I will blog further in due course about today’s meeting of
the Development and Organisation (D&O) Committee of the UNISON National
Executive Council (NEC) but will mention now briefly the excellent presentation
which the Committee received upon UNISON’s development of our digital/online presence.
I particularly commend the advice
from the Union on how to ensure more members read your bulk emails. Apparently
you have about three seconds to capture the attention of a reader online if you
want to communicate anything effectively.
I shall not follow that advice on this blog however, since
I am not writing this for you but primarily for my own amusement (which is the
most important objective for anyone with the slightest modicum of self-regard).
If you don’t want to read what I have to say then you have an entire internet
to amuse yourself with.
Today’s Committee meeting contributed significantly to my
amusement for the number of occasions on which colleagues made jokes about the
dangers of “unofficial blogs” or
social media generally. It wasn’t until I lunched (not wisely but too well)
with a couple of comrades that it was pointed out to me that these comments may
have been intended to have been directed at my good self.
Given that the third
of three disciplinary investigations which UNISON has initiated against me
concerns my failure to keep confidential the previous two disciplinary
investigations
(so please don’t mention this to anyone) I was tickled that colleagues felt no
need to observe any such injunction themselves.
Which is fine by me, since the risible allegations which
have led to the unnecessary investigations into your humble blogger are indeed
a source of amusement. For those who may fear that I am under attack by the “UNISON
bureaucracy” (and/or their lay hangers-on) I can assure you that I am fully
prepared to be savaged
by a dead sheep.
I shall leave it to any intelligent readers to work out for
themselves the motivation for attacks upon a trade unionist compelled to
complain to the Certification Officer (and to contemplate
the risks).
Hahaha!
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