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  • KDS: Best New Society 2010

    10:36 am on May 22, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment
    Tags: best new society, ,

    After a fantastic year of debating we were delighted to put the icing on the proverbial cake last night, taking home the award for ‘best new society.

    Unfortunately our eagerness to grab the prizes (a certificate and trophy, as modelled by Bowles and myself)  prevented us from making an acceptance speech. So instead I would just like to say a big congratulations to the other societies who were deservedly nominated for this award; if there was a prize for ‘most unoriginal new society’ we almost certainly would have won that also and there have been some great new socs popping up on campus that we can’t wait to work with and perhaps help towards taking the accolade next year.

    Also I would like to thank all the guest-speakers we have had this year, all those who have supported us and, most importantly, our members who show up every week. One of the factors in us winning was our great member base so this is by no means a committee award.

    Next year KDS will not be a new society and the challenge now will be putting ourselves in contention for best society.

     
  • “It’s all bo*****ks”

    11:57 pm on April 12, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment
    Tags: , , conservative, david cameron, , gordon brown, liberal democrats, new labour, news 24, policies

    Firstly I must beg for forgiveness regarding my language (the quotations I hope minimise any offence, I’ll keep the original owner of this phrase anonymous for now) but I feel  no other 3 words have been used so eloquently to sum up this year’s election buildup so far. And yes, that is a baby yawning.

    As Gordon Brown launches his manifesto on an electioneering loophole (allowing him to use what-will-soon-be a public hospital) and BBC News 24 spends several minutes debating what kind of a platform David (or Dave) Cameron will be standing on (is it, or is it not, a soapboax?) in Loughborough,  I couldn’t help but feel dread towards the prospect of what the next five years will be like politically.

    The two largest parties are, quite frankly, hideous.

    If my foot was the personification of my political interests, then Voting Conservative would be the equivalent of shooting it. I’m not quite sure what terrifies me more, the old guard of the Conservative party or the shiny glossy cover of rolled up sleeves, cringy visits with ‘real’ people and Obamaisms which hides it.

    Then, there’s the Labour party who long ago traded in my metaphorical foot for an electoral majority. Listening to David (not Dave) Milliband today bragging to dozens of immigrants about the UK’s role as a bastion for human rights (presumably by blowing up and torturing people)  and the rule of law, internationally, made me want to eat that foot and throw it up.

    Discovering that Labour had pledged to extend the vote to 16 & 17 yeard-olds made me want to do the same thing with the foot. Not because I don’t think they should be able to vote (anyone who says they’re not educated or mature enough to vote either need to actually meet young people, or meet the electorate) but because it smacks of hypocrisy and stupidity: Hypocrisy, because of  the shameful lengths New Labour have gone to criminalise, victimize and ostricise these very people; stupidity, because it’s based on the rationale that it is a solution to political apathy, that apathy can be defeated by extending the vote to more apathetic people.

    Then we have the likes of the Liberal Democrats, smaller parties and the independents who seem victims of a largescale conspiracy. A conspiracy to perpetuate the myth that none of them have policies or clout when really its because we are being force-fed the other two’s concotions by a lapdog media. Concoctions aimed at pandering to those in Middle England (being the unbroken part of broken Britain) who are allowed to decide the election, thanks to the political apathy endemic through most of our society.

    There you go, that’s the cynical musings of a miserable first-time voter. Not that my vote counts for much. The current system means that, even though I have the luxury of being able to vote in one of two constituencies, my vote is worthless in the Tory strongholds I reside from.

    I hope a more optimistic UKc student feels compelled to write an inspirational response, exposing me for the misinformed idiot that (I hope) I am. Until then, it’s tragic but it’s true: it’s all bo****ks.

     
  • President’s Year Report

    3:11 pm on April 9, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment
    Tags: , competitions, debates, , , inner temple, , santa clause, university of kent

    As I wind down, temporarily, from studies now would be a suitable time to sum up KDS’s progress this year.

    A year ago, there was no debating society. About May time last year we finally got the society ratified and, with a hand-picked team of enthusiasts we went about setting it up.

    Less than a year later we have nearly sixty members, have sent teams to national debating competitions (including the presitigious Inner Temple IV) and have held debates on everything from the detainment of Santa Clause to abortion.

    Not that we want to dwell on past success, I’m still thoroughly disappointed with debating at the University of Kent. That may seem like a particularly negative thing to say but its more a consequence of my own impatience. While we have achieved a lot this year, the aim has always been to set up a society akin to the debating societies other universities have and we still have a long way to go.

    That means having 100s of members, sending teams to competitions nearly every week and running our own competitions. However, the mega challenge in achieving this is not getting those members or getting the funding, its doing all that but without losing Kent Debating Society’s best quality: its atmosphere.

    The members we have had this year (well those that attend most weeks, big thank you to those that signed up, paid up and never showed up; I can confirm your membership made for some great pizza for the rest of us!) have been a fantastic bunch and the friendly, welcoming and unintimidating atmosphere they have helped foster is something I must commend them for. Some of them are leaving this year and will be sorely missed but we hope that they come back when they’re outstanding in whatever they decide to do and take part in a guest-debate or two.

    On May 19th our elections for next year will be held at our AGM, signalling the end of my enjoyable time as President, I won’t be around next year either to run for anything, but I will be keeping tabs on things from afar to make sure the society is even better when I come back.

    So committee, whoever you will be, watch your backs.

    To a successful future!

    Tom

     
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