This news is 3 days old now and a complete surprise (ahem): but it stinks. Gordon Brown helped fuel Britain’s banking crisis by pressuring the City regulator not to intervene and stop reckless lending: Lord Turner, the head of the Financial Services Authority. I've seen a few minor headlines about FSA failings etc but not this week's direct blaming of Brown.
sábado, 28 de febrero de 2009
Obliquely obscuring obvious odour...
This news is 3 days old now and a complete surprise (ahem): but it stinks. Gordon Brown helped fuel Britain’s banking crisis by pressuring the City regulator not to intervene and stop reckless lending: Lord Turner, the head of the Financial Services Authority. I've seen a few minor headlines about FSA failings etc but not this week's direct blaming of Brown.
Obliquely obscuring obvious odour...
This news is 3 days old now and a complete surprise (ahem): but it stinks. Gordon Brown helped fuel Britain’s banking crisis by pressuring the City regulator not to intervene and stop reckless lending: Lord Turner, the head of the Financial Services Authority. I've seen a few minor headlines about FSA failings etc but not this week's direct blaming of Brown.
martes, 24 de febrero de 2009
Olé Olympique
I hope the Arse can play as steadily in Rome...
Olé Olympique
I hope the Arse can play as steadily in Rome...
Orange or off...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Italy La Liga weigh up the use of orange cards. Nice idea. Would it work? [Link in Spanish]
FIFA President Blatter thinks being off for 5 or 10 minutes should do the trick. Nice to see football ahead of its time [NOT!...as usual] doing these revolutionary things. The picture of Collina with an orange card is of course 'doctored'. Collina also welcomed the possible introduction of a second ref: in his view, the referees who have already experienced this measure claim that "[they] had more control of what was happening in the area." The final decision will always be with the 'main' referee. (translated from the El Periodico article)"La Liga italiana sopesa aplicar la tarjeta naranja"
Orange or off...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Italy La Liga weigh up the use of orange cards. Nice idea. Would it work? [Link in Spanish]
FIFA President Blatter thinks being off for 5 or 10 minutes should do the trick. Nice to see football ahead of its time [NOT!...as usual] doing these revolutionary things. The picture of Collina with an orange card is of course 'doctored'. Collina also welcomed the possible introduction of a second ref: in his view, the referees who have already experienced this measure claim that "[they] had more control of what was happening in the area." The final decision will always be with the 'main' referee. (translated from the El Periodico article)"La Liga italiana sopesa aplicar la tarjeta naranja"
lunes, 23 de febrero de 2009
Oye, olé..
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Spanish justice minister resigns. [BBC] Spain's justice minister Mariano Fernandez Bermejo has quit his post; big news in Spain today mainly because a minister resigning is almost unheard of (yep, I know the UK now has that disease as well). Well this is a classic because he went hunting (illegaly) with a judge...and that judge is none other than semi [self-publicist] celebrity Baltasar Garzón Real (if you think he looks like a smarmy git then you're not far wrong) who happens to be in the middle of a anti-corruption campaign against certain businessmen connected very clearly to the Party Popular (the main opposition) ; trouble is he started his campaign just as the PP happen to be in the middle of election campaigns in the two major regions of the Basque Country and Galicia - what a coincidence...he also stood for the PSOE (now government) in the 90s in their equivalent of the House of commons so allegations of bias could hold...oh, it's dirty! The elections are this weekend and a bad showing could mean the downfall of the opposition leader Rajoy, IMHO he probably needs to go anyway for making absolutely no inroads into the government 'popularity' despite the economic situation (and the government aren't very good!)
Oye, olé..
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Spanish justice minister resigns. [BBC] Spain's justice minister Mariano Fernandez Bermejo has quit his post; big news in Spain today mainly because a minister resigning is almost unheard of (yep, I know the UK now has that disease as well). Well this is a classic because he went hunting (illegaly) with a judge...and that judge is none other than semi [self-publicist] celebrity Baltasar Garzón Real (if you think he looks like a smarmy git then you're not far wrong) who happens to be in the middle of a anti-corruption campaign against certain businessmen connected very clearly to the Party Popular (the main opposition) ; trouble is he started his campaign just as the PP happen to be in the middle of election campaigns in the two major regions of the Basque Country and Galicia - what a coincidence...he also stood for the PSOE (now government) in the 90s in their equivalent of the House of commons so allegations of bias could hold...oh, it's dirty! The elections are this weekend and a bad showing could mean the downfall of the opposition leader Rajoy, IMHO he probably needs to go anyway for making absolutely no inroads into the government 'popularity' despite the economic situation (and the government aren't very good!)
sábado, 21 de febrero de 2009
Obama offensive...
Cartoon by Sean Delonas of the New York Post.
OK, that's only a part of it. There has been growing outcry of that story depicted in a cartoon in the NY Post. Daryl Cagle, the daily editorial cartoonist for MSNBC (click on image for link to Daryl's blog and story), says, and I agree entirely - although I'm not a cartoonist!...just giving my tuppenny worth - "A standard, workday ritual that editorial cartoonists do is to list the major news stories of the day, and then think of how to combine two of the unrelated stories into a cartoon. Combining two unrelated things in a cartoon is funny. Monkeys are funny and the killer chimp was the big news one day along with the stimulus bill. Delonas is a staunch conservative who didn’t like the stimulus bill; this cartoon is a formulaic 'no-brainer.' I’m sure the reaction to the cartoon was a surprise to Delonas." Although the advice Daryl gives is to be aware that people are going to see certain things as alarming. However, I ask why all the hoohah? ...The NY Post has since apologised - NOT unreservedly - but some of the reaction is absurd (towards the bottom of THIS article). Also, despite the clear and obvious joke of a chimp having written the Stimulus Bill, the cartoonist persepective is reported in very different ways by other cartoonists: the founder of the UK's Political Cartoon Society, Tim Benson, reported by the BBC, says
"...it doesn't work unless the monkey is intended to be Obama. "At best it's confused, at worst racist,".
[Link] The power of the Cartoonist. What? You think he meant Obama was the monkey? Do you think ANYONE actually thinks Obama wrote the Stimulus Bill himself? Do you think he means Obama should be shot? Tim...resign, get a new job, you've clearly 'lost it'! He's not the only one though, as witnessed by the uproar: "demonstrators objecting to what they regarded as a racist depiction of President Barack Obama. " Funny that...can't imagine it being said about chimp images of evolution in SUPPORT of Obama...(image links to The Art of Obama)
Or happening with other US presidents (in support of Bankrupt Britain Brown!)...Maybe there's a reason for all this, as David Seaton put it last autumn on his blog: "Today, after eight years of George W. Bush; as the image and the brand and the reality of American power unravels, only a black man can be president of the United States . Why is this? Not because, as Andrew Sullivan suggests, a brown face in the White House will make [The USA] suddenly beloved in places like Pakistan... it wont, not at all, perhaps quite the contrary. But rather because nobody would dare to put a black person on a poster like the one advertising Oliver Stone's film, that's why. Political caricature is ill willed and cruel and after centuries of our cruelty it is taboo for civilized white people to ridicule a person of color." He gives, as an example, Steve Bell , cartoonist with the Guardian's drawing George W. Bush as a chimpanzee (image above), adding:
"Obviously if Bell drew Barack Obama as a chimpanzee he would be considered a vicious, racist beast."
QED.
Update...4 days later!! I see THIS from Mary Ellen Synon in The Mail...with another chimp, this time it's Gordon again. Mary Ellen ends with, "Meanwhile, I give you a recent cartoon by Peter Brookes from the Times, which aroused no such criticism. Gordon Brown is the chimp this time. It makes me recall what an old friend from Zambia once said: 'Get close to a chimp and push back his fur. You will see his skin is white.'"
Obama offensive...
Cartoon by Sean Delonas of the New York Post.
OK, that's only a part of it. There has been growing outcry of that story depicted in a cartoon in the NY Post. Daryl Cagle, the daily editorial cartoonist for MSNBC (click on image for link to Daryl's blog and story), says, and I agree entirely - although I'm not a cartoonist!...just giving my tuppenny worth - "A standard, workday ritual that editorial cartoonists do is to list the major news stories of the day, and then think of how to combine two of the unrelated stories into a cartoon. Combining two unrelated things in a cartoon is funny. Monkeys are funny and the killer chimp was the big news one day along with the stimulus bill. Delonas is a staunch conservative who didn’t like the stimulus bill; this cartoon is a formulaic 'no-brainer.' I’m sure the reaction to the cartoon was a surprise to Delonas." Although the advice Daryl gives is to be aware that people are going to see certain things as alarming. However, I ask why all the hoohah? ...The NY Post has since apologised - NOT unreservedly - but some of the reaction is absurd (towards the bottom of THIS article). Also, despite the clear and obvious joke of a chimp having written the Stimulus Bill, the cartoonist persepective is reported in very different ways by other cartoonists: the founder of the UK's Political Cartoon Society, Tim Benson, reported by the BBC, says
"...it doesn't work unless the monkey is intended to be Obama. "At best it's confused, at worst racist,".
[Link] The power of the Cartoonist. What? You think he meant Obama was the monkey? Do you think ANYONE actually thinks Obama wrote the Stimulus Bill himself? Do you think he means Obama should be shot? Tim...resign, get a new job, you've clearly 'lost it'! He's not the only one though, as witnessed by the uproar: "demonstrators objecting to what they regarded as a racist depiction of President Barack Obama. " Funny that...can't imagine it being said about chimp images of evolution in SUPPORT of Obama...(image links to The Art of Obama)
Or happening with other US presidents (in support of Bankrupt Britain Brown!)...Maybe there's a reason for all this, as David Seaton put it last autumn on his blog: "Today, after eight years of George W. Bush; as the image and the brand and the reality of American power unravels, only a black man can be president of the United States . Why is this? Not because, as Andrew Sullivan suggests, a brown face in the White House will make [The USA] suddenly beloved in places like Pakistan... it wont, not at all, perhaps quite the contrary. But rather because nobody would dare to put a black person on a poster like the one advertising Oliver Stone's film, that's why. Political caricature is ill willed and cruel and after centuries of our cruelty it is taboo for civilized white people to ridicule a person of color." He gives, as an example, Steve Bell , cartoonist with the Guardian's drawing George W. Bush as a chimpanzee (image above), adding:
"Obviously if Bell drew Barack Obama as a chimpanzee he would be considered a vicious, racist beast."
QED.
Update...4 days later!! I see THIS from Mary Ellen Synon in The Mail...with another chimp, this time it's Gordon again. Mary Ellen ends with, "Meanwhile, I give you a recent cartoon by Peter Brookes from the Times, which aroused no such criticism. Gordon Brown is the chimp this time. It makes me recall what an old friend from Zambia once said: 'Get close to a chimp and push back his fur. You will see his skin is white.'"
miércoles, 18 de febrero de 2009
Opulentometer...
Opulentometer...
Opulentometer...
lunes, 16 de febrero de 2009
Online on-message...
Online on-message...
domingo, 15 de febrero de 2009
Olid opinion...
Meanwhile, Luis Herrero, the Spanish Member of the European Parliament who was expelled from Venezuela on Friday, said that he regrets "absolutely nothing" about what he said in Caracas, basically he was alluding to don Hugo as a dictator (and why not?)..."vote in freedom and not for fear, as a dictator is trying to spread." [sic]"Ten years is nothing... ...I don't know what they're complaining about."
Hugo Chávez gana el referéndum sobre su perpetuación en el poder. No need to translate that I suppose...gana means he won.
Photo: Reuters
Link to see picture
CARACAS, 16 Feb. (EUROPA PRESS)
Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez announced the beginning of the historic third cycle of the Bolivarian Revolution from 2009 to 2019 and vowed to follow in "full service of the Venezuelan people." He also dedicated the referendum victory on constitutional reform to former Cuban leader Fidel Castro.El presidente de Venezuela, Hugo Chávez, anunció el comienzo "del tercer ciclo histórico de la Revolución Bolivariana del 2009 al 2019" y juró que seguirá al "pleno servicio del pueblo venezolano". Además, brindó la victoria en el referéndum para la reforma constitucional al ex dirigente cubano Fidel Castro.
olid adj. - evil-smelling.
Olid opinion...
Meanwhile, Luis Herrero, the Spanish Member of the European Parliament who was expelled from Venezuela on Friday, said that he regrets "absolutely nothing" about what he said in Caracas, basically he was alluding to don Hugo as a dictator (and why not?)..."vote in freedom and not for fear, as a dictator is trying to spread." [sic]"Ten years is nothing... ...I don't know what they're complaining about."
Hugo Chávez gana el referéndum sobre su perpetuación en el poder. No need to translate that I suppose...gana means he won.
Photo: Reuters
Link to see picture
CARACAS, 16 Feb. (EUROPA PRESS)
Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez announced the beginning of the historic third cycle of the Bolivarian Revolution from 2009 to 2019 and vowed to follow in "full service of the Venezuelan people." He also dedicated the referendum victory on constitutional reform to former Cuban leader Fidel Castro.El presidente de Venezuela, Hugo Chávez, anunció el comienzo "del tercer ciclo histórico de la Revolución Bolivariana del 2009 al 2019" y juró que seguirá al "pleno servicio del pueblo venezolano". Además, brindó la victoria en el referéndum para la reforma constitucional al ex dirigente cubano Fidel Castro.
olid adj. - evil-smelling.
sábado, 14 de febrero de 2009
Oncoming onslaught...
[Times] Worrying indeed. A few months ago the BBC and Robert Scoop Peston were only too keen to tell us how much Gordon Brown was involved; and as the BBC online tells us:"a 25 per cent chance of one of the 15 member countries of the eurozone pulling out of the currency club. That, he said, would be a catastrophic shock leading to a “far greater financial crisis" than the current one."
No room for doubt then. Except, as Iain Dale tells us, they seem to have forgotten that blessing and involvement, in fact they're going out of their way to not mention it. And Lloyd's is suffering: 1.6 billion quid MORE losses than they expected only a few weeks ago??!!! HBOS's corporate division seems to be at the heart of this problem, it lost £7 billion of the now 10 billion. Not enough due diligence, not enough time, not enough thought, not enough sense, not enough...not enough anything; of course don't worry, those responsible will suffer, or maybe not:"The government has also said it will over-rule any concerns that competition authorities may raise, BBC Business Editor Robert Peston has learned... ...He added the prime minister was involved in negotiating the deal, which has the blessing of UK authorities."
The original St. Valetines Day Massacre saw little real result for the gangs involved but the ensuing public outrage marked the beginning of the end for Bugs Moran's power, fading only one year later; Al Capone, the one who ordered the hit, succumbed via tax evasion charges two years later. With any luck the UK electorate won't have to wait that long...and if any of these wanker bankers had any integrity they'd be taking the lift to the high-floor windows as I write."Peter Cummings, who headed the division, is said to have left in January with a payoff of about £660,000 and a £6 million pension pot."
UPDATE...or even "STOP PRESS": (15th Feb...even though it's still only 10pm in the UK on the 14th) BONUS BAN...
Oncoming onslaught...
[Times] Worrying indeed. A few months ago the BBC and Robert Scoop Peston were only too keen to tell us how much Gordon Brown was involved; and as the BBC online tells us:"a 25 per cent chance of one of the 15 member countries of the eurozone pulling out of the currency club. That, he said, would be a catastrophic shock leading to a “far greater financial crisis" than the current one."
No room for doubt then. Except, as Iain Dale tells us, they seem to have forgotten that blessing and involvement, in fact they're going out of their way to not mention it. And Lloyd's is suffering: 1.6 billion quid MORE losses than they expected only a few weeks ago??!!! HBOS's corporate division seems to be at the heart of this problem, it lost £7 billion of the now 10 billion. Not enough due diligence, not enough time, not enough thought, not enough sense, not enough...not enough anything; of course don't worry, those responsible will suffer, or maybe not:"The government has also said it will over-rule any concerns that competition authorities may raise, BBC Business Editor Robert Peston has learned... ...He added the prime minister was involved in negotiating the deal, which has the blessing of UK authorities."
The original St. Valetines Day Massacre saw little real result for the gangs involved but the ensuing public outrage marked the beginning of the end for Bugs Moran's power, fading only one year later; Al Capone, the one who ordered the hit, succumbed via tax evasion charges two years later. With any luck the UK electorate won't have to wait that long...and if any of these wanker bankers had any integrity they'd be taking the lift to the high-floor windows as I write."Peter Cummings, who headed the division, is said to have left in January with a payoff of about £660,000 and a £6 million pension pot."
UPDATE...or even "STOP PRESS": (15th Feb...even though it's still only 10pm in the UK on the 14th) BONUS BAN...
jueves, 12 de febrero de 2009
Ordained obligation...
"I care not much for a man's religion whose dog and cat are not the better for it. "
Abraham Lincoln
"The mystery of the beginning of all things is insoluble by us; and I for one must be content to remain an agnostic."
Charles Darwin
...and if you're wondering about "ordained obligation" then an appropriate and wonderfully ironic (see previous post) quote from the 60th death-day boy - assassinated 12th feb 1949.
Hassan al-Banna, founder of Jama'at al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun (Muslim Brotherhood)"...when words are banned, hands make their move."
Ordained obligation...
"I care not much for a man's religion whose dog and cat are not the better for it. "
Abraham Lincoln
"The mystery of the beginning of all things is insoluble by us; and I for one must be content to remain an agnostic."
Charles Darwin
...and if you're wondering about "ordained obligation" then an appropriate and wonderfully ironic (see previous post) quote from the 60th death-day boy - assassinated 12th feb 1949.
Hassan al-Banna, founder of Jama'at al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun (Muslim Brotherhood)"...when words are banned, hands make their move."
Onward to oblivion (2)...
I'm confused; not a rare event: one the one hand we have UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband telling a BBC programme: "The home secretary [Jacqui snout-in-trough Smith] made a decision on an individual case as she is required to do." speaking of the UK government's descision to refuse entry to Dutch Freedom Party MP (Geert Wilder) because a film he made re Islam [Fitna...see it HERE ...or in myriad other sites!] had "caused outrage across the Muslim world", well, we all know is as easy as falling of a log. Miliband said it was:
"extreme anti-Muslim hate and we have very clear laws in this country".How then, and on the other hand, was the film shown in the House of Lords (as planned) and, according to the BBC correspondent in attendance Iain Watson,
"about 30 people had been at the screening and had given a round of applause, while calling for a debate on the issues raised."Eh??!!! Anyway, the second bit of news I spoke of is that American writer Sherry Jones is here in Barcelona [Link - Spanish] ...under special police guard. Of course, the report says, 'with regard to the controversy that publication of her book unleashed she was very sure: "I have never felt directly threatened, but have heard opinions in favor and against,"'. OK. I think I am right in saying that the book, The Jewel of Medina, has yet to be published in the UK. Last August, you may recall, Random House cancelled the planned publication; they had received no threats apparently, just a little words of warning that publishing the book might cause offence to some "members of the community". You may also recall the publisher that took up the gauntlet, Gibson Square Books, was firebombed. This was followed by a postponement of the release of the book and the news soon faded due to the current economic troubles. It's odd because it seems many countries don't have a problem publishing, in fact at Islam Online they were happy to review it!
Who cares that they don't think much of the story; they have read and reviewed it with an open mind and no thought of violence or outrage. What is the problem when world famous publishers and other less important groups like the UK government (arf arf) take descisions so as not to upset a few fanatics...shouldn't they just arrest, or at least control, the fanatics?
"I also hope that readers will take it for what it is: an attempt by a Western writer with little knowledge of Arabic, Arabia, Islam, and Muslims using her own Western, 21st century values, ideals and emotions to portray an unrecognizable version of the well-known and well-documented story of `A’ishah."
Onward to oblivion (2)...
I'm confused; not a rare event: one the one hand we have UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband telling a BBC programme: "The home secretary [Jacqui snout-in-trough Smith] made a decision on an individual case as she is required to do." speaking of the UK government's descision to refuse entry to Dutch Freedom Party MP (Geert Wilder) because a film he made re Islam [Fitna...see it HERE ...or in myriad other sites!] had "caused outrage across the Muslim world", well, we all know is as easy as falling of a log. Miliband said it was:
How then, and on the other hand, was the film shown in the House of Lords (as planned) and, according to the BBC correspondent in attendance Iain Watson,"extreme anti-Muslim hate and we have very clear laws in this country".
Eh??!!! Anyway, the second bit of news I spoke of is that American writer Sherry Jones is here in Barcelona [Link - Spanish] ...under special police guard. Of course, the report says, 'with regard to the controversy that publication of her book unleashed she was very sure: "I have never felt directly threatened, but have heard opinions in favor and against,"'. OK. I think I am right in saying that the book, The Jewel of Medina, has yet to be published in the UK. Last August, you may recall, Random House cancelled the planned publication; they had received no threats apparently, just a little words of warning that publishing the book might cause offence to some "members of the community". You may also recall the publisher that took up the gauntlet, Gibson Square Books, was firebombed. This was followed by a postponement of the release of the book and the news soon faded due to the current economic troubles. It's odd because it seems many countries don't have a problem publishing, in fact at Islam Online they were happy to review it!"about 30 people had been at the screening and had given a round of applause, while calling for a debate on the issues raised."
Who cares that they don't think much of the story; they have read and reviewed it with an open mind and no thought of violence or outrage. What is the problem when world famous publishers and other less important groups like the UK government (arf arf) take descisions so as not to upset a few fanatics...shouldn't they just arrest, or at least control, the fanatics?"I also hope that readers will take it for what it is: an attempt by a Western writer with little knowledge of Arabic, Arabia, Islam, and Muslims using her own Western, 21st century values, ideals and emotions to portray an unrecognizable version of the well-known and well-documented story of `A’ishah."
sábado, 7 de febrero de 2009
Onomatophobic onomatomania...
"fuzzy-haired frog"...would that be worse, better or just the same? Would it have led to being sacked? Or more topically, what about "Curly-haired french idiot"...hypothetical I guess but if JC can get away by VERY publically calling Gordon Brown a "one-eyed Scottish idiot" why the sacking of Carol Thatcher over a 'throw-away' comment said in private?
Well, the funniest thing about each of these stories is that these 'shocking' comments led Jo Brand to leave the room in disgust, oh the irony! And that NOBODY has had a go at Clarkson for calling Brown a liar!"As some rolled their eyes and others challenged Thatcher about her use of the word, she is said to have responded, “well, he’s half-golliwog”, prompting Brand to leave the room in disgust" [link]
Onomatophobic onomatomania...
"fuzzy-haired frog"...would that be worse, better or just the same? Would it have led to being sacked? Or more topically, what about "Curly-haired french idiot"...hypothetical I guess but if JC can get away by VERY publically calling Gordon Brown a "one-eyed Scottish idiot" why the sacking of Carol Thatcher over a 'throw-away' comment said in private?
Well, the funniest thing about each of these stories is that these 'shocking' comments led Jo Brand to leave the room in disgust, oh the irony! And that NOBODY has had a go at Clarkson for calling Brown a liar!"As some rolled their eyes and others challenged Thatcher about her use of the word, she is said to have responded, “well, he’s half-golliwog”, prompting Brand to leave the room in disgust" [link]