Poor and needy? His idea of that was the firemen. That was who he nominated . Now this article might come from the daily mail but unlike thickos rankings it is full of facts.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/a...blackmail-union-hides-theyre-underworked.html
And that's why he undermines everything he he supposed to stand for. He can't even identify who is "poor and needy".
and we know where firemen spend most of their time working
OK, I realise you've put the caveat in, as the Daily Mail have been caught quite a few times now making stories up, and I'd prefer it if they actually sourced their facts rather than saying things like "official figures". Certainly an academic paper (or even a proper policy report) would never be allowed to get away with the standards that journos do.
I think there is a wider issue here about the 'family' of causes that Brand is adopting though. The week previous on a nasty cold and wet evening he was supporting some tenants of a housing development who were presenting a petition to Downing Street. The story is that these people were being evicted from their supposedly secure tenancies because the property management had been transfered to an American private equity firm who wanted to evict them, and concentrate on luxury apartments for rich people.
Some journo tried collaring Brand for being a hypocrite because he lived in a rich apartment, with the clear insinuation that this absolves him from being able to support people less well off. A spat broke out, but the journo pretty well got slapped down by the campaigning woman who'd written to Brand asking for help. As she pointed out, Brand responded (nice to know he reads his correspondance himself) and even though he didn't need to, he felt suitably moved to lend his support and in doing so knew they'd get a higher media profile. There are plenty of rich people of means equal and above Brand's, but they do nothing to help defend the more vulnerable in society. Do you not think there is something perverse about a society that when one of its material 'haves' tries to speak up from a position of comparative wealth he's branded (to pun) some kind of hypocrite. What does that tells us about ourselves. Are we really being asked to condone a system that suggests that societies haves shouldn't do anything for the have nots, and that they should concentrate instead on fluffy issues pertinent to them like illegal wildlife trade
Personally I have to say fair play to Russell Brand in this instance. He had no stake in these peoples homes. He could easily have passed up their call for help and walked by on the other side of the street, and pretend that he just didn't see. Instead he decided to try and do something and called David Cameron out. The journo got a pretty good verbal kicking I thought for his stupid line of questioning. Instead he should have been looking into the background of what's really happening to these folk instead of trying to demonise Brand
I'm also reminded of the stage version of Yes Prime Minister when a nervous Jim Hacker is trying to get some contentious environmental policy through a reluctant cabinet. He bursts into the room waving a press release about and says "fantastic, Brad Pitt & Angelina Jolie have just announced their support for me. The cabinet won't dare oppose me now"
This is where I do disagree with EC about Brand though. A lot of the causes he's taking are going to make him deeply unpopular. I think you'd be hard pressed to really argue that its all some publicity stunt designed to make him more popular. Quite opposite. It reminds me very much of how those few celebrities who dared to speak up in support of the miners in the mid 80's were reviled