There have been a few online pieces analysing Peter Hain's position on devolution in Wales, following an interesting week where he appeared to try and derail the progress on the ruling coalition in Cardiff Bay.
Is it really any wonder that some people in Wales pursue freedom for their country from the UK, when you read reports that the UK has recently been complicit in torture?
The evidence for British complicity and support for the use of torture comes from a report by Human Rights Watch, an NGO that has most often been criticised for being biased towards Western countries. The evidence is not really a surprise for those of us on the Welsh Left who have never been supportive of the alleged "War On Terror".
Quite simply, the British Government has pursued international policies which are more likely to cause terrorism than to stop it. They really are a bad regime considering the values that they espouse.
The ongoing Iraq Inquiry is proving that what people like Plaid and the anti-war movement were saying was correct all along. Anyone on the demonstrations across Wales and the rest of Europe would have known at the time that we were all right and it was the Labour government in Westminster and the Conservatives who were wrong. The Inquiry and the Human Rights Watch report should certainly make anyone who criticises Cuba pause for thought.
But this is not a cause for celebration. The problem with the UK advocating torture and supporting dishonesty is that it undermines the legitimacy and credibility of democratic, Western states and makes it impossible to put the case for human rights to some of the world's more oppressive societies. The UK will find it difficult to lecture anyone on torture now, and that is a shame.
It's very refreshing for us that are "Welsh not British" to know that a free Wales would have no need or possible inclination to torture anyone.
It is excellent news that even in a time of recession and economic crisis, one of Plaid's Ministers is co-ordinating record levels of spending on affordable housing. Jocelyn keeps a lower profile than many other Plaid elected representatives, but her work-rate on housing has clearly contributed to today's news that investment in affordable housing has gone up 20%. This is in spite of warnings from the Opposition that the Welsh Government would not achieve the One Wales target of 6,500 new affordable homes by 2011. We're now halfway towards meeting that particular commitment which was put in the agreement on Plaid Cymru's insistence.
There's no need to get excited as the predicted collapse of the Welsh Government has failed to happen.
Che notes that excerpts from one of Rhodri Morgan's last speeches deserve a wider audience than simply being in the pages of the Western Mail. The outgoing First Minister's comments about Wales' increasingly internationalist image are more examples of why he will be fondly remembered, despite doing a number of things with which Ramblings disagreed like sitting on the fence and protecting Tony Blair over Iraq. But nonetheless, there is a time for forgiveness and Rhodri clearly understands the potential contribution Wales can make to the world.
“Malta has a population hardly bigger than Cardiff, but has a direct seat at the table and access to the entire EU decision-making machinery.”
Adam Price also this week made what could be one of his last significant speeches before he returns after studying in America. The blogosphere noted Adam's comments about Wales' national pyschology and lack of confidence, and the need to overcome this.
Rhodri's words ("For too long, our lack of confidence had emerged as a sense of suspicion of the wider world") echo Adam's position, though they come from different political traditions. Rhodri Morgan has mapped out clearly what Welsh Labour needs to do to remain relevant and not surrender Welshness to Plaid Cymru.
The world is becoming smaller and more interdependent. Wales being small is thus no longer a barrier to our success.
The All Wales Convention's recommendations won't of course deliver what nationalists want. They won't deliver anything particularly close to Scottish-style powers or anything that meaningful. But for the sake of confidence alone, a "Yes" vote will be another important step forward.
What would be the financial cost to the taxpayer of Wales attaining direct law-making powers in the 20 fields currently on offer?
There has already been plenty of blogging about the much predicted result of the All Wales Convention's detailed and lengthy field work. It is an entirely positive thing that the Convention has recommended a referendum and has said that one could be won. This echoes everything Welsh Ramblings and other bloggers have been saying about the constitutional situation, and endorses Plaid Cymru's political strategy of working with Labour to try and take Wales forward.
"As nationalists the lesson is clear: we should each of us start to think and behave prefiguratively as if our nation is already free. We must be the Wales we want to create: a vibrant, self-empowering, dynamic country that emphasises the power of our own initiative."
From Adam Price's lecture for the Institute of Welsh Politics on Monday night.
We need to build up our confidence and our post-colonial mindset as a precursor to political liberation.
Tomorrow might well set us on the way to a referendum. Ramblings will take a look at the situation and give comment, but it's surely obvious that the 'Yes' vote will not so much be about the actual powers as it will be about the confidence and symbolism of taking another step forward.
Rumours of Aneurin Glyndwr's demise were thankfully unfounded, as the site is very much alive and as dire as ever. Their latest post is a pretty brutal attack on BBC Wales, accusing the public service broadcaster of being a "Nat factory" and questioning salaries and expenses.
This isn't the first time the site has attacked the BBC, with a previous post containing a number of personal attacks on current and former members of staff and again questioning the broadcaster's impartiality.
From an impartial position it can certainly be said Huw Lewis' campaign has had a fairly decent impact on Welsh political circles and the commentariat, although it has barely made a dint on ordinary Welsh peoples lives (which isn't Huw's fault).
Anyone who saw the BBC Wales news last night might have seen Peter Hain and Elfyn Llwyd live outside Westminster, discussing the war in Afghanistan, the human cost of which is rising on a weekly basis. Afghanistan is one of the biggest political issues for the people of Wales at present, but Peter Hain's defence of the unwinnable conflict was flimsy at best. Sending more troops will mean causing more deaths, both of Welsh servicemen and Afghans.
The pressure must surely be mounting on pro-war Labour MPs like Peter Hain, as the United States most important man in Afghanistan has sensationally warned the US Government that sending more troops is "not a good idea".
Welsh Labour's biggest ever internet farce has come to an early end, with the widely mocked Aneurin Glyndwr website now appearing to be inactive, according to Betsan's blog.
Edwina Hart's campaign manager Andrew Davies has called for Wales to lead the way in promoting co-operatives and mutuals, in response to what he deems the "catastrophic failure of the banking system". Considering he is the Welsh Government's Finance Minister, these comments are very welcome.
But in practice, Andrew Davies rejected such an idea when Plaid thinkers like Adam Price and Leanne Wood advocated the "People's Bank" (a not-for-dividend model based on Post Offices) last year.
In a departure from Welsh affairs it's worth looking at the current moves to bolster the United States' declining authority in Latin America, in particular the further strengthening of military ties between the US and Colombia. It's good that there is support for the policies of Venezuela's current government from politicians from the broad progressive spectrum in Wales and the UK, with politicians from the Labour party, Plaid, the SNP, the Greens and others all praising different aspects of social policy there.