We, the Web Kids

Posted on 21st February 2012 in The monuments of world

Piotr Czerski is a Polish writer and commentator. Here, he lays out the kind of political/literary manifesto that seems to pop up from time to time, usually in Europe. The essay, as translated by Marta Szreder, was posted to Pastebin under a Creative Commons license. I repost it here with the first several paragraphs excised, so that we can hasten to the meat of Czerski’s analysis about how the expectations of young people have been conditioned by their experiences of the Internet.

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1. We grew up with the Internet and on the Internet. This is what makes us different; this is what makes the crucial, although surprising from your point of view, difference: we do not ‘surf’ and the internet to us is not a ‘place’ or ‘virtual space’. The Internet to us is not something external to reality but a part of it: an invisible yet constantly present layer intertwined with the physical environment. We do not use the Internet, we live on the Internet and along it. If we were to tell our bildnungsroman to you, the analog, we could say there was a natural Internet aspect to every single experience that has shaped us. We made friends and enemies online, we prepared cribs for tests online, we planned parties and studying sessions online, we fell in love and broke up online. The Web to us is not a technology which we had to learn and which we managed to get a grip of. The Web is a process, happening continuously and continuously transforming before our eyes; with us and through us. Technologies appear and then dissolve in the peripheries, websites are built, they bloom and then pass away, but the Web continues, because we are the Web; we, communicating with one another in a way that comes naturally to us, more intense and more efficient than ever before in the history of mankind.

Brought up on the Web we think differently. The ability to find information is to us something as basic as the ability to find a railway station or a post office in an unknown city is to you. When we want to know something – the first symptoms of chickenpox, the reasons behind the sinking of ‘Estonia’, or whether the water bill is not suspiciously high – we take measures with the certainty of a driver in a SatNav-equipped car. We know that we are going to find the information we need in a lot of places, we know how to get to those places, we know how to assess their credibility. We have learned to accept that instead of one answer we find many different ones, and out of these we can abstract the most likely version, disregarding the ones which do not seem credible. We select, we filter, we remember, and we are ready to swap the learned information for a new, better one, when it comes along.

To us, the Web is a sort of shared external memory. We do not have to remember unnecessary details: dates, sums, formulas, clauses, street names, detailed definitions. It is enough for us to have an abstract, the essence that is needed to process the information and relate it to others. Should we need the details, we can look them up within seconds. Similarly, we do not have to be experts in everything, because we know where to find people who specialise in what we ourselves do not know, and whom we can trust. People who will share their expertise with us not for profit, but because of our shared belief that information exists in motion, that it wants to be free, that we all benefit from the exchange of information. Every day: studying, working, solving everyday issues, pursuing interests. We know how to compete and we like to do it, but our competition, our desire to be different, is built on knowledge, on the ability to interpret and process information, and not on monopolising it.

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2. Participating in cultural life is not something out of ordinary to us: global culture is the fundamental building block of our identity, more important for defining ourselves than traditions, historical narratives, social status, ancestry, or even the language that we use. From the ocean of cultural events we pick the ones that suit us the most; we interact with them, we review them, we save our reviews on websites created for that purpose, which also give us suggestions of other albums, films or games that we might like. Some films, series or videos we watch together with colleagues or with friends from around the world; our appreciation of some is only shared by a small group of people that perhaps we will never meet face to face. This is why we feel that culture is becoming simultaneously global and individual. This is why we need free access to it.

This does not mean that we demand that all products of culture be available to us without charge, although when we create something, we usually just give it back for circulation. We understand that, despite the increasing accessibility of technologies which make the quality of movie or sound files so far reserved for professionals available to everyone, creativity requires effort and investment. We are prepared to pay, but the giant commission that distributors ask for seems to us to be obviously overestimated. Why should we pay for the distribution of information that can be easily and perfectly copied without any loss of the original quality? If we are only getting the information alone, we want the price to be proportional to it. We are willing to pay more, but then we expect to receive some added value: an interesting packaging, a gadget, a higher quality, the option of watching here and now, without waiting for the file to download. We are capable of showing appreciation and we do want to reward the artist (since money stopped being paper notes and became a string of numbers on the screen, paying has become a somewhat symbolic act of exchange that is supposed to benefit both parties), but the sales goals of corporations are of no interest to us whatsoever. It is not our fault that their business has ceased to make sense in its traditional form, and that instead of accepting the challenge and trying to reach us with something more than we can get for free they have decided to defend their obsolete ways.

One more thing: we do not want to pay for our memories. The films that remind us of our childhood, the music that accompanied us ten years ago: in the external memory network these are simply memories. Remembering them, exchanging them, and developing them is to us something as natural as the memory of ‘Casablanca’ is to you. We find online the films that we watched as children and we show them to our children, just as you told us the story about the Little Red Riding Hood or Goldilocks. Can you imagine that someone could accuse you of breaking the law in this way? We cannot, either.

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3. We are used to our bills being paid automatically, as long as our account balance allows for it; we know that starting a bank account or changing the mobile network is just the question of filling in a single form online and signing an agreement delivered by a courier; that even a trip to the other side of Europe with a short sightseeing of another city on the way can be organised in two hours. Consequently, being the users of the state, we are increasingly annoyed by its archaic interface. We do not understand why tax act takes several forms to complete, the main of which has more than a hundred questions. We do not understand why we are required to formally confirm moving out of one permanent address to move in to another, as if councils could not communicate with each other without our intervention (not to mention that the necessity to have a permanent address is itself absurd enough.)

There is not a trace in us of that humble acceptance displayed by our parents, who were convinced that administrative issues were of utmost importance and who considered interaction with the state as something to be celebrated. We do not feel that respect, rooted in the distance between the lonely citizen and the majestic heights where the ruling class reside, barely visible through the clouds. Our view of the social structure is different from yours: society is a network, not a hierarchy. We are used to being able to start a dialogue with anyone, be it a professor or a pop star, and we do not need any special qualifications related to social status. The success of the interaction depends solely on whether the content of our message will be regarded as important and worthy of reply. And if, thanks to cooperation, continuous dispute, defending our arguments against critique, we have a feeling that our opinions on many matters are simply better, why would we not expect a serious dialogue with the government?

We do not feel a religious respect for ‘institutions of democracy’ in their current form, we do not believe in their axiomatic role, as do those who see ‘institutions of democracy’ as a monument for and by themselves. We do not need monuments. We need a system that will live up to our expectations, a system that is transparent and proficient. And we have learned that change is possible: that every uncomfortable system can be replaced and is replaced by a new one, one that is more efficient, better suited to our needs, giving more opportunities.

What we value the most is freedom: freedom of speech, freedom of access to information and to culture. We feel that it is thanks to freedom that the Web is what it is, and that it is our duty to protect that freedom. We owe that to next generations, just as much as we owe to protect the environment.

Perhaps we have not yet given it a name, perhaps we are not yet fully aware of it, but I guess what we want is real, genuine democracy. Democracy that, perhaps, is more than is dreamt of in your journalism.

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“My, dzieci sieci” by Piotr Czerski is licensed under a Creative Commons Uznanie autorstwa-Na tych samych warunkach 3.0 Unported License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/

Contact the author: piotr[at]czerski.art.pl

More From The Atlantic

Brussels is slowly beeting the life out of our sugar industry

Posted on 20th February 2012 in The monuments of world

Now this superb business faces a threat from Brussels, and the imposition of an unnecessary and badly thought-out regulation. For 134 years, the company has sourced its sugar cane from around the world — not unnaturally, since the crop doesn’t grow in the UK. Week in, week out, huge boatloads of brown crystals come up the Thames to be treated. The plant has the capacity to produce 1.1 million tonnes of refined sugar a year; and yet the company is prevented, by the EU commission, from importing the raw materials in the quantities it needs. Their current output is now down to 60 per cent of capacity — and the result is that jobs are being lost in a part of London that already faces the highest levels of unemployment in the city and indeed in the whole of the country.

And while a great London business is unable to fulfil its potential, the price of sugar is pushed up — by the EU — far higher than necessary, and that price hike is felt by every hard-pressed consumer who eats anything in which sugar is an ingredient. That is a long list of foods, in tough times, whose prices are being pushed up by the Common Agricultural Policy. It is utter madness, and it derives from the ruthless determination of the Commission to protect the sugar beet producers of continental Europe.

For decades they have been artificially shielded, by high tariff walls around the EU, which mean that sugar prices in Europe are more than double the world market price. And those sugar beet producers have been given huge sums of taxpayers’ money, in export refunds, to dump their produce overseas. In 2006 the Commission reluctantly bowed to outrage from Oxfam and others, and agreed to a programme of “reform”. Of the total EU sugar market of about 17 million tonnes, 13.5 million would be reserved for the European sugar beet barons. The other 3.5 million tonnes could be supplied by sugar cane producers around the world.

The trouble is that these countries — in Africa, the Caribbean or Pacific regions — have not been able to fill the gap. To find enough cane sugar, Tate & Lyle need to be able to bring in boatfuls from places like Brazil or Central America: and that Brussels forbids. They face swingeing tariffs to bring more in — while the sugar beet producers are given a licence to produce more. At every turn the British refinery finds the system skewed in favour of the beet producers, mainly in France and Germany. But they can’t use beet in the London plants; and you can’t use beet to make golden syrup.

Already 30 jobs are going — high-skilled jobs held by long-serving staff; and it is surely a disgrace that a natural source of employment is being choked at a critical time for the economy. London firms need to be given every incentive and confidence to hire more staff and expand, from tax breaks to the apprenticeship schemes we have been helping to lead from City Hall. And we are lobbying Brussels to drop its crazy prohibition, and allow Tate and Lyle to get cane sugar from wherever in the world it can find the stuff. It is time for common sense on the sugar regime — in the name of jobs for London and cheaper food all round.

UK Representative's Address to the Holy See

Posted on 17th February 2012 in The monuments of world

“What made me feel even more confident as a British Muslim … was that my country … had a strong Christian identity”

VATICAN CITY, FEB. 16, 2012 (Zenit.org).- Here are the notes of the address given Tuesday by the leader of a U.K. delegation visiting the Holy See to mark the 30th anniversary of the establishment of full diplomatic relations between the two states.

The delegation was led by Baroness Sayeeda Hussain Warsi, who represented the prime minister.

The Pope received the delegation in audience on Wednesday.

* * *

INTRODUCTION

Your Eminences. Excellencies. Reverend Fathers. Colleagues, Ladies and Gentlemen. It is an immense honour for me to stand here today in what is, for more than a billion people, the spiritual capital of the world. And it is a further privilege to lead the largest ever ministerial delegation from the United Kingdom to the Holy See, to celebrate the relationship between our two states, the oldest formal diplomatic relationship in my country’s history and today, one of the strongest. Our diplomatic relationship began here in 1479, only a short distance from where we now stand. For reasons we all know too well, we broke diplomatic relations only to restore them during the First World War.

This year marks 30 years since full diplomatic relations were re-established between us.

We want to build upon our bond, to show it to the rest of the world, and to let it inspire others. Because our relationship enables us to act together in the name of the common good: to promote democracy, to fight for human rights, to encourage fair, responsible trade: to tackle climate change, and to help build stable nations.

We are grateful for the superb work our Ambassador Nigel Baker is doing here, building on the tremendous tenure of his predecessor Francis Campbell. The UK recognises that, as the smallest state in the world, the Holy See has the widest global reach. We also respect each other’s differences.

Because the areas in which we agree are so vast, we can confidently acknowledge those areas where we differ. And I believe the strength of our relationship can give tremendous hope and inspiration to others across the world. This year, the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth are celebrating a person who has worked hard to bring our two great states closer: Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.

Her Majesty’s visits here to the Vatican over a 60-year reign, and before when she came as a young Princess Elizabeth, her work to encourage harmony between Catholics and Protestants, her ground breaking visit to the people of Ireland in 2011, and her steadfast commitment to all her people are just some of the reasons her Diamond Jubilee makes this year such a special one for my country. And of course it was on her invitation that the Holy Father graced the United Kingdom with the first papal State Visit in our history.

PAPAL VISIT

The visit of September 2010 was historic, momentous and unforgettable, and I want to thank the Holy Father on behalf of all four nations in our country.

The hand of friendship was warmly received across our isles, reaching out to Catholics and non-Catholics, to those of faith and those of none, from the cheering crowds on the streets of Scotland, to those in silent contemplation during the Mass in Birmingham, and the many millions watching on their television screens or holding special events in school assemblies, community groups and workplaces.

It was a milestone in our relationship, a milestone in UK history – where heart truly spoke unto heart. On a personal level, I heeded the words of the Holy Father during his landmark speech in Westminster Hall. And I had the immense honour of enjoying an audience during a special event to promote interfaith relations.

It was a humbling, moving moment for me, and having made my speech at the Anglican Bishops’ Conference two days earlier on the importance of governments ‘doing God’ marking a clean break with the approach from the past, saying that our Government would be on the side of faith the Holy Father urged me to carry on making the case for faith in society.

MAIN ARGUMENT

So today I want to make one simple argument. That in order to ensure faith has a proper space in the public sphere, in order to encourage social harmony, people need to feel stronger in their religious identities, more confident in their beliefs. In practice this means individuals not diluting their faith, and nations not denying their religious heritage. If you take this thought to its conclusion then the idea you’re left with is this: Europe needs to become more confident in its Christianity.

Let us be honest: too often there is a suspicion of faith in our continent where signs of religion cannot be displayed or worn in government buildings where states won’t fund faith schools and where faith is sidelined, marginalised and downgraded. It all hinges on a basic misconception: that somehow to create equality and space for minority faiths and cultures we need to erase our majority religious heritage.

But it is my belief that the societies we are, the cultures we’ve created, the values we hold and the things we fight for stem from something we’ve argued over, dissented from, discussed and built up: Centuries of Christianity. It’s what the Holy Father called the “unrenounceable Christian roots of [our] culture and civilisation” which shine through our politics, our public life, our culture, our economics, our language and our architecture. You cannot and should not erase these Christian foundations from the evolution of our nations any more than you can or should erase the spires from our landscapes.

Let me get one thing very clear: I am not saying that everything done in the name of faith has been a blessing for our continent. Too much blood has been shed in the name of religion. But trying to erase this history or blind ourselves to the role of religion on our continent is wrong. We need to realise what drives us, what binds us and what inspires us is a history we are in danger of denying. I know, in a globalised world, it is easy to think that to relate to others you must water down your identity. But my point today is that being sure of who you are is the only way in which you will be more accommodating of others.

And there is a second strand to this argument: that true confidence has the power to guarantee openness, because only when you’re content in your own identity, only when you realise that the ‘Other’ does not jeopardise who you are can you truly accept and not merely tolerate the presence of difference. Just as the bully bullies because he or she is insecure, so too the state suppresses, marginalises, dictates and dismisses when it feels its identity is at stake.

In the United Kingdom, we have guarded against such fear by recognising the importance of the Established Church and our Christian heritage – our majority faith, and that is what has created religious freedom and a home for people like me, of minority faiths. Majority faiths and minority faiths – as a Muslim who was born and raised in – and now serves – a Christian country, I have experience of both. So I hope you will permit me to start by telling you a bit about my early life in the north of England in the 1970s and 80s. 

PERSONAL

When I was growing up, as the daughter of Pakistani immigrants, the debate in my country was not about religion but race. As a teenager what shaped me was the obvious injustice of Apartheid. In my student days I campaigned for racial equality, and in the years that followed I launched campaigns to bolster race relations.

But after 9/11 I saw the debate shifting – with difference being defined not by race but by religion. My loyalty to my country was not in question because of my parents’ home country or even the colour of my skin, but because of the religion I was born into. I began to look back at my faith and the choices I made, as well as the lessons I learnt from my parents. I attended a relatively conservative mosque. My father taught me to learn – to seek knowledge of both the history of my country and the foundation of my faith. He said that to truly understand my religion I needed to understand history as much as theology.  

He told me to think about my identity in the following way. He said that a river changes its appearance according to the bed on which it flows; the river will reflect the colour and the texture of the bed. It’s the same with religious and national identity. Like the river, your faith will reflect which nation you are a part of.

So what made me feel even more confident as a British Muslim, what truly enabled me to learn about my faith and to practice it was that my country – the bed over which the river of my faith flowed – had a strong Christian identity. This defined, shaped and gave me confidence in my own faith, which, combined with the confidence of my country’s principles, have since been evident in the decisions I’ve taken as an adult.

One decision which I think demonstrates how strongly I believe this was my choice of school for my daughter: an Anglican convent school. Many might think it is unusual for a Muslim mother to send her daughter to a Christian school, but I knew she would be free to follow her faith there, that she would not be looked down on because she believed. And as I had hoped, she found it strengthened her faith.

It also left her posing a lot of questions about religion. As she once said to me, during one of our frequent debates about religious symbols: “Mother Robina is going to get really upset about everyone being nasty about women who wear the hijab, because she wears one.”

As so often is the case, the youth shed light on situations like this and innocence brings clarity with my 9-year-old daughter bringing into sharp focus the similarities between the veil and the hijab. Summing up exactly why I don’t support the banning of religious symbols because, for me, it’s all about personal choice and the right to express one’s faith – whatever their faith. 

So with my daughter’s school, as with my own upbringing, a strong sense of Christianity didn’t threaten our Muslim identity – it actually reinforced it. It enabled me to make the case for further interfaith debate, discussion and work. It motivated me to stand up and speak out against anti-Muslim hatred, the persecution of Christians and anti-Semitism. And it inspired me to challenge the growing marginalisation of faith in my country and in Europe.

AROUND THE WORLD

As I look around the world today, my resolve is strengthened. Where we see faith inspiring, driving and motivating good works is where certainty of conviction is at its strongest. As the Bible teaches us: “For even as the body without the spirit is dead: so also faith without works is dead.” The Quran teaches us something similar – that:

“those who believe and do good works are the best of created beings.”

We see the proof every day – globally, locally and individually, grom the Catholic Church being instrumental in toppling communism, to its key role in securing peace in Northern Ireland: from the Catholic Schools in the UK, many of which are outperforming other institutions to the domestic response to the earthquake in Haiti, the floods in Pakistan and the drought in East Africa. And where day by day, faith sustains people through their darkest, most desperate periods there is no denying the link between these positive actions and faith.

Perhaps the best example I have seen of this was on my visit to Pakistan last month, a visit I promised the late Shahbaz Bhatti, the country’s tragically assassinated minorities minister, I would undertake meeting the Christian communities of Karachi. There I met four wonderful sisters at the Convent of Jesus and Mary School, including two Irish nuns. One of them had spent 58 years of her life teaching girls in Pakistan. Sister Berchmans, a native of County Clare – one of the most westerly spots in Europe – had left rural Ireland as a young nun to go and work in Pakistan.

There in Karachi, at the age of 80, and wearing her white habit and veil, she led the morning assembly in prayer in English. And then she led the singing of the Pakistan national anthem in Urdu. It was remarkable to see and to think of the practical and silent, discreet witness that Sister Berchmans and her fellow Nuns have shown to generations of young Pakistani girls, many of them Muslim, and one of who grew up to become a Prime Minister, the first female to govern the modern Islamic world: the late Benazir Bhutto.

Sister Berchmans did not have to dilute her own faith or require others to dilute theirs. Rather she was doing what countless generations have done before her – witnessing and living side by side with other cultures and faiths. With Sister Berchmans rooted in her beliefs, and the Pakistani community she serves unwavering in its… I saw not the diminishment of faith but the ultimate enactment of the common good. 

And I want to share some news with you today. Sister Berchmans, and another person of faith who has laboured in Pakistan for over 35 years – Father Robert McCulloch of Australia, who is with us here today have just been recognised for their lifetime of services to the people and development of Pakistan. And the President of Pakistan has awarded them Pakistan’s highest civilian honour: the Nishan-e-Quaid-i-Azam.

INTERFAITH

I believe the same commitment is needed for dialogue and service between faiths to continue to succeed. Its interlocutors need to demonstrate the strength of faith shown by Sister Berchmans and the strength of appreciation and gratitude shown by the President of Pakistan. Because different faiths must realise that, just because they don’t worship together, doesn’t mean that they can’t work together. 

A great deal of this progress has been made thanks to the efforts of the Catholic Church through its educational outreach or the work of groups like Caritas International and its federation of aid agencies around the world and landmark documents like in Britain Meeting God in Friend and Stranger.

As a UK cabinet minister of the Muslim faith, representing a country with an Anglican Established Church, visiting our friends in the spiritual home of Catholicism you will find no greater champion of understanding between faiths than me.

But I believe that where interfaith dialogue does not work is where faiths are dumbed down in order to find common ground. 

Just as the European language of Esperanto, which attempted to build a new tongue, neautralises our component languages a common language between faiths risks watering down the diversity and intensity of our respective religions. Instead, interfaith dialogue works when we debate our differences, when we wear our beliefs on our sleeves. It’s not about you giving your version of God, and me giving my version of God, and us coming to some watered-down compromise, but about establishing our areas of consensus, and being firm enough in our devotion to work together. 

That’s why, when I visited the Tomb of David in Jerusalem I felt no contradiction saying my nafils, or prayers, in an alternative place of worship.  It’s why when Vatican II, whose 50thanniversary we celebrate this year, set out Nostra Aetate, its acceptance of other faiths it was not a sign of the church’s weakness of belief, but a sign of its strength. And why, when the Holy Father made his historic visit to the Blue Mosque in Istanbul, he was not weakening his own faith but reaffirming it.

DEFEATING BIGOTRY

The point is that in so many ways, being sure of your faith adds a layer of strength to society. Confidence in our own beliefs enables us to defend attacks on others. Faith asks you to stand up for your neighbour. As the fourth Muslim caliph Ali ibn Abi Talib said: “Every man is your brother…either your brother in faith or your brother in humanity.”

This is the spirit which inspired Muslims to protect Jews during the Holocaust, which motivated Christians to support Muslims fleeing persecution in Darfur, and which led Chief Rabbi Sacks to call for action against persecution in Bosnia. 

It’s something I’ve been arguing for a long time. That persecution somewhere is persecution everywhere: that if you oppress my neighbour you are oppressing me: that an attack on a gudwara is an attack on a mosque, a church, a temple, a synagogue. 

Today I’m moving that thought on and saying that standing up for your neighbour of another faith doesn’t make you less of a Christian, less of a Jew or less of a Muslim – it makes you more of one. 

When British Jews stand up to the political factions promoting anti Muslim hatred, when Christians understand the horrors of the Holocaust and tackle anti-Semitism, when Muslims stand shoulder to shoulder with Sikhs to protect their temples it is not a betrayal of their own faith or a threat to it; it is the most powerful demonstration of security in their own faith.

MARGINALISATION OF FAITH

But the confident affirmation of religion which I have spoken of is under threat. It is what the Holy Father called ‘the increasing marginalisation of religion’ during his speech in Westminster Hall. I see it in United Kingdom and I see it in Europe: spirituality, suppressed: divinity, downgraded.

Where, in the words of the Archbishop of Canterbury, faith is looked down on as the hobby of ‘oddities, foreigners and minorities’: where religion is dismissed as an eccentricity because it’s infused with tradition: where we undermine people who attribute good works to their belief and require them to deny it as their motivation. And where faith is overlooked in the public sphere with not even a word about Christianity in the preface of the “European Constitution.”

When I pledged that the new government in the United Kingdom would ‘do God,’ in some quarters there was uproar. More telling were the countless comments I received of quiet support a relief that finally someone had said what they had been thinking. This fact alone shows the extent to which religion has been sidelined by some.

Because in parts of Europe there have been misguided beliefs that in order to accommodate people from other backgrounds, we must somehow become less religious or less Christian. That somehow society must level itself out so that faith becomes something that is marginalised and limited to the private confines of one’s home or even one’s mind. But those calls are not coming from other faith communities. They are coming from two types of people. First, the well-intentioned liberal elite who, conversely, are trying to create equality by marginalising faith in society who think that the route to religious pluralism is by creating a path of faith-neutrality, who downgrade religion to a mere subcategory in public life.

But look at their supposed level playing field. Its terrain is all but impassable to anyone of belief. One of the arguments of the liberal elite is that faith and reason are incompatible. But they don’t realise, as the Holy Father has argued for many years, that faith and reason go hand in hand. As he said to us in Westminster Hall: “…the world of secular rationality and the world of religious belief…need one another and should not be afraid to enter into a profound and ongoing dialogue, for the good of our civilisation. 

In other words, just as reason should not be excluded from debates about faith, so too spirituality should not be excluded when we look at worldly matters. Second, there are the anti-religionists, the faith deniers. The people who dine out on free-flowing media and sustain a vocabulary of secularist intolerance attempting to remove all trace of religion from culture, history and public discourse. While ignoring the fact that people of faith give more to charity and that the number of people going to a place of worship is globally on the up.

My theory is that we are so afraid – and rightly so – of going backwards in history to the bad days when religion was imposed on people by despotic regimes that we have got to the stage where aggressive secularism is being imposed by stealth. Leaving us with the ironic situation where, to stave off intolerance against minorities we end up being intolerant towards religion itself.

For me, one of the most worrying aspects about this militant secularisation is that at its core and in its instincts it is deeply intolerant. It demonstrates similar traits to totalitarian regimes – denying people the right to a religious identity and failing to understand the relationship between religious loyalty and loyalty to the state. That’s why in the 20thCentury, one of the first acts of totalitarian regimes was the targeting of organised religion.

Why? Because, to them, a religious identity struck at the heart of their totalitarian ideology. In a free market of ideas, they knew their ideology was weak. And with the strength of religions, established over many years, followed by many billions their totalitarian regimes would be jeopardised. Our response to militant secularisation today has to be simple: holding firm in our faiths: holding back intolerance.

Reaffirming the religious foundations on which our societies are built and reasserting the fact that, for centuries, Christianity in Europe has been inspiring, motivating, strengthening and improving our societies: in public life – driving people to do great things, like setting up schools, creating public services, leading the way in charitable acts: in politics – inspiring parties on both the left and the right: in economics – providing many of the foundations for our market economy and capitalism: in culture – influencing our monuments, our music, our paintings, and our engravings. 

I’m delighted that the UK Government understands this from supporting faith schools and faith charities at home and abroad to helping religious groups to deliver vital public services and, most powerfully, when our Prime Minister spoke out unequivocally about the lasting impact of the King James Bible on our country.

THE FUTURE

But we must take this confident, open faith and apply it beyond the present. I see a growing problem in some parts of our world today with governments dictating what is a church and what isn’t: where people can build a place of worship and where they cannot: which faith they can belong to and which they cannot: and whether they can display their beliefs in public or not. 

I believe this is a misguided attempt at shoring up majority religions. These governments need to realise that pluralism is not a threat to tradition. Closer to home we see a similar suspicion. For example, from the politicians who say that inviting Turkey to join the European Union is a threat to the roots of Europe and its Christian heritage. Because they worry that the inclusion of a Muslim-majority country would diminish the Christianity of other countries. They are mistaken.

The solution is not to shut the door on people of other faiths, but to strengthen our continent’s identity. Just as German Chancellor Angela Merkel said of her country: “The problem is not that we have too much Islam, it’s that we have too little Christianity and too few discussions about the Christian view of mankind.”

Those discussions will only come about if Europe is more confident in its Christianity. So our continent needs the zeal of a convert not from discovering something new but rediscovering something which has underpinned our civilisations for centuries.

FAITH’S SEAT AT THE TABLE

At the same time, politicians need to give faith a seat at the table in public life. Not the privileged position of a theocracy, but that of an equal informer of our public debate. So we are not afraid to acknowledge when the debate derives from a religious basis and not afraid to take onboard – and take on – the solutions offered up by religion.

Politicians must also not be afraid to speak out when we think people who speak in the name of faith have got it wrong. For example, in the UK today, Bishops in the House of Lords, the chamber in which I sit, are opposing the government’s reforms to welfare where the government is trying to restore the dignity of work by putting responsibility back at the heart of religion.

I welcome the role of the Bishops in scrutinising the legislation. I support their right to bring their view to the table. But I reserve the right to disagree. I am not saying that faith leaders should have a monopoly on morality. Because, of course, as our Prime Minister David Cameron said, there are Christians who don’t live by a moral code and there are atheists and agnostics who do. But for people who do have a faith, their faith can be a helpful prod in the right direction.

Therefore, I’m arguing that religion needs a role when we look at the problems today. And that even the most committed atheist can find that those who are committed to religion have something to offer and that faith can be good for society, good for communities and good for those who choose to follow a faith.

When religion has a role in public life, it enables us to look at our economy and refer to the Christian principles on which our markets were founded. It means we can take solace from teachings such a Rerum Novarum and Caritas in Veritate, which offer up answers for creating moral markets.

It means we can look at our social problems and be inspired by Catholic Social Teaching, looking at our welfare system and thinking, how does this impact on human dignity? Looking at social breakdown and thinking, are we reinforcing responsibility between citizens? Looking at governance and thinking, are we relying on large organisations to do what smaller units could achieve? All the while thinking and remembering that many of our values – loving our neighbours, acting as the Good Samaritan would, supporting and championing the family unit doing to others as you would be done by – are Biblical, spiritual and religious in their origin.

UNDERSTANDING FAITH

This action at a national and at a political level should have an impact at a social level. Where individuals’ stronger rooting in their own religion will inspire a stronger understanding of faith. And there is no better remedy to the distortion of our respective faiths. As the Holy Father said last year in Assisi: “[Violence] is not the true nature of religion. It is the antithesis of religion and contributes to its destruction.”

Yet it remains a sad fact that in the modern world we see faith hijacked in the name of evil acts, utterly contrary to the teachings of the mainstream religions of the world. Perhaps if states were more rooted in their religious heritages then faiths would be less prone to being distorted and hijacked for political gains.

At the same time it is this distortion which leads to believers being victimised for the actions of their co-religionists. So Christians in Pakistan, Muslims in the USA, and even Jews in Britain, are targeted, victimised and feel the backlash of actions by their co-religionists. It’s unacceptable and it must stop.

CONCLUSION

I started today by talking about the bond between the UK and the Holy See about how we have overcome our differences to form our oldest formal diplomatic relationship. I established that appreciating these differences was a sign of our strength, not weakness. And this strength of identity has shone through in our actions in the name of the common good, in the Holy Father’s State Visit to the UK in 2010, and, I trust, in our visit today. 

Today I am urging individuals and nations to take the same approach when it comes to faith, and saying that in order to create harmony, people need to strengthen their own identity being sure of their nation’s religious foundations, and secure in their own beliefs.

At a time of great change taking place throughout the Muslim world, particularly during the Arab awakening. Many countries, political parties and individuals are redefining their identity. They are looking to their faith as source of inspiration to define the values by which they want to govern. This is a great opportunity for them to show that their countries are a home for all people, to demonstrate that defending your neighbour, whatever their faith, is an obligation and to prove to the world the true, peaceful spirit of religion.

For Europe this means becoming more confident in its Christianity and with that confidence, becoming more open. People need to realise that, in our continent and beyond, Christianity’s teachings and values are as permanent as Westminster Abbey, as indelible as Da Vinci’s Last Supper, and as solid as Christ the Redeemer. And that Christianity is as vital to our future as it is to our past. 

For the wider world this means recognising that defending another faith does not diminish your own, being sure of your foundations and protecting minorities, preventing faith from being undermined and creating a space for faith – any faith – to thrive. Our two states have lots to learn, and much to teach and I have hope – and, yes, faith – that others will continue with us on this path. 

© Innovative Media, Inc.

Full transcript | David Cameron | Speech on Scottish independence | Edinburgh | 16 February 2012

Posted on 16th February 2012 in The monuments of world

“Of course Scotland could govern itself. So could England. But we do it so much better together.”

The air in Scotland hangs heavy with history. Edinburgh’s cityscape is studded with monuments to memories.

Walter Scott, Robert Louis Stevenson and John Knox all compete for our attention. In Dundee, Captain Scott’s Discovery lies at anchor. In Aberdeen, King’s and Marischal Colleges remind us of a time when the Granite City had as many universities for its citizens as England had for all of hers.

And while the hauntingly empty acres of the Highlands stand in mute memorial to the injustices visited on the victims of the clearances, Glasgow’s magnificent architecture and art galleries remind us of the mercantile greatness of the Empire’s second city.

For politicians north and south of the border, however, there is a danger of living in the past when thinking of Scotland. That is partly because its history is populated so thickly with great men and women who we might want to conscript for our contemporary battles.

Those of us on the centre-right will pray in aid of Adam Smith and David Hume, economic liberals and philosophical conservatives whose enlightenment thought laid the basis for later political action.

On the left, the examples of James Maxton and Keir Hardie can still inspire class strugglers to one more heave.

This has been a pioneering country all its life. As a home of learning in medieval times. A nursery of literacy and learning at the time of the Reformation. A champion of liberty during the Enlightenment. The turbine hall of the Industrial Revolution. A recruiting ground for freedom’s fighters in two world wars. The birthplace of John Reith, who gave us public service broadcasting and as a powerful contributor to the last twenty-five years of economic growth. Scotland has much of which to be proud.

And one of the reasons we are tempted to look backwards is precisely because Scotland as a nation – and as part of the United Kingdom for over 300 years – has achieved so much.

But proud as that past and present are, I am convinced that for both Scotland, and the United Kingdom, our best days lie ahead of us.

And that even though it may be a great historical construct, the United Kingdom is actually even more of an inspiring model for the future.

Think of the key challenges of our times.

There’s the risks and opportunities of globalisation – with populations moving, cultures clashing and new routes to prosperity.

And there’s the impact of increasing economic competition from the new, economic power houses of the world.

The United Kingdom has the answers to both.

In an increasingly uncertain world, where risks proliferate and atomisation threatens our ability to look out for one another, nothing encapsulates the principle of pooling risk, sharing resources and standing together with your neighbour better than the United Kingdom.

Whether it’s ensuring the same disability benefits for those in need from Motherwell to Maidstone or ensuring that the resources of sixty million taxpayers stand behind our banks.

Whether in Edinburgh or London, the United Kingdom is a warm and stable home that billions elsewhere envy.

And in an increasingly competitive world, where the future belongs to those who can collaborate, innovate and co-operate together best. The support a nation of sixty million can give, for example, to knowledge exchange between bio-engineers in Edinburgh and Oxford and venture capital for the best start-ups could be the envy of others.

So – I come here today with one simple message: I hope and wish that Scotland will vote to remain part of the UK.

That’s not because I want to dragoon Scotland into an arrangement which is in my interests. Or, frankly, my party’s interests.

I know the Conservative Party isn’t currently Scotland’s most influential political movement and so more than a little humility is called for when any contemporary Tory speaks in Scotland.

In fact some say it might be wiser not to speak at all.

As well as avoiding any criticism from the press – or politicians from other parties for “interfering” – it might be thought wise of me to just let Scotland, in every sense, go its own way.

And some people, not all of them Tories, have suggested that an independent Scotland might make it easier for my party to get a majority in Westminster. But that doesn’t interest me.

I’m not here to make a case on behalf of my party, its interests or its approach to office.

I’m here to stand up and speak out for what I believe in. I believe in the United Kingdom. I’m a Unionist head, heart and soul. I believe that England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are stronger together than they would ever be apart.

It is time to speak out, whatever the consequences, because something very special is in danger – the ties which bind us in the country we call home.

The danger comes from the determination of the Scottish National Party to remove Scotland from our shared home.

Now it is absolutely right that since the SNP won the Scottish elections, they should be able to determine the business of the Scottish Parliament and the agenda of the Scottish Government.

They want to put the question of independence to the Scottish people and their ultimate ambition is clear: they want Scotland to leave the United Kingdom.

And it is right too that the choice over independence should be for the Scottish people to make.

But that choice should not be made – with its consequences for all of us – without explaining why I believe in the United Kingdom, and why it matters to so many of us.

Let’s be clear, though, I’m not going to stand here and suggest Scotland couldn’t make a go of being on its own, if that’s what people decide. There are plenty of small, independent nation states of a similar size or even smaller.

Scotland could make its way in the world alongside countries like those.

Of course, every country in the world is facing new challenges and an independent Scotland would itself need to confront some big issues. There are those who argue about the volatility of dependence on oil, or the problems of debt and a big banking system.

And there is for some smaller nations the risk that independence can actually lead to greater dependence.

Certainly today Scotland has a currency which takes into account the needs of the Scottish economy as well as the rest of the United Kingdom when setting interest rates.

And it can borrow on rates that are amongst the lowest in Europe.

An independent Scotland would have to negotiate in future for things it now gets as of right.

But these challenges and the need to overcome them, they are not my point today.

My argument is simple. Of course Scotland could govern itself. So could England. But we do it so much better together.

I can – and will – enumerate a number of practical reasons for our United Kingdom.

But the reason I make the case is – partly – emotional. Because this is a question of the heart as well as the head.

The United Kingdom isn’t just some sort of deal, to be reduced to the lowest common denominator.

It’s a precious thing. It’s about our history, our values, our shared identity and our joint place in the world.

I am not just proud of the Union because it is useful. I’m proud because it shapes and strengthens us all.

Just think of what we’ve achieved together. Scotland has contributed to the greatest political, cultural and social success story of the last three hundred years, the creation and flourishing of a United Kingdom built on freedom and inclusivity.

Individual nations can of course adhere around ancient myths, blood-soaked memories and opposition to others. But we have built a United Kingdom that also coheres around the values embodied in standing up for freedom and democracy around the globe. In free healthcare for all. Generous welfare for the poorest and championing the most vulnerable on the world stage.

A United Kingdom which is not monoglot, monochrome and minimalist but multi-national, multi-cultural and modern in every way. Our United Kingdom.

Founded on the strengths of our constitutional monarchy, parliamentary democracy and the rule of law. It’s also the birthplace of the NHS, the BBC and Christian Aid.

We have shared achievements that more than match those of any other country in the world.

From Waterloo to the Second World War our servicemen and women have fought and won together. The liberation of Europe was a battle fought to the skirl of the pipes as Lord Lovat’s Highlanders were among the first ashore on D-Day in the battle to defeat Hitler.

Your heroes are our heroes.

Men like Robert Dunsire who twice in one day crawled out of the trenches facing a hail of bullets to rescue injured men at the Battle of Loos. And Lance Corporal Liam Tasker – the dog handler who helped to save so many lives in Afghanistan before tragically being shot.

The Union has never been about shackling different nations: it’s a free partnership, a joint effort, often driven by Scottish ideas and Scottish leadership.

From the industrial and commercial leadership of James Watt and Robert Owen centuries ago to Sir Bill Gammell and Ian Wood today.

And in Westminster the cause of progress has depended on the voices of politicians from Scotland – whether its been the liberalism of Henry Campbell-Bannerman and Joe Grimond. The progressive conservatism of Iain Macleod and George Younger, or the generous and humane radicalism of Donald Dewar and John Smith.

Together we have turned a group of off-shore European islands into one of the most successful countries in the world. But it’s not just about what we have achieved together. It’s about who we are together.

The ties of blood grow thicker. Far from growing apart we’re actually growing together.

There are now more Scots living in England and English people living in Scotland than ever before. And almost half of Scots now have English relatives.

I am a classic case. My father’s father was a Cameron. My mother’s mother was a Llewellyn. I was born and have always lived in England.

I am proud to be English – but like so many others, I am proud to be British too.

Proud of the United Kingdom and Scotland’s place within it.

Then there are the practical reasons for the Union to stay together. The Union helps to make Scotland stronger, safer, richer and fairer.

We’re stronger, because through our shared Union we count for more together in the world than we would apart.

We have a permanent place on the UN Security Council real clout in NATO and Europe and unique influence with key allies all over the world.

Scottish pilots helped us to free Libya from tyranny and prevented a failed pariah state festering on Europe’s Southern border potentially threatening our security and creating a more dangerous and uncertain world for Britain and for all our allies as well as for the people of Libya.

We’re safer, not just because of the expertise and bravery our armed forces to which Scotland makes an immense contribution but also because of our policing expertise and security services respected the world over.

When a bomb went off at Glasgow Airport the full resources of the UK state went into running down every lead. Our tentacles reach from the border areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan to the CIA computers at Langley.

We’re richer, because Scotland’s 5 million people are part of an economy of 60 million with no boundaries, borders or customs but a common system, rules and currency which has helped to make us the 7th largest economy in the world.

And far from growing apart our economies are growing together. A fifth of all Scottish workers are employed by firms registered in Scotland but owned by companies based elsewhere in rest of the UK. And Scotland sells twice as much to the rest of the UK as to the rest of the world put together.

And we’re fairer. Not just because we all benefit from being part of a properly-funded welfare system, with the resources to fund our pensions and health-care needs, but because there is real solidarity in our United Kingdom.

When any part of the United Kingdom suffers a shock or a set back, the rest of the country stands behind it. Whether it is floods in the West Country, severe weather in the north or the economic dislocation that has hit different parts of our economy at different times and in different ways we are there for each other.

And together we have the power to do much in the world to promote fairness. One issue that is very close to my heart is aid. And this is an issue where Scottish people have a huge influence.

Together as a UK we have the 2nd biggest aid budget in the world. Through the UK, Scotland has global reach. And with that we are saving thousands of lives and helping people in some of the poorest parts of the world to forge a new future.

From the famine in the Horn of Africa to the support for people in North Africa and the Middle East as they seek new freedoms that we and others take for granted.

So I believe there are emotional and practical reasons why the Scotland is better off in the Union – and why we are all better off together than apart. But I don’t think that is enough.

I also understand why people in Scotland want to express their identity as Scots strongly and to have greater control over their lives. I believe in real devolution and want to make devolution work better.

I want a Scotland where more people own their own homes. Where more people keep more of their money. With secure jobs and a secure future for their children.

A Scotland where businesses can innovate and create the wealth and opportunities so vital to local communities breaking down the barriers to entrepreneurship that have for too long held Scotland back.

I believe in devolution not because I see it as a mechanism for obtaining power – hardly the case for my party in Scotland – but because I believe in giving people choice and a real say of their own affairs.

I passionately believe that local is best. And the decentralisation of power is one of the core aims of the Coalition government I lead.

One of my first acts as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom was to come here to Scotland to meet Alex Salmond and to show that I want the governments in Westminster and Holyrood – whoever they are and whichever party they are from – to work together to get the best for Scotland.

To listen to Scotland – to act on Scotland’s voice and govern in Scotland’s interests.

On that first visit I said the only political input into senior Scottish civil service appointments should come from the First Minister and I delegated my previous responsibility to the Cabinet Secretary.

A small symbolic gesture of the kind of change I want to bring about. Since then Ministers in Holyrood and Westminster have been meeting regularly. And soon a much bigger change will become law.

The Scotland Bill hasn’t got the attention yet that it deserves. But it’s an incredible opportunity for Scots.

Not London telling Edinburgh which powers it can have – but opening up Scotland’s choice to expand the ones it needs.

By implementing the recommendations of the Calman Commission – devolving new powers to the Scottish Parliament including for the first time the ability to raise tax revenue and borrow for capital and current expenditure the Scottish government is getting real choice over how and when to invest in long-term projects that will benefit future generations.

And let me say something else about devolution. That doesn’t have to be the end of the road.

When the referendum on independence is over, I am open to looking at how the devolved settlement can be improved further. And yes, that means considering what further powers could be devolved.

But that must be a question for after the referendum, when Scotland has made its choice about the fundamental question of independence.

When Scotland has settled this question once and for all – and ended the uncertainty that could damage and hold back Scotland’s prospects and potential.

So I believe the strengths that have served us through the centuries are precisely the ones we most need today.

Our United Kingdom is a modern Union: one that evolves, that protects us and that allows our different nations to grow stronger because we share the same secure foundations – institutions that celebrate diversity and turn it into a strength.

Scotland’s greatest poet said we should “see ourselves as others see us” – and that’s worth doing.

Because our Union isn’t some antique imposition. It’s living, free and adaptable.

It’s admired around the world as a source of prosperity, power and security.

Just think for a moment: could you explain to someone in America, or France, or Australia what was so intolerable about Great Britain that we decided to build artificial barriers between our nations?

I don’t believe that the people of Scotland any more than the people of any other part of the United Kingdom want to turn inward and away from each other at this time.

I believe – indeed it’s my reason for being in politics – that it’s when you pull together, when you set aside difference, when you roll up your sleeves in a common endeavour you can achieve things which are truly worthwhile, even noble, which you could never accomplish on your own.

For me the principle that we work best when we work together without coercion or conscription, bullying or bossiness, in a spirit of shared service sums up what’s best about our countries.

That’s what the United Kingdom stands for – common endeavour.

Being part of something bigger – a greater Britain in which the virtues of sharing, standing together and making a difference for our fellow citizens guide our every action.

If anything’s worth fighting for that surely is; which is why I’m ready for the fight for our country’s life.

Is Ireland's Achill-henge a beauty or a blight?

Posted on 16th February 2012 in The monuments of world

16 February 2012 Last updated at 06:12 ET

By Kieran Cooke BBC News

Achill-henge

Ireland has plenty of ancient settlements and monuments. But on a visit to Achill Island, off the far west coast – up a mountain and in the middle of a bog – sits a different kind of monument that locals are calling Achill-henge.

The wind is so strong, just opening the car door takes considerable effort. A spitting downpour of hail hits the flesh like shards of glass.

Balancing on one foot in a gale to put on waterproof trousers is not a good idea. I am blown, hopping, along the rough track, eventually toppling into a soft – and very wet – patch of bog.

Achill Island is about as far west in Europe as you can go: “From here it’s next stop New York,” said the man in the bar.

On a bright summer day its rolling boglands and towering cliffs have a haunting, majestic beauty. But on a winter afternoon, with a force 10 gale blowing, Achill really does feel like the end of the road, the edge of the earth.

Leaning into the wind, I struggle for about 1.5km (1 mile) up the mountain, its top covered in a thin layer of snow, like sugar powder sprinkled on a cake.

And then, rising out of the bog as if it is some science fiction creation, it comes into view – a massive circular concrete construction of 30 columns, each more than 4m (13ft) high.

The edifice, a very modern looking coliseum, is topped by a ring of stone: in all the construction is more than 100m in circumference.

Taking their cue from ancient Stonehenge in southern England, locals have been quick to name the site Achill-henge.

Only a short time after it was built, roughly-made signs now guide the adventurous visitor up the slippery mountain path.

A local developer with a grudge against the authorities is responsible for Achill-henge.

In the past, he has driven a cement mixer into gates of the Irish Parliament to protest about what he sees as the politicians inept handling of the financial crisis.

I struggle up on to a pile of stone and wet earth to take a picture.

What is visible through the rain-soaked lens is peculiar, alien and definitely mysterious.

To some, it is Ireland’s latest tourist attraction. To others, yet another example of developers’ wanton butchery of the Irish landscape.

A map of Achill IslandAchill Island is the largest island off the west coast

The hail has gone but another storm is galloping in from the Atlantic. In between the downpours, the high cliffs in the distance are lit by rays of sunlight. You feel the weather here in every fibre of your being. It is desolate.

Achill has always been a place of leaving. In one area, a whole village stands deserted – a relic to those who left during the mid-19th Century famine.

A railway once ran from Achill all the way east to Dublin. Each summer teams of locals would leave to go picking potatoes in Scotland and England.

During the recent boom, years of the so-called Celtic Tiger, people did return to live on what is Ireland’s largest island. Now, what with financial bail-outs and the economic downturn, emigration has once again become a fact of life.

There are varying opinions about Achill-henge: even those virulently opposed to the construction admit it is a considerable feat of engineering – built over a weekend in November without planning permissions – by a team of workers hauling giant concrete slabs up the mountain side and sinking them in the bog.

“It would have taken the council five years to do anything like that,” says one local.

Achill has always had a reputation as a wild place, where the rule of law does not always apply.

Over the years, writers and artists have been drawn to the islands’ rugged landscape, the clarity of its light – and its tempestuous storms.

Graham Greene spent time here in a tumbledown house, writing and pursuing his then lover, a rich and eccentric society beauty.

The German writer Heinrich Boll was a frequent visitor – it was a place, he said, where you could play truant from Europe.

What, I wonder, would they have thought of Achill-henge?

Orders to demolish the construction have gone unheeded.

StonehengeThousands watch the sun rises at the original Stonehenge in Wiltshire

Strangely, the man responsible for the project has said little about what Achill-henge is, what it represents or exactly what he intends to do with it.

A poll in a local newspaper found that most people feel Achill-henge should be left standing.

Some see it as a place of contemplation, or even as a daring art installation.

It is causing plenty of confusion. One man summed up the general feeling. “It is meaningless – in a way – so each of us can put our own meaning on it.”

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Snow damages Colosseum, Medieval churches in Italy

Posted on 15th February 2012 in The monuments of world
The Colosseum in Rome, and sites in the historic walled town of Urbino, have suffered damage due to unprecedented snow-fall
The Colosseum in Rome, and sites in the historic walled town of Urbino, have suffered damage due to unprecedented snow-fall
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Snow has caused damage to the Colosseum in Rome and to historic buildings in Urbino
  • Plunging temperatures caused ice to form on Colosseum walls, forcing off small pieces of rock
  • Delicate houses in Urbino’s historic walled center have suffered collapses
  • Worst snowfall in Italy for many years; said to be equivalent of a severe flood

London (CNN) — Heavy snow in recent weeks has already wreaked havoc across Europe — now it is damaging some of the continent’s most recognized historic monuments.

The Colosseum in Rome has been forced to shut after small pieces of its walls crumbled away as a result of freezing temperatures.

And buildings in the historic walled town of Urbino — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — are reported to be at risk of collapse under the weight of snow, following unprecedented blizzards in the area.

Are you there? Share your photos and video with iReport

In the Italian capital, thousands of tourists have been disappointed to discover the Colosseum, one of the city’s most popular attractions, is closed to visitors, while checks are carried out to determine the extent of the damage and to help prevent further movement.

Rossella Rea, archaeologist and superintendent of the Colosseum, told CNN: “Tests and evaluation of the damage is still ongoing, especially on the second level of arches.”

Rea said the enforced closure of the site would have a serious financial impact — the Colosseum attracts some 7,000 visitors a day, paying 12 euros for a ticket — but that it was necessary in the circumstances.

“At the weekend, some of the tourists didn’t understand why the Colosseum was closed — for people from northern countries, the snow is not a problem.

“But it’s very unusual for us and it caused the detachment of dust, concrete and bricks. Little quantities but if they fall from a certain height they can be dangerous.”

Cristiano Brughitta, spokesman for Italy’s Ministry for Cultural Heritage and Activities, said the damage was caused by ice forming on the walls of the monument.

It’s an enormous quantity of snow compared with what we normally get in winter and it’s had a heavy impact, the equivalent of a flood
Gabriele Cavalera

“When the temperatures drop below zero, and there is rain and snow, it causes ice to form which, with the increase in volume, pushes the external plaster masonry and causes small pieces to fall off,” he said.

David Pickles, senior architect at English Heritage, told CNN such damage was an extreme version of the natural wear and tear buildings face during everyday weather.

“There’s a whole freeze/thaw cycle of damage to buildings where moisture gets into the stonework, into the pores of the stone, it then freezes and expands very significantly, it then breaks up the stone and then when it thaws, bits of stone will start falling off.

“That’s happening all the time, of course, that’s one of the major decay mechanisms in historic buildings anyway, because they’re largely water permeable… You can’t treat stone to stop it happening.”

In Urbino, in the Marche region of Italy, partial collapses have been reported at the convents of San Francesco and San Bernardino, while the roof of the Church of the Capuchins outside the town center has reportedly caved in.

The town’s Duomo (cathedral) is also shut, because of water damage. Checks are being carried out on vulnerable buildings in the area.

“Our biggest worry is the buildings in the historic center, which have wooden joists and delicate roofs,” said Gabriele Cavalera, a spokesperson for the local council.

According to Cavalera, residents of some private homes in the historic center are adding extra support to the old roof beams in an attempt to prevent any further cave-ins.

“It’s an enormous quantity of snow compared with what we normally get in winter and it’s had a heavy impact, the equivalent of a flood,” said Cavalera.

Brughitta agreed that conditions were exceptional: “Maybe every 30 years it gets this cold, but it’s very rare.”

A number of Italy’s historic monuments, including the Colosseum and Pompeii, have suffered in recent years from damage and collapse.

The Colosseum, which is scheduled to reopen to the public Thursday, is due to undergo restoration works later this year with sponsorship from luxury brand Tod’s.

In case of similar snowfalls in the future, Brughitta in Rome suggests using a type of cold-weather “blanket” for exposed monuments such as the nearly 2,000-year-old Colosseum.

Though Pickles said such plans may be difficult, on a practical level: “For a building like the Colosseum, I should think it would cost a fortune to cover it, because we’re talking about a huge wall area.”

And while delicate, these buildings are nonetheless tenacious when it comes to adverse weather and acts of god.

After all, said Cavalera, The Ducal Palace in Urbino, which is around 500 years old and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, managed to resist collapse during the earthquakes of the 1990s and is so far holding out against the snow.

Livia Borghese in Rome contributed to this report.

Rome's Colosseum snow damage

Posted on 15th February 2012 in The monuments of world
The Colosseum in Rome, and sites in the historic walled town of Urbino, have suffered damage due to unprecedented snow-fall
The Colosseum in Rome, and sites in the historic walled town of Urbino, have suffered damage due to unprecedented snow-fall
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Snow has caused damage to the Colosseum in Rome and to historic buildings in Urbino
  • Plunging temperatures caused ice to form on Colosseum walls, forcing off small pieces of rock
  • Delicate houses in Urbino’s historic walled center have suffered collapses
  • Worst snowfall in Italy for many years; said to be equivalent of a severe flood

London (CNN) — Heavy snow in recent weeks has already wreaked havoc across Europe — now it is damaging some of the continent’s most recognized historic monuments.

The Colosseum in Rome has been forced to shut after small pieces of its walls crumbled away as a result of freezing temperatures.

And buildings in the historic walled town of Urbino — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — are reported to be at risk of collapse under the weight of snow, following unprecedented blizzards in the area.

Are you there? Share your photos and video with iReport

In the Italian capital, thousands of tourists have been disappointed to discover the Colosseum, one of the city’s most popular attractions, is closed to visitors, while checks are carried out to determine the extent of the damage and to help prevent further movement.

Rossella Rea, archaeologist and superintendent of the Colosseum, told CNN: “Tests and evaluation of the damage is still ongoing, especially on the second level of arches.”

Rea said the enforced closure of the site would have a serious financial impact — the Colosseum attracts some 7,000 visitors a day, paying 12 euros for a ticket — but that it was necessary in the circumstances.

“At the weekend, some of the tourists didn’t understand why the Colosseum was closed — for people from northern countries, the snow is not a problem.

“But it’s very unusual for us and it caused the detachment of dust, concrete and bricks. Little quantities but if they fall from a certain height they can be dangerous.”

Cristiano Brughitta, spokesman for Italy’s Ministry for Cultural Heritage and Activities, said the damage was caused by ice forming on the walls of the monument.

It’s an enormous quantity of snow compared with what we normally get in winter and it’s had a heavy impact, the equivalent of a flood
Gabriele Cavalera

“When the temperatures drop below zero, and there is rain and snow, it causes ice to form which, with the increase in volume, pushes the external plaster masonry and causes small pieces to fall off,” he said.

David Pickles, senior architect at English Heritage, told CNN such damage was an extreme version of the natural wear and tear buildings face during everyday weather.

“There’s a whole freeze/thaw cycle of damage to buildings where moisture gets into the stonework, into the pores of the stone, it then freezes and expands very significantly, it then breaks up the stone and then when it thaws, bits of stone will start falling off.

“That’s happening all the time, of course, that’s one of the major decay mechanisms in historic buildings anyway, because they’re largely water permeable… You can’t treat stone to stop it happening.”

In Urbino, in the Marche region of Italy, partial collapses have been reported at the convents of San Francesco and San Bernardino, while the roof of the Church of the Capuchins outside the town center has reportedly caved in.

The town’s Duomo (cathedral) is also shut, because of water damage. Checks are being carried out on vulnerable buildings in the area.

“Our biggest worry is the buildings in the historic center, which have wooden joists and delicate roofs,” said Gabriele Cavalera, a spokesperson for the local council.

According to Cavalera, residents of some private homes in the historic center are adding extra support to the old roof beams in an attempt to prevent any further cave-ins.

“It’s an enormous quantity of snow compared with what we normally get in winter and it’s had a heavy impact, the equivalent of a flood,” said Cavalera.

Brughitta agreed that conditions were exceptional: “Maybe every 30 years it gets this cold, but it’s very rare.”

A number of Italy’s historic monuments, including the Colosseum and Pompeii, have suffered in recent years from damage and collapse.

The Colosseum, which is scheduled to reopen to the public Thursday, is due to undergo restoration works later this year with sponsorship from luxury brand Tod’s.

In case of similar snowfalls in the future, Brughitta in Rome suggests using a type of cold-weather “blanket” for exposed monuments such as the nearly 2,000-year-old Colosseum.

Though Pickles said such plans may be difficult, on a practical level: “For a building like the Colosseum, I should think it would cost a fortune to cover it, because we’re talking about a huge wall area.”

And while delicate, these buildings are nonetheless tenacious when it comes to adverse weather and acts of god.

After all, said Cavalera, The Ducal Palace in Urbino, which is around 500 years old and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, managed to resist collapse during the earthquakes of the 1990s and is so far holding out against the snow.

Livia Borghese in Rome contributed to this report.

Sky Poker's Cardstacker Challenge Landmark Build Begins as Guinness World Record Holder Bryan Berg Prepares to Rebuild …

Posted on 15th February 2012 in The monuments of world

LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM–(Marketwire -02/15/12)- It took just seven days to build Rome so Sky Poker are giving Bryan ‘The Cardstacker’ Berg exactly the same amount of time to deck out his gravity-defying playing card masterpiece. Sky Poker’s highly anticipated Cardstacker Challenge, which sees the Guinness World Record Holder build a UK landmark entirely out of freestanding playing cards at Aspers Casino, Stratford, has reached exciting new heights as the votes are in! The public have spoken, and Bryan Berg will be rebuilding Big Ben and Parliament at an impressive 14 feet wide and 7 1/2 feet tall, solely out of playing cards, with no tape, no glue, and no tricks! Sky Poker, the UK’s leading online poker firm, can announce that Aspers Casino is now a construction zone, as men (one man) are at work. The build has begun!

Big Ben and Parliament were up against some of the UK’s finest monuments, but the iconic Thames-side vista won the hearts of voters all over the country. This win is convenient for The Cardstacker himself, who can take a short trip to Embankment for inspiration, before heading back to nearby Stratford.

The build takes place in Aspers Casino near Stratford’s trendy Olympic village. Watch as one of London’s most historic landmarks comes to life in the fashionable East End.


Where: Aspers Casino
Live Build
When: 2-10pm, 15 - 22 February 2012
Exhibition
22-26 February 2012
Knockdown
27 February 2012
(All visitors must be over 18)

The Cardstacker Challenge Landmark Build celebrates Sky Poker’s Play the Nation event.

The build reaches a climax on 27 February 2012 as the Cardstacker’s creation faces The Knockdown! Visit the Sky Poker Facebook Page to find out all latest details about the demolition.

Has The Cardstacker met his biggest challenge yet? Guests aged 18 and over are invited to see Bryan Berg building live daily at Aspers Casino Westfield Stratford City, 312 The Loft, Montfichet Road, Olympic Park, London.

About SkyPoker.com

Sky Poker is the British Sky Broadcasting’s online poker division, which allows users to play poker online on their website, and screens selected hands from various tournaments and cash games on Sky Poker TV, allowing players on the site to become the stars of the TV channel. Sky Poker focuses on UK poker players, with all play at the tables in pounds rather than dollars, as well as its own Sky Poker Tour around the country.

Sky Poker is licensed and regulated by the Alderney Gambling Control Commission (AGCC).

About Cardstacker Bryan Berg

Guinness World Record Holder for the Tallest House of Freestanding Playing Cards since 1992, cardstacker Bryan Berg also created the original Guinness World Record for the Largest House of Freestanding Playing Cards in 2004. Since age 17, Berg has been commissioned to break his own records more than a dozen times. His most recent tallest tower stood 26 feet, and his most recent largest contained 219,000 cards and required 44 days to construct. He continues to hold both records. Berg uses no tape, no glue, no folding, and no other tricks in his structures – just freestanding playing cards. Using a grid technique informed by patterns found in nature, his cardstacking has been tested in an engineering lab to support more than 660 pounds per square foot. Berg is trained as an architect, and earned a Master in Design Studies from Harvard. Cardstacking is Berg’s full-time job. He has travelled throughout North America, Europe, Asia, and Africa building projects for science and art museums, television, and special events.

About Aspers Casino

Aspers is a high quality and upscale British casino operator. A joint venture between the Aspinall family and Crown Limited, one of the world’s leading gaming companies, Aspers Westfield Stratford City is the first of its kind to open in the UK. Open 24 hours per day, 364 days of the year, all guests over 18 are welcome. Aspers is a socially responsible game operator.

Friendly Planet Travel Announces Next Big Giveaway: Amazing Peru

Posted on 7th February 2012 in The monuments of world

JENKINTOWN, Pa.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–

Just one month ago, Friendly Planet Travel, a leading tour operator of exotic destinations worldwide, announced the ultimate giveaway for travel enthusiasts. Just by becoming a fan of Friendly Planet Travel’s Facebook page, travelers are entered to win one of six exotic getaways being given away in the wildly successful “Win the World” Sweepstakes. Today, Friendly Planet Travel has gained more than 9,000 fans through the Sweepstakes. There’s more where that came from, with the next giveaway for fans being Friendly Planet Travel’s Amazing Peru tour, a prize valued at over $6,400.

The 12-day Amazing Peru tour will take one lucky winner and a guest to Lima, the country’s capital; Cuzco, the 11,000-foot-high Inca capital; Machu Picchu, the Lost City of the Incas and one of the most impressive archeological discoveries of all time; and Lake Titicaca, one of the most beautiful lakes in the world. The winner of the Amazing Peru tour will be selected on Feb. 29.

“We are truly amazed at the response from our fans in the first month of this sweepstakes,” says Peggy Goldman, President of Friendly Planet Travel. “We are thrilled to give away five more trips as a thank you to our fans for their support. It couldn’t be possible without them.”

The first winner and recipient of Friendly Planet Travel’s 13-day Best of South Africa tour, valued at over $8,500, is Jamie Bartlett. He was randomly selected out of thousands of entries via Facebook.

The four remaining giveaways include:

  • A Taste of China: Travelers will visit China’s three most important cities: Beijing, the thriving and modern capital of China; Xi’an, where the Terra Cotta Army is found; and Shanghai, the heart of business in China and often called the Paris of the Orient.
  • Best of Turkey: At the crossroads of Europe and Asia, Turkey is an exotic land steeped in history and touched by many civilizations. Travelers will see Kusadasi on Turkey’s Aegean coast, a hub of art and culture since it was founded 5,000 years ago. There’s also Ephesus, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World; Troy; Canakkale; and Istanbul.
  • A Taste of Ireland: Travelers can feast their eyes on Dublin, Ireland’s capital and its most populous city. They’ll also see the Cliffs of Moher, the most majestic cliffs in Ireland; Ring of Kerry; Muckross House; Medieval Kilkenny; and more.
  • Taj Mahal Express: Explorers will visit fascinating and exotic Delhi; Agra; and the Taj Mahal, one of the world’s most famous monuments. There’s also Jaipur, called the pink city because of its lavish mansions and palaces.

Each tour includes round-trip airfare, superior accommodations, some meals, and plenty of escorted touring.

For more information about Friendly Planet Travel please visit the company’s website at www.FriendlyPlanet.com; the blog at blog.FriendlyPlanet.com; or contact Jackie Zima at 610-228-2138 (office), 215-534-2973 (mobile), or write to Jackie@GregoryFCA.com.

Knoll Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2011 Results Announces acquisition of FilzFelt and Richard Schultz Design …

Posted on 7th February 2012 in The monuments of world

EAST GREENVILLE, PA, February 7, 2012 Knoll, Inc. (NYSE: KNL – News) today announced results for the fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2011.  Net sales were $223.1 million for the quarter, a decrease of 7.0% from fourth quarter 2010.  Operating profit was $27.8 million, or 12.5% of net sales, an increase of 14.9% from the fourth quarter of 2010.  The fourth quarter of 2011 includes a $5.4 million curtailment benefit associated with the modification of the Company`s pension and other post-retirement benefits.  Excluding this benefit operating profit was $22.4 million, or 10.0% of net sales, a decrease of 7.4% from the fourth quarter 2010.  Net income was $17.4 million, an increase of 61.1% when compared with the fourth quarter of 2010.  Diluted earnings per share was $0.37 for the quarter compared to $0.23 per share in the prior year. 

For the full year, net sales were $922.2 million, an increase of 13.9% when compared to 2010.  Operating profit was $97.1 million, or 10.5% of net sales, an increase of 50.1% when compared to 2010.  Net income was $58.0 million for 2011, an increase of 107.1% when compared to 2010.  Diluted earnings per share was $1.24 for the year compared to $0.61 per share in the prior year. 

“We are pleased with our overall performance in 2011,” commented Andrew Cogan, CEO. “We grew sales and profits, expanded our operating margins, reduced our debt and returned more cash through an increased dividend to our shareholders. We won the Cooper Hewitt National Design Award for Corporate and Institutional Achievement and made significant progress in putting in place robust strategies to improve the profitability of our core Office business while simultaneously investing in our high margin, high design content Specialty platform. The acquisitions we are announcing today of FilzFelt and Richard Schultz Design will serve to strengthen the portfolio of products that we can offer architects and designers and consumers through our Specialty businesses.”

 ”The sales decline that we experienced in the 4th quarter was the direct result of lessened project activity in our Government business and significantly reduced purchases from a single commercial client. While we expect challenging comps to continue at least through the first half of 2012, we believe that the recent softness in industry demand is more indicative of a transient lull than a broad based decline and that improving fundamentals as demonstrated in the recent Architectural Billing Index data should drive better industry conditions later in the year.” 

Fourth Quarter Results

Fourth quarter 2011 financial results highlights follow:

 
Dollars in Millions Except Per Share Data
Three Months Ended Percent
12/31/11 12/31/10 Change
Net Sales $ 223.1 $ 239.8   (7.0) %
Gross Profit 70.7 77.2 (8.4) %
Operating Expenses 48.3 51.3 (5.8) %
Curtailment Benefit 5.4 -
Restructuring Charges - 1.7
Operating Profit 27.8 24.2 14.9 %
Net Income    17.4 10.8 61.1 %
Earnings Per Share – Diluted .37 .23 60.9 %

Beginning this quarter, we will report net sales and operating income by three defined reporting segments.  Our three reporting segments consist of Office, which includes systems, seating, storage, tables, desks and KnollExtra®  ergonomic accessories as well as the International sales of our North American Office products; a Studio segment which includes KnollStudio® and Knoll Europe (where over half our sales consist of KnollStudio®  products); and a Coverings segment encompassing  KnollTextiles®, Edelman®Leather, Spinneybeck®, and FilzfeltTM. For more information regarding these segments, see “Business Segment Results” below.

Net sales for the quarter were $223.1 million, a decrease of $16.7 million, or 7.0%, when compared with the fourth quarter of 2010.  Net sales for the Office segment were $157.3 million in the fourth quarter of 2011, a decrease of $13.0 million, or 7.6% when compared with the fourth quarter of 2010.  Net sales for the Studio segment were $40.1 million, a decrease of $4.6 million, or 10.3%, when compared with the fourth quarter of 2010.  The decline in the Studio segment during the fourth quarter of 2011 was entirely attributable to our European business.  Net sales for the Coverings segment were $25.7 million, an increase of $0.9 million, or 3.6%, when compared with the fourth quarter of 2010. 

Gross profit for the fourth quarter of 2011 was $70.7 million, a decrease of $6.5 million, or 8.4%, from the same period in 2010.   Gross margin decreased from 32.2% in the fourth quarter of 2010 to 31.7%.  The decrease in gross margin from the fourth quarter of 2010 was largely the result of lower absorption of our fixed costs in conjunction with our lower sales volumes and materials and transportation inflation. 

Operating expenses for the quarter were $48.3 million, or 21.6% of net sales, compared to $51.3 million, or 21.4% of net sales, for fourth quarter of 2010.  The decrease in operating expenses during the fourth quarter of 2011 was in large part due to lower commissions and incentive compensation as a result of our lower sales volumes when compared with the fourth quarter of 2010.

Our operating profit for the fourth quarter of 2011 was $27.8 million, an increase of $3.6 million, or 14.9%, when compared to the same period in 2010.  Operating profit for the fourth quarter of 2011 includes a $5.4 million curtailment benefit.  Excluding this benefit operating profit as a percentage of net sales was 10.0% for the fourth quarter of 2011.  Operating profit for the Office segment was $10.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2011, a decrease of $3.2 million, or 23.0% when compared with the fourth quarter of 2010.  Operating profit for the Studio segment was $6.0 million, a decrease of $1.2 million, or 16.7% when compared with the fourth quarter of 2010.  Operating profit for the Coverings segment was $5.7 million, an increase of $0.9 million, or 18.8% when compared to the fourth quarter of 2010.

During the fourth quarter 2011, other income included $0.6 million of foreign exchange gains and $0.6 million of miscellaneous expense related to a negative judicial ruling.  Other expense for the fourth quarter 2010 included $2.9 million of foreign exchange losses and $0.1 million of miscellaneous expense.

The effective tax rate was 34.7% for the fourth quarter of 2011, as compared to 37.2% for the same period last year.  The decrease in the effective tax rate is largely due to the mix of pretax income between the countries in which we operate.

Net income for the fourth quarter 2011 was $17.4 million, or $0.37 diluted earnings per share, as compared to $10.8 million, or $0.23 per share, for the same quarter in 2010. 

Cash generated from operations during the fourth quarter 2011 was $35.8 million, compared to $38.1 million in the same period of 2010.  Cash generated from operations was lower during the fourth quarter of 2011when compared with the fourth quarter of 2010 because of changes in assets and liabilities, primarily accounts payable.  Capital expenditures for the fourth quarter 2011 totaled $5.7 million compared to $4.4 million for 2010.  We repaid $5.0 million of debt during the fourth quarter of 2011 compared to $10.0 million during 2010.  The Company also paid dividends of $4.6 million, or $0.10 per share during the fourth quarter of 2011 compared to $2.8 million, $0.06 per share during the fourth quarter of 2010.

Full Year Results

2011 financial results highlights follow:

Dollars in Millions Except Per Share Data
Twelve Months Ended Percent
12/31/11 12/31/10 Change
Net Sales $ 922.2 $ 809.5 13.9 %
Gross Profit 294.4 264.3 11.4 %
Operating Expenses 202.1 192.1 5.2 %
Curtailment Benefit 5.4 -
Restructuring Charges 0.7 7.6 (90.8) %
Operating Profit 97.1 64.7 50.1 %
Net Income 58.0 28.0 107.1 %
Earnings Per Share – Diluted 1.24 0.61 103.3 %

For the year, net sales totaled $922.2 million, an increase of $112.7 million, or 13.9%, from 2010 net sales of $809.5 million.  Net sales for the Office segment were $664.1 million, an increase of $101.7 million, or 18.1% when compared with the 2010.  Net sales for the Studio segment modestly increased to $152.7 million from $151.9 million during 2010.  Less large project activity in Europe tempered growth in our Studio segment during 2011.  Net sales for the Coverings segment were $105.4 million, an increase of $10.2 million, or 10.7%, when compared with 2010. 

During the full year 2011, gross margin decreased from 32.7% in 2010 to 31.9% in 2011.  The largest contributors to this decline were transportation and materials inflation, particularly steel.    The strengthening of the Canadian dollar during 2011 when compared to 2010 also negatively affected our gross margin.  Gross profit dollars increased 11.4% from $264.3 million in 2010 to $294.4 million in 2011. 

Operating expenses for 2011 were $202.1 million, or 21.9% of net sales, compared to $192.1 million, or 23.7% of net sales, for 2010.  The increase in operating expenses during 2011 was in large part due increased commissions and incentive compensation based upon the higher sales volumes as well as expenses related to infrastructure upgrades. 

Our operating profit for 2011 was $97.1 million, an increase of $32.4 million, or 50.1%, when compared with the same period in 2010.  Operating profit as a percent of net sales was 10.5% for 2011 and includes restructuring charges of $0.7 million and a curtailment benefit of $5.4 million.  Operating profit for the Office segment was $46.7 million in 2011, an increase of $13.8 million, or 41.9% when compared with 2010.  Operating profit for the Studio segment was $23.0 million, an increase of $2.1 million, or 10.0% when compared with 2010.  Operating profit for the Coverings segment was $22.7 million, an increase of $4.3 million, or 23.4% when compared to 2010.

Interest expense for 2011 decreased $7.7 million when compared with the full year 2010.  The decrease in interest expense is due to our lower outstanding debt and the expiration of two interest rate swap agreements that expired on June 9, 2011.  Other income in 2011 included $2.7 million of foreign exchange gains, $1.6 million of miscellaneous expense related to a negative judicial ruling, and $0.3 million of miscellaneous income.  Other expense in 2010 included $5.5 million of foreign exchange losses, a $1.2 million non-cash expense related to the ineffective portion of our interest rate swaps, and a $0.3 million gain on miscellaneous income. 

The effective tax rate was 34.7% for the year, as compared to 31.4% for the same period last year.  Our effective tax rate is dependent upon the mix of pretax income between the countries in which we operate.  In addition, during 2010 we recorded a $2.5 million tax benefit related to foreign tax credits.

We generated 2011 net income of $58.0 million, or $1.24 diluted earnings per share, compared to $28.0 million, or $0.61 diluted earnings per share, in 2010. 

Annual cash generated from operations in 2011 was $66.9 million, compared to $89.6 million the year before. Cash generated from operations was lower during 2011when compared with the 2010 because of changes in assets and liabilities, primarily accounts payable.  Capital expenditures in 2011 totaled $15.3 million compared to $8.3 million for 2010. During 2011 we repaid $33.0 million of debt compared to $50.0 million in 2010.  We also paid dividends of $16.7 million in 2011 compared with $5.5 million in 2010.

“Over the past twelve months we reduced our debt by $33.0 million bringing our total debt outstanding to $212.0 million at year end. Additionally, in order to take advantage of the current interest rate environment, we recently negotiated a new $450.0 million all revolver bank facility that will give us the flexibility we need through 2017″ commented Barry L. McCabe, EVP & CFO.

Business Segment Results

The following information categorizes the Company`s results into its defined reporting segments.
The Office segment serves corporate, government, healthcare, retail and other customers in the United States and Canada providing a portfolio of office furnishing solutions including systems, seating, storage and other products. The Studio segment includes KnollStudio® and the Company`s European subsidiaries which primarily sell KnollStudio® products.  The KnollStudio® portfolio includes a range of lounge seating; side, café and dining chairs; barstools; and conference, dining and occasional tables.  The Coverings segment includes, KnollTextiles®, Spinneybeck®, Edelman®Leather, and FilzfeltTM. These businesses serve a wide range of customers offering high quality textiles and leather. 

Three Months Ended
           December 31,
Net Sales (in millions) 2011 2010
  
Office $     157.3   $     170.3
Studio 40.1 44.7
Coverings 25.7  24.8
  
Total Sales  $ 223.1      $    239.8
Twelve Months Ended
           December 31,
2011 2010
  
Office $     664.1 $    562.4
Studio 152.7 151.9
Coverings 105.4  95.2
  
Total Sales  $ 922.2  $    809.5



Three Months Ended
           December 31,
Operating Profit (in millions) 2011 2010
  
Office $       10.7 $      13.9
Studio 6.0 7.2
Coverings 5.7  4.8
  
Total Segment Operating Profit 22.4 25.9
Curtailment Benefit 5.4 -
Restructuring Charges - (1.7)
Total Operating Profit $    27.8       $ 24.2



Twelve Months Ended
           December 31,
2011 2010
  
Office $       46.6 $          32.9
Studio 23.0 20.9
Coverings 22.7  18.4
  
Total Segment Operating Profit 92.3 72.2
Curtailment Benefit 5.4 -
Restructuring Charges (0.7 ) (7.6)
Total Operating Profit  $        97.1 (1)  $        64.7(1)

 (1) Results do not add due to rounding

Conference Call Information

Knoll will host a conference call on Tuesday, February 7, 2012 at 10:00 A.M. EST to discuss its financial results.

The call will include slides; participants are encouraged to listen to and view the presentation via webcast at http://www.knoll.com; go to “About Knoll” and click on “Investor Relations”.

The conference call may also be accessed by dialing:

North America 800 510-0178
International    617 614-3450
Passcode           29061054

A replay of the webcast can be viewed by visiting the Investor Relations section of the Knoll corporate website.

In addition, an audio replay of the conference call will be available through February 14, 2012 by dialing 888 286-8010. International replay: 617 801-6888 (Passcode: 68938769).

About Knoll

Knoll is the recipient of the 2011 National Design Award for Corporate and Institutional Achievement from the Smithsonian`s Copper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. Since 1938, Knoll has been recognized internationally for creating workplace and residential furnishings that inspire, evolve and endure. Today, our commitment to modern design, our understanding of the workplace and our dedication to sustainable design has yielded a unique portfolio of products that respond and adapt to changing needs. Knoll is aligned with the U.S. Green Building Council and the Canadian Green Building Council and can help companies achieve Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design LEED workplace certification. Knoll is the founding sponsor of the World Monuments Fund Modernism at Risk program.

Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Information

This press release includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All statements regarding Knoll, Inc.`s expected future financial position, results of operations, revenue levels, cash flows, business strategy, budgets, projected costs, capital expenditures, products, competitive positions, growth opportunities, plans and objectives of management for future operations, as well as statements that include words such as “anticipate,” “if,” “believe,” “plan,”  “goals, ” “estimate,” “expect,” “intend,” “may,” “could,” “should,” “will,” and other similar expressions are forward- looking statements. This includes, without limitation, our statements and expectations regarding any current or future recovery in our industry.  Such forward-looking statements are inherently uncertain, and readers must recognize that actual results may differ materially from the expectations of Knoll management. Knoll does not undertake a duty to update such forward-looking statements. Factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements include corporate spending and service-sector employment, price competition, acceptance of Knoll`s new products, the pricing and availability of raw materials and components, foreign currency exchange, transportation costs, demand for high quality, well designed office furniture solutions, changes in the competitive marketplace, changes in the trends in the market for office furniture, the financial strength and stability of our suppliers, customers and dealers, access to capital, and other risks identified in Knoll`s annual report on Form 10-K, and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Many of these factors are outside of Knoll`s control.

 

Contacts

Investors:        Barry L. McCabe
                        Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
                        Tel 215 679-1301
                        bmccabe@knoll.com

Media:             David E. Bright
                        Senior Vice President, Communications
                        Tel 212 343-4135
                        dbright@knoll.com

KNOLL, INC.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
 (Dollars in thousands, except per share data)

Three Months Ended
                   December 31,
Twelve Months Ended
                   December 31,
2011 2010 2011 2010
Sales $ 223,148    $ 239,784 $ 922,200    $ 809,467
Cost of sales 152,498    162,588 627,803    545,118
Gross profit 70,650    77,196 294,397    264,349
Selling, general, and administrative expenses 48,281    51,301 202,075    192,122
Restructuring and other charges - 1,690 696 7,565
Curtailment benefit (5,445 ) - (5,445 ) -
Operating profit 27,814    24,205 97,071    64,662
Interest expense 1,138    3,996 9,753    17,436
Other (income) expense, net (35 )    3,010 (1,508 ) 6,379
Income before income tax expense 26,711    17,199 88,826    40,847
Income tax expense 9,268    6,406 30,815    12,823
Net income $ 17,443    $ 10,793 $ 58,011    $ 28,024
Earnings per share:      
Basic $ .38    $ 0.24 $ 1.25    $ 0.61
Diluted $ .37    $ 0.23 $ 1.24    $ 0.61
Weighted-average shares outstanding:      
Basic 46,339,443    45,814,226 46,249,571    45,600,043
Diluted 46,767,149    46,130,869 46,835,712    45,970,680

KNOLL, INC.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
 (Dollars in thousands, except per share data)

   December 31,
 2011
December 31, 2010
ASSETS   
Current assets:   
Cash and cash equivalents    $ 28,263 $ 26,935
Customer receivables, net    126,078 126,780
Inventories    89,244 85,216
Prepaid and other current assets    21,308 22,229
Total current assets    264,893 261,160
Property, plant, and equipment, net    121,792 122,219
Intangible assets, net    297,250 298,347
Other noncurrent assets    4,156 5,706
Total Assets    $ 688,091 $ 687,432
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS` EQUITY
Current liabilities:   
Current maturities of long-term debt    $ - $ 135
Accounts payable    83,824 101,206
Other current liabilities    99,304 90,577
Total current liabilities    183,128 191,918
Long-term debt    212,000 245,000
Other noncurrent liabilities    127,540 124,128
Total liabilities    522,668 561,046
Stockholders` equity    165,423 126,386
Total Liabilities and Stockholders` Equity    $ 688,091 $ 687,432

KNOLL, INC.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(Dollars in thousands)

Year Ended December 31,
2011 2010
Net income    $ 58,011 $ 28,024
  
Cash Flows provided by Operating Activities    66,921 89,632
Cash Flows used in Investing Activities    (16,332 ) (9,037 )
Cash Flows used in Financing Activities    (49,913 ) (57,487 )
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents    652 (2,134)
Increase in cash and cash equivalents    1,328 20,974
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period    26,935 5,961
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period    $ 28,263        $ 26,935





This announcement is distributed by Thomson Reuters on behalf of Thomson Reuters clients.

The owner of this announcement warrants that:
(i) the releases contained herein are protected by copyright and other applicable laws; and
(ii) they are solely responsible for the content, accuracy and originality of the
information contained therein.

Source: Knoll, Inc. via Thomson Reuters ONE


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