipitating a huge internal wrangle in her own ranks by spontaneously and unilaterally ditching her party's opposition to a referendum on Scottish independence and urging the SNP to "bring it on". |
| Underage sex | | 2:40am Saturday 10th May 2008 | | Legislating around sex is always difficult, and reconfiguring the law on sexual offences involving children was always going to be a complex and controversial task. | | By EDITORIAL COMMENT |
| Waste of food | | 10:43pm Friday 9th May 2008 | | The knives were out for Gordon Ramsay yesterday after the celebrity chef called for legislation to ban restaurants from selling fruit and vegetables out of their proper season. | | By EDITORIAL COMMENT |
| Birthday for Israel | | 12:17am Friday 9th May 2008 | |
Israel celebrated its 60th birthday yesterday with both exuberance and foreboding. This was more than an excuse for a national party. Six decades after the Jewish state became a phoenix that rose from the ashes of the Holocaust, Israel has much to celebrate. It is a thriving modern pluralist democracy of some seven million people. It has a free press and an independent judiciary. It has chalked up outstanding achievements, especially in science and technology and agriculture. Coverage of the anniversary has reminded us of the hardships endured by early settlers struggling to reach their promised land, their joy on arrival and the utopianism of life on the kibbutz. | | By EDITORIAL COMMENT |
| Visitor attractions | | 12:17am Friday 9th May 2008 | |
The news that Scotland's visitor attractions saw a 1.8% increase in visitor numbers last year will provide a timely fillip for a major sector of the economy as the new season moves into top gear. However, the good news coincided with the latest chapter in the cautionary tale of the Cairngorm funicular railway, underlining the fact that the tourist industry is a precarious one with no place for complacency. | | By EDITORIAL COMMENT |
| Cannabis classification | | 12:50am Thursday 8th May 2008 | | Ordering a review into the classification of cannabis was one of Gordon Brown's early acts as Prime Minister, along with reconsidering the decision to allow a supercasino in London, which signalled that his regime would take a much tougher line on social ills. His concern on cannabis was that downgrading it from Class B to Class C sent the wrong message to young people and confused their understanding of drug laws. Now that the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) has recommended that cannabis should remain in Class C, the government's decision to return to Class B is open to the charge of prejudging the issue and following the dictates of populism. |
| Labour U-turn | | 12:50am Thursday 8th May 2008 | | Wendy Alexander has form for doing the unexpected in Scottish devolutionary politics. In the early days of the first Scottish Executive she let it be known that the Labour Liberal Democrat coalition administration, in which she was a minister, intended to repeal Section 28. The selective leaking of the policy contributed to making the ensuing debate and changing the law more controversial and difficult for the executive than it should have been. Ms Alexander, now Labour's leader at Holyrood, is engulfed in another Section 28 moment, only this time the ramifications extend beyond the issue of Scotland making its mark as a modern, inclusive country having no truck with intolerant legislation. |
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