domingo, 24 de mayo de 2009

Other outgoings II...

Just in case those UK dwellers out there thought you just might scrape a few pennies together over the next few years DESPITE the huge mountain of debt, well, there's more bad news; news that has not gone unreported but has gone largely unnoticed and it became law on 26th November 2008, the day before Damien Green was arrested (although I'm sure that is just a coincidence!)

"One measure of the fantasy world now inhabited by our sad MPs was the mindless way that they nodded through, last October, by 463 votes to three, by far the most expensive piece of legislation ever to go through Parliament."

From Christopher Booker's column in The Sunday Telegraph. Let's just repeat part of that: "by far the most expensive piece of legislation EVER to go through Parliament." Worryingly, the almost unnanimous vote confirmed what Booker calls the "zombie state of our MPs" because they all agreed without the minister Ed Miliband or the Government saying what it would/could cost. Peter Lilley [ you may remember that he forewarned in 1997 of the possibility of the FSA disaster] informed Booker that the minister had "at last slipped out a figure on his website (without bothering to tell Parliament)." Unbelievable.

The Government's estimate was £404 billion, or £18 billion a year, or £760 per household every year for four decades.

Knowing that that is the government's estimate means we can safely assume that the real figure is probably well beyond the 404 billion mark.

h/t Conservative Home.

(Updated) Off on a tangent and just as a reminder of other problems and ramping up the debt under cover of the expenses scandal George Monbiot in the Guardian says the expenses hoohah "is microscopic by comparison"...and he's right (not often I could say that about what George writes!) He is referring to the PFI schemes and one in particular: the M25 motorway widening: now it is going to cost 25% more...for 50% LESS work. [monbiot.com]

"The Campaign for Better Transport had calculated that the same amount of extra road space - if it were really needed - could have been created for £478m(1). But somehow, over the past four weeks, the £5bn for widening four sections of motorway has mutated into £6.2bn for widening two(2). In Sicily, officials agree to terms like this with the help of dainty gifts like horse’s heads and waistcoats full of fish. In the UK, the government volunteers them without any obvious inducement."

References:

1. Campaign for Better Transport, 8th May 2008. Award of £5bn M25 PFI contract shows “appalling judgment”. [Link]

2. Highways Agency, 20th May 2009. £6.2 billion M25 Design, Build, Finance and Operate (DBFO) contract awarded. [Link]


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Other outgoings II...

Just in case those UK dwellers out there thought you just might scrape a few pennies together over the next few years DESPITE the huge mountain of debt, well, there's more bad news; news that has not gone unreported but has gone largely unnoticed and it became law on 26th November 2008, the day before Damien Green was arrested (although I'm sure that is just a coincidence!)

"One measure of the fantasy world now inhabited by our sad MPs was the mindless way that they nodded through, last October, by 463 votes to three, by far the most expensive piece of legislation ever to go through Parliament."

From Christopher Booker's column in The Sunday Telegraph. Let's just repeat part of that: "by far the most expensive piece of legislation EVER to go through Parliament." Worryingly, the almost unnanimous vote confirmed what Booker calls the "zombie state of our MPs" because they all agreed without the minister Ed Miliband or the Government saying what it would/could cost. Peter Lilley [ you may remember that he forewarned in 1997 of the possibility of the FSA disaster] informed Booker that the minister had "at last slipped out a figure on his website (without bothering to tell Parliament)." Unbelievable.

The Government's estimate was £404 billion, or £18 billion a year, or £760 per household every year for four decades.

Knowing that that is the government's estimate means we can safely assume that the real figure is probably well beyond the 404 billion mark.

h/t Conservative Home.

(Updated) Off on a tangent and just as a reminder of other problems and ramping up the debt under cover of the expenses scandal George Monbiot in the Guardian says the expenses hoohah "is microscopic by comparison"...and he's right (not often I could say that about what George writes!) He is referring to the PFI schemes and one in particular: the M25 motorway widening: now it is going to cost 25% more...for 50% LESS work. [monbiot.com]

"The Campaign for Better Transport had calculated that the same amount of extra road space - if it were really needed - could have been created for £478m(1). But somehow, over the past four weeks, the £5bn for widening four sections of motorway has mutated into £6.2bn for widening two(2). In Sicily, officials agree to terms like this with the help of dainty gifts like horse’s heads and waistcoats full of fish. In the UK, the government volunteers them without any obvious inducement."

References:

1. Campaign for Better Transport, 8th May 2008. Award of £5bn M25 PFI contract shows “appalling judgment”. [Link]

2. Highways Agency, 20th May 2009. £6.2 billion M25 Design, Build, Finance and Operate (DBFO) contract awarded. [Link]


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viernes, 22 de mayo de 2009


Even funnier if you know the original.(Links to YouTube)
h/t Order Order...

...and whilst we're on the videos: weekend eye-candy : "Those Crazy Europeans..."


h/t Paul (No, Not The One in New Zealand)

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Even funnier if you know the original.(Links to YouTube)
h/t Order Order...

...and whilst we're on the videos: weekend eye-candy : "Those Crazy Europeans..."


h/t Paul (No, Not The One in New Zealand)

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jueves, 21 de mayo de 2009

Objurgating obscurantism...

I would like to draw your attention to some good sense struggling to make itself heard over the MPs expenses and "Speaker Out" uproar. One thing is that it distracts from the economic crisis but also it is managing to distract from another real crisis: that we aren't seeing the wood for the trees: from EU Refererendum, Lost in the beauty contest:

"Never more has it been more important to focus on the essential point that the "expenses" controversy is a symptom not the cause of the problem."

"At the heart of this stinking affair is the erosion of democracy and the very great danger is that – as Hannan points out [see below]– that the "cure" will make the disease worse." Perhaps more importantly explaining that for all the money they earn and fiddle - and constantly increase the amounts they are 'due' - the UK parliament is actually doing less and less: The EU Ref post link to the Earl of Balfour's letter to The Daily Telegraph saying that "His letter demands the widest possible circulation" (as I am doing):

Retired MPs say that the lot of a backbencher these days is very dull and powerless.

So much legislation comes from Brussels and bypasses Parliament altogether, and this has been exacerbated by the wholesale politicisation of the Civil Service since 1997.

Hannan pointed out that "Gordon Brown's proposals would make matters far worse": "The revelations of parliamentary abuses have left me feeling let down, disappointed and, in some cases, shocked. But I only started getting angry as I listened to the Prime Minister's asinine claim that the way to clean up Parliament was to subject it to an external quango." Nice to see that the spin in Brown's "class war" reference to the current system seeming like a Gentlemen's Club wasn't lost.

No doubt, sadly, I must probably count myself - at least in part - among those so-called 'claquers' whom EU Referendum derides for helping to distract attention - not for a second assuming I am 'visible' enough to be either seen or counted - whose "love of personality politics" will...

"...wreck any chance of a serious debate, as they focus on the coming beauty contest. Thus does our democracy dribble down the pan, lost in the torrent of trivia and stupidity that drives what passes for political discourse."


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Objurgating obscurantism...

I would like to draw your attention to some good sense struggling to make itself heard over the MPs expenses and "Speaker Out" uproar. One thing is that it distracts from the economic crisis but also it is managing to distract from another real crisis: that we aren't seeing the wood for the trees: from EU Refererendum, Lost in the beauty contest:

"Never more has it been more important to focus on the essential point that the "expenses" controversy is a symptom not the cause of the problem."

"At the heart of this stinking affair is the erosion of democracy and the very great danger is that – as Hannan points out [see below]– that the "cure" will make the disease worse." Perhaps more importantly explaining that for all the money they earn and fiddle - and constantly increase the amounts they are 'due' - the UK parliament is actually doing less and less: The EU Ref post link to the Earl of Balfour's letter to The Daily Telegraph saying that "His letter demands the widest possible circulation" (as I am doing):

Retired MPs say that the lot of a backbencher these days is very dull and powerless.

So much legislation comes from Brussels and bypasses Parliament altogether, and this has been exacerbated by the wholesale politicisation of the Civil Service since 1997.

Hannan pointed out that "Gordon Brown's proposals would make matters far worse": "The revelations of parliamentary abuses have left me feeling let down, disappointed and, in some cases, shocked. But I only started getting angry as I listened to the Prime Minister's asinine claim that the way to clean up Parliament was to subject it to an external quango." Nice to see that the spin in Brown's "class war" reference to the current system seeming like a Gentlemen's Club wasn't lost.

No doubt, sadly, I must probably count myself - at least in part - among those so-called 'claquers' whom EU Referendum derides for helping to distract attention - not for a second assuming I am 'visible' enough to be either seen or counted - whose "love of personality politics" will...

"...wreck any chance of a serious debate, as they focus on the coming beauty contest. Thus does our democracy dribble down the pan, lost in the torrent of trivia and stupidity that drives what passes for political discourse."


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lunes, 18 de mayo de 2009

Online outrage...

The online outrage suffered by Google a few days ago doesn't seem to have gone away. Is it me or are things still as slow today as they were at the end of last week? The services aren't down but they're frustratingly slow. Is this a sign of the times? What the future holds? Google sneezes and the world catches a cold...this type of 'traffic control' incident added to the 'fact' that "Demand for Internet bandwidth is growing so rapidly that connectivity will suffer starting as early as next year"...and added to that in places like the UK with "Bandwidth-throttling conspiracy theorists" in the iGIZMO tech news I may find myself having to get the Scrabble, Risk and Monopoly out a bit more. Or I suppose I could read a book ;-)

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Online outrage...

The online outrage suffered by Google a few days ago doesn't seem to have gone away. Is it me or are things still as slow today as they were at the end of last week? The services aren't down but they're frustratingly slow. Is this a sign of the times? What the future holds? Google sneezes and the world catches a cold...this type of 'traffic control' incident added to the 'fact' that "Demand for Internet bandwidth is growing so rapidly that connectivity will suffer starting as early as next year"...and added to that in places like the UK with "Bandwidth-throttling conspiracy theorists" in the iGIZMO tech news I may find myself having to get the Scrabble, Risk and Monopoly out a bit more. Or I suppose I could read a book ;-)

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domingo, 17 de mayo de 2009

Oblivious or obviated outrage...

A year ago: The Times, May 18th 2008: Tony Blair’s expenses shredded: Some of Tony Blair's expenses claims, which the High Court last week ruled should be disclosed to the public, have been shredded. The documents, itemising Blair's claims for household expenses during a year of his premiership, were destroyed in the midst of a legal battle over whether they should be published. All MPs' expenses are funded by taxpayers.

In the Daily Mail: "Tony Blair's expenses shredded 'by mistake' - just as they were about to be made public." [Link] The article goes on to say "Commons Speaker Michael Martin allowed officials to destroy claim forms and receipts up to April 2005 - meaning thousands of expenses have been secretly shredded." and "Speaker Michael Martin squandered almost £200,000 of taxpayers cash in his failed attempt to keep the accounts secret."

THIS WAS LAST YEAR! Only in the last week we were reminded: Tony Blair facing questions (Daily Telegraph) over how he funded his multi-million-pound property empire...

Also: "Tony Blair and the huge new mortgages" Mail Online: Tony Blair remortgaged his constituency home for £296000, almost ten times what he paid for it, months before he bought his London townhouse for £3.65million.

Revealed: the 'black hole' in Blair's expenses: TONY BLAIR is facing questions over an apparent "black hole" in his parliamentary expenses...

That final link WAS THREE YEARS AGO!! Why has it been allowed to go on so long, how and why have they been allowed to hide it: Parliament isn't theirs, it's ours!

h/t Liz Kemp, comments on Conservative Home.

P.S. Being rampantly anti-Blair (and Brown!) for well over a decade I was intrigued to know how I could have missed all this when it was in the news so I went and checked in the Owsblog archives: the answer - and I was pleasantly reminded - was that I had better things to do in nicer surroundings! May 17th 2008: Ostras: overdose of oysters...

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Oblivious or obviated outrage...

A year ago: The Times, May 18th 2008: Tony Blair’s expenses shredded: Some of Tony Blair's expenses claims, which the High Court last week ruled should be disclosed to the public, have been shredded. The documents, itemising Blair's claims for household expenses during a year of his premiership, were destroyed in the midst of a legal battle over whether they should be published. All MPs' expenses are funded by taxpayers.

In the Daily Mail: "Tony Blair's expenses shredded 'by mistake' - just as they were about to be made public." [Link] The article goes on to say "Commons Speaker Michael Martin allowed officials to destroy claim forms and receipts up to April 2005 - meaning thousands of expenses have been secretly shredded." and "Speaker Michael Martin squandered almost £200,000 of taxpayers cash in his failed attempt to keep the accounts secret."

THIS WAS LAST YEAR! Only in the last week we were reminded: Tony Blair facing questions (Daily Telegraph) over how he funded his multi-million-pound property empire...

Also: "Tony Blair and the huge new mortgages" Mail Online: Tony Blair remortgaged his constituency home for £296000, almost ten times what he paid for it, months before he bought his London townhouse for £3.65million.

Revealed: the 'black hole' in Blair's expenses: TONY BLAIR is facing questions over an apparent "black hole" in his parliamentary expenses...

That final link WAS THREE YEARS AGO!! Why has it been allowed to go on so long, how and why have they been allowed to hide it: Parliament isn't theirs, it's ours!

h/t Liz Kemp, comments on Conservative Home.

P.S. Being rampantly anti-Blair (and Brown!) for well over a decade I was intrigued to know how I could have missed all this when it was in the news so I went and checked in the Owsblog archives: the answer - and I was pleasantly reminded - was that I had better things to do in nicer surroundings! May 17th 2008: Ostras: overdose of oysters...

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sábado, 16 de mayo de 2009

Odd one out...

No, not which Westminster MP is out, but, from the Times Money Central: The 10 richest towns in the UK...[link] based on information from UHY Hacker Young about average income tax contributions; can you note the odd-one-out from this list:

1. St Albans: Average income per year: £43,500
2. Windsor: Average income per year: £42,100
3. Guildford: Average income per year: £38,200
4. Wokingham: Average income per year: £37,500
5. London: Average income per year: £34,700
6. Macclesfield: Average income per year: £34,500
7. Wycombe: Average income per year: £33,900
8. Reigate: Average income per year: £33,400
9. Chelmsford: Average income per year: £30,000
10. Basingstoke: Average income per year: £30,300

In fact they all something in common except one: there's only one not within the area of the map below; if you're not from the UK, or not up on UK place-names or are just crap at knowing what towns are where then click on the map to find the answer:

London and environsNo offence meant to Macclesfieldians but I guess this is the rich and famous of Manchester living 'in the countryside' (oops, just gave it away).
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Odd one out...

No, not which Westminster MP is out, but, from the Times Money Central: The 10 richest towns in the UK...[link] based on information from UHY Hacker Young about average income tax contributions; can you note the odd-one-out from this list:

1. St Albans: Average income per year: £43,500
2. Windsor: Average income per year: £42,100
3. Guildford: Average income per year: £38,200
4. Wokingham: Average income per year: £37,500
5. London: Average income per year: £34,700
6. Macclesfield: Average income per year: £34,500
7. Wycombe: Average income per year: £33,900
8. Reigate: Average income per year: £33,400
9. Chelmsford: Average income per year: £30,000
10. Basingstoke: Average income per year: £30,300

In fact they all something in common except one: there's only one not within the area of the map below; if you're not from the UK, or not up on UK place-names or are just crap at knowing what towns are where then click on the map to find the answer:

London and environsNo offence meant to Macclesfieldians but I guess this is the rich and famous of Manchester living 'in the countryside' (oops, just gave it away).
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viernes, 15 de mayo de 2009

On and on and on...

The "honourable" UK Member of Parliament expenses scandals just keep coming. This latest wasn't exactly unknown before and it isn't all Balls, "Flipping" hell!! Some others claim "innocence" and aren't too worried about what the perception of them is with the voters: "Shahid Malik, the Justice Minister, who ran up the highest expenses claim of any MP, has defended himself and insisted he will not pay the money back to Parliamentary authorities." [DT Link]

Update 5pm: Shahlid Malik has resigned his post this afternoon "pending an inquiry into claims about his expenses made in the Daily Telegraph." [BBC]
DT Matt 150509More hilarious cartoons from Matt in the Daily Telegraph HERE.

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On and on and on...

The "honourable" UK Member of Parliament expenses scandals just keep coming. This latest wasn't exactly unknown before and it isn't all Balls, "Flipping" hell!! Some others claim "innocence" and aren't too worried about what the perception of them is with the voters: "Shahid Malik, the Justice Minister, who ran up the highest expenses claim of any MP, has defended himself and insisted he will not pay the money back to Parliamentary authorities." [DT Link]

Update 5pm: Shahlid Malik has resigned his post this afternoon "pending an inquiry into claims about his expenses made in the Daily Telegraph." [BBC]
DT Matt 150509More hilarious cartoons from Matt in the Daily Telegraph HERE.

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miércoles, 13 de mayo de 2009

Olfactory offence...

seized cocaine purityWhilst we know that drug users are stupid (yes, you are) I didn't realise they were this stupid: The latest figures from the Forensic Science Service reveal how average purity of police seizures of cocaine has fallen to its lowest ever recorded level - less than 20% pure on average.

Almost a third (31%) of seizures are below 9% pure.

(Link to article Mark Easton's article through graph) Yep, they're paying the same money and getting a lot less than they think; oh of course they'll say "my source is good/pure/the best/quality etc...but it isn't, you're sticking shit into yourselves and paying through the nose...(get it?) "Purities now are quite low - between 5% and 40% in police seizures and we have seen them as low as 4% or 5% in the last few weeks."

That said, I think we may all be at it more than we think: "Spanish scientists have detected the presence of cocaine in the air of Madrid and Barcelona" [Link]

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Olfactory offence...

seized cocaine purityWhilst we know that drug users are stupid (yes, you are) I didn't realise they were this stupid: The latest figures from the Forensic Science Service reveal how average purity of police seizures of cocaine has fallen to its lowest ever recorded level - less than 20% pure on average.

Almost a third (31%) of seizures are below 9% pure.

(Link to article Mark Easton's article through graph) Yep, they're paying the same money and getting a lot less than they think; oh of course they'll say "my source is good/pure/the best/quality etc...but it isn't, you're sticking shit into yourselves and paying through the nose...(get it?) "Purities now are quite low - between 5% and 40% in police seizures and we have seen them as low as 4% or 5% in the last few weeks."

That said, I think we may all be at it more than we think: "Spanish scientists have detected the presence of cocaine in the air of Madrid and Barcelona" [Link]

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martes, 12 de mayo de 2009

Oversight...

A good day to bury bad news...well it was: last Friday the MP abuse of expenses story was all over the media...coinciding with THIS news. Oops, "The Bank of England yesterday stepped up its aggressive campaign to end Britain’s economic slump by ordering a surprise £50 billion expansion of its radical scheme to jump-start growth by 'printing money'." The BoE buying more UK government debt, would've thought it, eh?

Update 13th May: ...and of course the Bank of England are much gloomier than the government about the recovery too. "The Bank has cut its growth forecast over the next two years..." No mention in Parliament today; maybe tomorrow.

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Oversight...

A good day to bury bad news...well it was: last Friday the MP abuse of expenses story was all over the media...coinciding with THIS news. Oops, "The Bank of England yesterday stepped up its aggressive campaign to end Britain’s economic slump by ordering a surprise £50 billion expansion of its radical scheme to jump-start growth by 'printing money'." The BoE buying more UK government debt, would've thought it, eh?

Update 13th May: ...and of course the Bank of England are much gloomier than the government about the recovery too. "The Bank has cut its growth forecast over the next two years..." No mention in Parliament today; maybe tomorrow.

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lunes, 11 de mayo de 2009

Ominous overtones III...

I'm loathe to push Liz down the page but life goes on...

Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) has always been the hen laying the golden eggs for Venezuela. Today it is technically bankrupt; they lost their heritage, their good name, with serious cash flow problems, production problems, problems paying the bills: the government will only recognize about 60% of the outstanding debt (I doubt even this will be paid)

The once grand company now has a multiple role: petty cash cow for the government, part Treasury, part leading provider of foreign exchange bypassing Central Bank, a provider of funds for clandestine operations [las maletas] plus national and international leverage parallel to the Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank. All this without considering that Venezuela is the only OPEC member country that does not display any plan of investment for its oil industry, which obviously has an indelible impact on their production of crude oil and derivatives, as well as the working life of their wells and deposits.

To make matters worse the inefficiency of other institutions of the Venezuelan state has led PDVSA to become a bureaucratic entity with nearly one hundred thousand workers, responsible for funding 11 social missions created by the government in areas of food distribution, education, training, literacy and employment, among others, thus encompassing powers normally covered by several ministries. This clear operational and financial deterioration has made a pauper of what was the highest paid sector of the economy; what is worse, these workers - as has happened with all public employees - are now political puppets shouting pro Chavez slogans; even managers and boards of directors were suddenly shouting slogans and marching with red shirts to political demonstrations.

All PDVSA's transport and buildings are covered with this pseudo advertising, including the most striking expression "homeland, Socialism or death". [Owsblog] Now all the goods and services related to the oil industry that provide equipment, transport, servicing, logistics, maintenance and operations to PDVSA (some of these contacting companies unpaid for 12 months) are being taken over by the state. Basically, the government has taken measures to seize anything it needs for the daily operations of the oilfields, this deep within the financial crisis, and which largely it can't pay for. (The same mechanism as applied to Radio Caracas Television when closed in May 2007 to take over their transmission facilities without compensation)

Meanwhile, Chavez celebrated the "liberation" of 8,000 workers belonging to these service companies and contractors whom will no longer be "oppressed" by the oligarchy and by capitalism (they will be absorbed by PDVSA...more costs.) Populism at its most cheap and farcical: the truth is that the hen that lays the golden eggs is being killed and the eggs broken; Venezuela is living one of the most difficult moments of its history.

The above edited and adapted from José Luís Méndez La Fuente's Petróleos de Venezuela, casi en quiebra in today's La Vanguardia.

To understand more and read a great opinion and blog about Venezuela: The Devil's Excrement, who, on the same subject says: "Chavez accelerates the pace of destruction of Venezuela, taking over oil service companies, "To me this is simply further evidence that Venezuela’s Dictator is simply out of control by now: In the face of the problem of the debt of the service companies, Chavez took the autocratic, expedient and simplistic solution of taking them over."

"This is just like a little kid playing a game that kicks the board because he is losing. Except that the debts do not go away like the game on the little kid’s board, PDVSA can’t handle this new responsibility and the drop in oil production will not only continue to go down, but is likely to accelerate with these measures. And the debt itself does not go away either"

The piece ends on an interesting point almost reminiscent of the UK's problems: "one way or the other, with or without Hugo Chavez, it is Venezuelans that will one day have to pay for all of these decisions."

The Devil remarks in another post that "while taking over farmlands is no longer news in Venezuela, this week the Government decided that sugar cane lands in Aragua and Carabobo states are too fertile for sugar cane and have to be taken over and/or planted with different crops. This includes some of the best rum producing areas." Now, this is of major concern, both as a ex resident of those states, with family still there and being a 'great' Venezuelan rum drinker...I fear the worst!

"Of course, nobody has given it any thought in the Government as to what to do with the sugar processing plants nearby, the workers that are there and what happens to them if the crops are changed."

Doh!
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Ominous overtones III...

I'm loathe to push Liz down the page but life goes on...

Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) has always been the hen laying the golden eggs for Venezuela. Today it is technically bankrupt; they lost their heritage, their good name, with serious cash flow problems, production problems, problems paying the bills: the government will only recognize about 60% of the outstanding debt (I doubt even this will be paid)

The once grand company now has a multiple role: petty cash cow for the government, part Treasury, part leading provider of foreign exchange bypassing Central Bank, a provider of funds for clandestine operations [las maletas] plus national and international leverage parallel to the Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank. All this without considering that Venezuela is the only OPEC member country that does not display any plan of investment for its oil industry, which obviously has an indelible impact on their production of crude oil and derivatives, as well as the working life of their wells and deposits.

To make matters worse the inefficiency of other institutions of the Venezuelan state has led PDVSA to become a bureaucratic entity with nearly one hundred thousand workers, responsible for funding 11 social missions created by the government in areas of food distribution, education, training, literacy and employment, among others, thus encompassing powers normally covered by several ministries. This clear operational and financial deterioration has made a pauper of what was the highest paid sector of the economy; what is worse, these workers - as has happened with all public employees - are now political puppets shouting pro Chavez slogans; even managers and boards of directors were suddenly shouting slogans and marching with red shirts to political demonstrations.

All PDVSA's transport and buildings are covered with this pseudo advertising, including the most striking expression "homeland, Socialism or death". [Owsblog] Now all the goods and services related to the oil industry that provide equipment, transport, servicing, logistics, maintenance and operations to PDVSA (some of these contacting companies unpaid for 12 months) are being taken over by the state. Basically, the government has taken measures to seize anything it needs for the daily operations of the oilfields, this deep within the financial crisis, and which largely it can't pay for. (The same mechanism as applied to Radio Caracas Television when closed in May 2007 to take over their transmission facilities without compensation)

Meanwhile, Chavez celebrated the "liberation" of 8,000 workers belonging to these service companies and contractors whom will no longer be "oppressed" by the oligarchy and by capitalism (they will be absorbed by PDVSA...more costs.) Populism at its most cheap and farcical: the truth is that the hen that lays the golden eggs is being killed and the eggs broken; Venezuela is living one of the most difficult moments of its history.

The above edited and adapted from José Luís Méndez La Fuente's Petróleos de Venezuela, casi en quiebra in today's La Vanguardia.

To understand more and read a great opinion and blog about Venezuela: The Devil's Excrement, who, on the same subject says: "Chavez accelerates the pace of destruction of Venezuela, taking over oil service companies, "To me this is simply further evidence that Venezuela’s Dictator is simply out of control by now: In the face of the problem of the debt of the service companies, Chavez took the autocratic, expedient and simplistic solution of taking them over."

"This is just like a little kid playing a game that kicks the board because he is losing. Except that the debts do not go away like the game on the little kid’s board, PDVSA can’t handle this new responsibility and the drop in oil production will not only continue to go down, but is likely to accelerate with these measures. And the debt itself does not go away either"

The piece ends on an interesting point almost reminiscent of the UK's problems: "one way or the other, with or without Hugo Chavez, it is Venezuelans that will one day have to pay for all of these decisions."

The Devil remarks in another post that "while taking over farmlands is no longer news in Venezuela, this week the Government decided that sugar cane lands in Aragua and Carabobo states are too fertile for sugar cane and have to be taken over and/or planted with different crops. This includes some of the best rum producing areas." Now, this is of major concern, both as a ex resident of those states, with family still there and being a 'great' Venezuelan rum drinker...I fear the worst!

"Of course, nobody has given it any thought in the Government as to what to do with the sugar processing plants nearby, the workers that are there and what happens to them if the crops are changed."

Doh!
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Ouch II...

Lovely lizSlap in the face: An email is sent to Labour members by the Parliamentary Labour Party's office exonerating them in expenses scandal tells them: "You're blameless".

Slap on the face: GORDON Brown was red-faced again last night after his MAKE-UP tips were left in a taxi by a bungling aide.

Slap around the face: A Saudi judge has told a seminar on domestic violence that it is OK for a man to slap his wife for lavish spending, a newspaper has reported.

Slap-up meal: security research released to coincide with the InfoSec event last month revealed that 37% of workers in London would be willing to sell company secrets if the price was right: amazingly, 2% said they would betray their company for a free slap up meal.

Slap happy: No doubt dazed and incoherent from multiple blows to the head the UK prime minister apologises - on behalf of all political parties - for the ludicrous expenses claims made and said "public trust must be restored immediately".

Slap and tickle: So DO people have more sex in the countryside than in the city? Oh Liz...

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Ouch II...

Lovely lizSlap in the face: An email is sent to Labour members by the Parliamentary Labour Party's office exonerating them in expenses scandal tells them: "You're blameless".

Slap on the face: GORDON Brown was red-faced again last night after his MAKE-UP tips were left in a taxi by a bungling aide.

Slap around the face: A Saudi judge has told a seminar on domestic violence that it is OK for a man to slap his wife for lavish spending, a newspaper has reported.

Slap-up meal: security research released to coincide with the InfoSec event last month revealed that 37% of workers in London would be willing to sell company secrets if the price was right: amazingly, 2% said they would betray their company for a free slap up meal.

Slap happy: No doubt dazed and incoherent from multiple blows to the head the UK prime minister apologises - on behalf of all political parties - for the ludicrous expenses claims made and said "public trust must be restored immediately".

Slap and tickle: So DO people have more sex in the countryside than in the city? Oh Liz...

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domingo, 10 de mayo de 2009

Outing ophidians...

"...irredeemably corrupt and unreformable." From an article by Christopher Booker; but unlike my previous post this time it's about that other thieving, deceitful, arrogant, almost facist sleazefest that is the EU. Something else we all know but nothing seems to be done.

"The system was open to fraud in every direction. Almost immediately, however, Miss Andreasen found herself being pressured to sign off the 2001 accounts which, as she said, would be a criminal offence... ...It soon became obvious that her attempts to introduce changes were being blocked at every turn. "

"Brussels Laid Bare", published tomorrow and written by the a sacked former chief accountant of the EU, Marta Andreasen.

ophidian
adj.,n. - (reptile) belonging to order of reptiles including snakes; like snakes.

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Outing ophidians...

"...irredeemably corrupt and unreformable." From an article by Christopher Booker; but unlike my previous post this time it's about that other thieving, deceitful, arrogant, almost facist sleazefest that is the EU. Something else we all know but nothing seems to be done.

"The system was open to fraud in every direction. Almost immediately, however, Miss Andreasen found herself being pressured to sign off the 2001 accounts which, as she said, would be a criminal offence... ...It soon became obvious that her attempts to introduce changes were being blocked at every turn. "

"Brussels Laid Bare", published tomorrow and written by the a sacked former chief accountant of the EU, Marta Andreasen.

ophidian
adj.,n. - (reptile) belonging to order of reptiles including snakes; like snakes.

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Daily Telegraph: MP Expenses scandalI know many bloggers 'float' through Owsblog whilst surfing; many may not know of what is becoming a 'revolution-forming scandal in the UK: at last the people are finding a voice. If you haven't already heard of the outrageous situation in the UK regarding the "honourable" Members of Parliament and their Expenses and allowances claims then please read the Daily Telegraph: click on the image (left) to go direct to their ample coverage. "Ministers and MPs had 'no excuses' for milking the system of taxpayer-funded Commons expenses" says Alasdair Campbell. I agree entirely with him - not a common occurance - they have NO EXCUSE. Alasdair goes on to say

"The question in MPs' minds as they submit expenses should not be 'can I get away with this?', nor even 'how will it look?', nor even 'is it within the rules?', but 'is it right?"

However the problem is that IF (not when) they get to that final question it appears they DON'T CARE! Many are saying that it is not all MPs, or some are low claimers...but they all KNOW! Their silence has aided and abetted the theft and the fraud and the disgraceful deceit. "It's easy to blame 'the system' without taking responsibility" says Matthew d'Ancona. I don't wish to blight the name of someone who deserves better by associating his name with corrupt and greedy shitcakes but some quotes of Edward Murrow spring to mind: "The obscure we see eventually. The completely obvious, it seems, takes longer."...but now it's becoming clear:

"A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves"

Inspired no doubt from Benjamin Franklin's "Make yourself a sheep and the wolves will eat you." At long last the sheep seem to be acting as a flock and as such can even overcome a small pack of wolves. No wonder this thieving bunch of scumbags tried so hard to keep this quiet, to keep it hidden, to edit what was released etc.

I'll finish with what Mike Wasdin says: it's pretty much what I think too, HERE. "It must become fashionable to question authority again for freedom and liberty to prevail"

...I would like to end by expressing my love for the government in the words of the late Abbie Hoffman...FUCK THE GOVERNMENT!"
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Daily Telegraph: MP Expenses scandalI know many bloggers 'float' through Owsblog whilst surfing; many may not know of what is becoming a 'revolution-forming scandal in the UK: at last the people are finding a voice. If you haven't already heard of the outrageous situation in the UK regarding the "honourable" Members of Parliament and their Expenses and allowances claims then please read the Daily Telegraph: click on the image (left) to go direct to their ample coverage. "Ministers and MPs had 'no excuses' for milking the system of taxpayer-funded Commons expenses" says Alasdair Campbell. I agree entirely with him - not a common occurance - they have NO EXCUSE. Alasdair goes on to say

"The question in MPs' minds as they submit expenses should not be 'can I get away with this?', nor even 'how will it look?', nor even 'is it within the rules?', but 'is it right?"

However the problem is that IF (not when) they get to that final question it appears they DON'T CARE! Many are saying that it is not all MPs, or some are low claimers...but they all KNOW! Their silence has aided and abetted the theft and the fraud and the disgraceful deceit. "It's easy to blame 'the system' without taking responsibility" says Matthew d'Ancona. I don't wish to blight the name of someone who deserves better by associating his name with corrupt and greedy shitcakes but some quotes of Edward Murrow spring to mind: "The obscure we see eventually. The completely obvious, it seems, takes longer."...but now it's becoming clear:

"A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves"

Inspired no doubt from Benjamin Franklin's "Make yourself a sheep and the wolves will eat you." At long last the sheep seem to be acting as a flock and as such can even overcome a small pack of wolves. No wonder this thieving bunch of scumbags tried so hard to keep this quiet, to keep it hidden, to edit what was released etc.

I'll finish with what Mike Wasdin says: it's pretty much what I think too, HERE. "It must become fashionable to question authority again for freedom and liberty to prevail"

...I would like to end by expressing my love for the government in the words of the late Abbie Hoffman...FUCK THE GOVERNMENT!"
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viernes, 8 de mayo de 2009

Overflowing obloquy II...

feathering their nests...Well, we've known for some time: Overflowing obloquy..."Nest-feathering like never before; who do these greedy shits think they are?"...Picture link to DT article: "Gordon Brown and his most senior ministers are facing questions over their use of parliamentary expenses after the Daily Telegraph revealed details of their claims." Of course we know other/all parties are at it too but the brunt will - and should - fall on the government.
"The disclosures show the scale of ministers’ claims and the extent to which politicians have exploited the expenses system to subsidise their lifestyles"
"Just when Brown thought it couldn't get worse..." [Conservative Home]

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Overflowing obloquy II...

feathering their nests...Well, we've known for some time: Overflowing obloquy..."Nest-feathering like never before; who do these greedy shits think they are?"...Picture link to DT article: "Gordon Brown and his most senior ministers are facing questions over their use of parliamentary expenses after the Daily Telegraph revealed details of their claims." Of course we know other/all parties are at it too but the brunt will - and should - fall on the government.

"The disclosures show the scale of ministers’ claims and the extent to which politicians have exploited the expenses system to subsidise their lifestyles"

"Just when Brown thought it couldn't get worse..." [Conservative Home]


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jueves, 7 de mayo de 2009

Ollie on Onion's opener...

Oliver Brett reporting for BBC Sport at Lord's today tells of Graham Onion's dream debut. [Link]

"Five wickets fell in 14 balls after tea - four of them to Onions who took three in an over and wound up with a marvellous 5-38."

Now, I hate cricket but couldn't pass up such a gift of a title; the quote is just some fun to wind-up and/or confuse anyone who doesn't understand a thing it says (a large majority no doubt!)

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Ollie on Onion's opener...

Oliver Brett reporting for BBC Sport at Lord's today tells of Graham Onion's dream debut. [Link]

"Five wickets fell in 14 balls after tea - four of them to Onions who took three in an over and wound up with a marvellous 5-38."

Now, I hate cricket but couldn't pass up such a gift of a title; the quote is just some fun to wind-up and/or confuse anyone who doesn't understand a thing it says (a large majority no doubt!)

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martes, 5 de mayo de 2009

Ouch!

For those that feel Gordon Brown and New Labour are a bit on the fascist side, a bit too keen on taking away personal liberties...and with moronic comments about the far right coming from certain Labour corners: "Labour MP Denis MacShane blames 'xenophobic' Tories for rise of far-right BNP" [DM] we are provided with an absolute classic faux pas from Brown: the BBC news website (story here) has a rather nice image! Just in case the Beeb have realised and changed the picture you can see a (rather poor quality) screenshot HERE. No, you're not seeing things, those are Nazi swastikas.

h/t Guido

More pictures, some quite sinister, HERE (if they remain!)

Update May 6th a.m. The BBC yesterday changed their news webpage but they have at least realised you can't buck the blogosphere: they have now 'allowed' the image.

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Ouch!

For those that feel Gordon Brown and New Labour are a bit on the fascist side, a bit too keen on taking away personal liberties...and with moronic comments about the far right coming from certain Labour corners: "Labour MP Denis MacShane blames 'xenophobic' Tories for rise of far-right BNP" [DM] we are provided with an absolute classic faux pas from Brown: the BBC news website (story here) has a rather nice image! Just in case the Beeb have realised and changed the picture you can see a (rather poor quality) screenshot HERE. No, you're not seeing things, those are Nazi swastikas.

h/t Guido

More pictures, some quite sinister, HERE (if they remain!)

Update May 6th a.m. The BBC yesterday changed their news webpage but they have at least realised you can't buck the blogosphere: they have now 'allowed' the image.

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original oneness...

Council of EuropeHappy 60th birthday and happy Europe Day...the real one (I do NOT mean the day later this week associated with that EU thingy which grew from a coal and steel deal to become a seemingly corrupt veritable monolithic juggernaut and which, IMHO, should be scrapped).

Today is the 60th Anniversary of the Council of Europe (later some bunch of headstrong egoists pinched the flag...and the anthem...and a whole lot more). The Council of Europe was founded on 5 May 1949 by the Treaty of London. Article 1(a) of the Statute states that "The aim of the Council of Europe is to achieve a greater unity between its members for the purpose of safeguarding and realising the ideals and principles which are their common heritage and facilitating their economic and social progress." [Wiki]There may have been some bad press re the ECHR etc but all in all a very good thing.Link through the image to find out other interesting things you may not know, including how it costs 200 million Euros a year to run as against 130+ billion that the EU costs.

"In the first sixty years of its existence, the Council of Europe has helped to reconcile a continent after decades of ideological divide..." Press release.

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original oneness...

Council of EuropeHappy 60th birthday and happy Europe Day...the real one (I do NOT mean the day later this week associated with that EU thingy which grew from a coal and steel deal to become a seemingly corrupt veritable monolithic juggernaut and which, IMHO, should be scrapped).

Today is the 60th Anniversary of the Council of Europe (later some bunch of headstrong egoists pinched the flag...and the anthem...and a whole lot more). The Council of Europe was founded on 5 May 1949 by the Treaty of London. Article 1(a) of the Statute states that "The aim of the Council of Europe is to achieve a greater unity between its members for the purpose of safeguarding and realising the ideals and principles which are their common heritage and facilitating their economic and social progress." [Wiki]There may have been some bad press re the ECHR etc but all in all a very good thing.Link through the image to find out other interesting things you may not know, including how it costs 200 million Euros a year to run as against 130+ billion that the EU costs.

"In the first sixty years of its existence, the Council of Europe has helped to reconcile a continent after decades of ideological divide..." Press release.

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domingo, 3 de mayo de 2009

Oblectation obvention...

Six of the best, sixes and sevens, six of one half a dozen of the other...etc but this weekend it was 6 and 2; not Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Vegas 2 but something far more explosive...sports: first Barcelona provided a lesson in rampant and enjoyable football: "It wasn't just the Barcelona press that saluted their team's performance against Madrid as one of the greatest ever" [Guardian Sport blog] Barcelona thrash Real Madrid in Madrid 2 - 6; secondly a record breaking penalty shoot-out...in rugby: "Leicester beat Cardiff in dramatic shoot-out to reach Heineken Cup final" which, after a wonderful Cardiff fightback, finished 26 - 26 after extra time and in the shoot-out when the score reached 6-6 Martyn Williams missed [Times] ; finally in boxing Filipino Manny Pacquiao won another world title reaching the top in a record-tying 6th weight by flooring Ricky Hatton - repeatedly - in the 6 minutes (end of 2nd round - that's how long the fight lasted!) Incredibly "The Filipino landed 73 blows to Hatton's 18" [BBC]. Anything else? I guess Rafa Nadal winning his second set 6 - 2 to regain the Rome Masters title could count...but that's hardly casual or occasional.

obvention n. - casual or occasional happening or gift.
oblectation n. - delight, pleasure
[Luciferous Logolepsy]

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Oblectation obvention...

Six of the best, sixes and sevens, six of one half a dozen of the other...etc but this weekend it was 6 and 2; not Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Vegas 2 but something far more explosive...sports: first Barcelona provided a lesson in rampant and enjoyable football: "It wasn't just the Barcelona press that saluted their team's performance against Madrid as one of the greatest ever" [Guardian Sport blog] Barcelona thrash Real Madrid in Madrid 2 - 6; secondly a record breaking penalty shoot-out...in rugby: "Leicester beat Cardiff in dramatic shoot-out to reach Heineken Cup final" which, after a wonderful Cardiff fightback, finished 26 - 26 after extra time and in the shoot-out when the score reached 6-6 Martyn Williams missed [Times] ; finally in boxing Filipino Manny Pacquiao won another world title reaching the top in a record-tying 6th weight by flooring Ricky Hatton - repeatedly - in the 6 minutes (end of 2nd round - that's how long the fight lasted!) Incredibly "The Filipino landed 73 blows to Hatton's 18" [BBC]. Anything else? I guess Rafa Nadal winning his second set 6 - 2 to regain the Rome Masters title could count...but that's hardly casual or occasional.

obvention n. - casual or occasional happening or gift.
oblectation n. - delight, pleasure
[Luciferous Logolepsy]

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