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In the last couple of days a furore has broken out regarding people who foster children in the UK. As we all know all too well it is important that children are fostered with the right temporary parents. Just what defines "right" could be open to debate.

Many children who are fostered in the UK have had more than their fair share of trouble. They may only be young but in some cases will have seen the nasty side of life already. A loving home must therefore be at the top of the list for potential foster parents requirements. There will of course be other considerations.

Should one of those be the political persuasion of one or both foster parents?

The case which has raised all of this involves parents who are members of UKIP, the United Kingdom  Independence Party. Look online and you will see that reports on the matter written abroad have UKIP categorised as a Conservative party.  UKIP may or may not like that alliance. It is fair to say that most of their policies are right wing but as they attempt to court British voters they be hoping to draw a line between the two parties. Many  British voters will be steering well clear of any party that even remotely looks Tory tainted at the next election. UKIP have altready said they would join forces with the Tories to form a coalition if necessary. So more of the same could be on offer.

Still we digress.
 
Three foster children have been removed from their temporary home due to the foster parents membership of UKIP. Immediately a political row got underway which does not help the kids notr the parents. The council where the children live is a Labour run one but council members have denied any involvement. They too claim to be appalled at this action. The Tories who are already in election mode of course are trying to use this case as political leverage.

But what about the childrem? It is after all only they who matter.

The foster parents at the heart of the row have fostered chidren for seven years. The three children are described as being of "ethnic minority". UKIP have clear policies on immigration into the UK which seem to have casued the action to remove the children.

Britain's Education Minister Michael Gove, who was himself adopted promised an investigation saying also,

"Rotherham's reasons for denying this family the chance to foster are indefensible. The ideology behind their decision is actively harmful to children. We should not allow considerations of ethnic or cultural background to prevent children being placed with loving and stable families. We need more parents to foster, and many more to adopt.

"Any council which decides that supporting a mainstream UK political party disbars an individual from looking after children in care is sending a dreadful signal that will only decrease the number of loving homes available to children in need. I will be investigating just how this decision came to be made and what steps we need to take to deal with this situation."
The couple at the centre of this case are in the mid 50's, respectable and apparently law abiding citizens. They are said to have previously been Labour voters who have turned to UKIP as the UKs hope. That is their choice.

Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council will now carry out an urgent review of the case. The area has a high ethnic minority population and has also recently been involved in cases of child abuse such as sex grooming gangs.

The person responsible for children's services in Rotherham insisted that the UKIP, for want of a better word, foster home was only ever going to be temporary and said.
"We always try to place children in a sensible cultural placement. These children are not UK children and we were not aware of the foster parents having strong political views. There are some strong views in the Ukip party and we have to think of the future of the children." "Also the fact of the matter is I have to look at the children's cultural and ethnic needs. The children have been in care proceedings before and the judge had previously criticised us for not looking after the children's cultural and ethnic needs, and we have had to really take that into consideration with the placement that they were in."

Asked what the specific problem was with the couple being Ukip members, Mrs Thacker told the BBC: "We have to think about the clear statements on ending multi-culturalism for example.

"These children are from EU migrant backgrounds and Ukip has very clear statements on ending multiculturalism, not having that going forward, and I have to think about how sensitive I am being to those children."

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On the face of it this looks ridiculous. We are inclined to wonder just who may have engineered all of this. It is certainly good PR for UKIP as one of their leading lights has already told the media. UKIP were once thought of as just another crackpot fringe party but have come on in leaps and bounds in recent years. This is mainly due to people's disillusionment with the EU. They now have three Peers in the house of Lords but this is due to Tory defections. So yes it is yet another Tory Party iin different clothes.

Perhaps we should remind the Tories and Biritsh people what David Cameron's opinion of UKIP was in 2006. At that time in a radio interview he said UKiP members were "fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists, mostly". Now of course he is trying to distance himself from those words.

Nigel Farage is an articulate man. He does offer UKIP an electable face. Whether the party has grown is not clear. Their manifesto is based around, "a demand for Britain to pull out of Europe and to curb immigration. It is also critical of multiculturalism and political correctness."

We are left wondering where do you draw the line? Is it fair to foster an afro caribbean child with a member of the BNP? You tell me.

We just hope the children find a suitable home soon. The rest is just political spin and opportunism.
 
 
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Remember the sixties? Not as old as this blogger? Well let me reminisce with a glimpse of my memories of the sixties. Of course as a personal slant, and looking through rose coloured glasses, this account may not be how you remember things, if you were around.

As a child and then teenager of the sixties, in the UK, a feeling of hope was perhaps understandable. For some it was establishment business as usual, war and more. It did however seem a positive period in history. Sections of society wanted change and in the most part peaceful change. The response by authorities may have at times been much less than peaceful but young people like myself at the time remained hopeful. It was a time of rebellious youth for many young people.

Benefiting from the post war period following World War Two, parents tended to be a little more relaxed with their children. As so often is the case that inevitably went too far.

It was however also a time when it was possible to believe that hate due to skin colour would become a thing of the past. It still existed but was gradually dwindling. Post War there was a time of hate for German and Japanese people. The wounds of war were still raw.

Those people who had good sense though, in time realised you cannot hate a new generation for the "sins of the father". This however illustrates that racism is not always a matter of skin colour. The Nazis hated the Jews and savagely killed populations yet neither had a black skin.

In the UK and the US black skinned people suffered to differing degrees but the "times they were a changing". Race discrimination laws in the UK ensured some protection. But who would have thought in 1960 that a black skinned man, albeit more a mixed race black, would in 2012 occupy the White House? That to this blogger remains awesome.I t shows how far the US has come or it did appear to at one time.

Was it 9/11 that changed all of the early hope?  Whilst it may have contributed, the current level of hate in the world and racism is much more complicated.

The "hippies" who hoped that " peace and love man" would rule the day moved on. It has been recorded many times that as the sixties ended a very different time was to follow. The "dream" had died. Idealism is often derided but surely it has to be better than hate, war, violence and destruction?

The idols of that era moved into "fat cat" jobs, acquired wealth and joined the establishment they had once derided. Some continued to apparently live the life as they aged but it was often all a front.  They had decided that money was their "one true god" and foolishly they worshipped it.

Wealth can open doors but in truth it does not always bring happiness and satisfaction with life. However it is to each his or her own. Of course you have to be a liberal minded person to even say that statement, "to each his or her own".

What has initiated this ramble down memory lane though is the amount of hate and racism alive and flourishing today.

As the UK tries to hit hard at insensitive tweeters who post racist comments it fails to address the more serious problem. In some ways it alienates rebellious young people who may then develop a worse attitude.

This weekend there has been reports of endemic racism in the UK Metropolitan Police force which has led to an investigation. In the US there have been shootings of black individuals by a white drive by shooter. There has been the recent murder of Trayvon Martin in the US which has been belittled and bounced around as it is used by people with race issues, on all sides.

The US remains divided over President Barack Obama and it is fair to say that for some the colour of his skin andplace of birth remains the issue rather than his track record as Commander in Chief. The drive by shootings in Tulsa are the latest headlines in the US. These involve a white man and black victims.

Today April 8, 2012, this blogger has written on the progress of Thusha Kamaleswaran. As Britain’s youngest gangland gun victim this Sri Lanken girl was shot by black youths. As the emergency team fought to save her life supporters of the gang asked them why they were bothering to save a "paki".

France is still recovering from the drive by shooting of citizens including children by a non-white citizen with an axe to grind, and it appears a similar killer is on the loose again. Are the latest killings race based or merely hate fuelled crimes.

Whilst we all should try and stay clear of the "race card" it is hard to ignore.

Even non-white races at times are racist against each other. Not sure what this blogger means? Well in black South Africa some years ago the caste system between black people meant that some were looked down on by "their own" and treat accordingly.

Of course it is now the 21st Century, we are civilised, we are better educated and we should be more enlightened? Are we? Are we hell.

In Ireland each year the marching season brings trouble to the streets.The marchers celebrate a victory in battle from a long distant past. Too distant to be worth remembering surely?. Definitely too distant to cause problems now. But of course as long as people hold on to such events hate continues.

When you think about it even the religions that are often at the heart of hate and racism stem from a long distant past. Of course we should always remember that it is not the religion that is necessarily at fault but how we choose to interpret it and allow it to affect our lives.

Whilst this blog may sound silly, depressing or ideological remember life is to a large extent what you make it. Outside influences play a part but in the West it is still possible to live a fairly "free" life. Some people around the world are not so lucky. Life is so brief and these days there seem to be too many people eager to get to the hereafter, whatever that may be, and in the process ruin other people's life. Why? Is there something in the water, the food, the air, that these days causes so much hate. Or is it that so many people have sad lives?

This ramble draws few conclusions but raises many unanswerable questions. For me the sixties was not all a bed of roses but it was a time of hope, fun, growth and expectancy.. I wonder how today's teenagers are viewing the current decade? I doubt it will be one of hope. For young people though it should be.

Tags: The sixties, racism, hate, hope, President Obama, Trayvon Martin, Thusha, drive by shootings