martes, 27 de septiembre de 2011

Oppugnant onomatomania...


FFS! PC BBC BCE/CE or BC/AD? Boris got in a huff, over this puff, but there's enuff stuff to belie the hysterics; that said some presenters clearly are using the trendy meaningless BCE/CE and the website for BBC Religion and Ethics does seem to prefer the newer terms.. headed by Aaqil Ahmed;...surely Aaqil is not offended? And surely it makes no difference because according to most BBC news/political output that I've heard over the last few months time started in May 2010.

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Osmatic oppidan...


I did say blogging would be light but some things need sharing: picture this: yesterday I was lucky enough to observe - in Providence Place, Bedminster, Bristol - a lady walking her pet...skunk!

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martes, 20 de septiembre de 2011

Obvoluted opinions...


[Edited:'dead' image removed] Tim Montgomerie notes that most of the ear big wigs: Hughes, Farron, Cable and Huhne all seem to be vying for position amongst themselves both in the 'who will take over from Clegg' stakes and in out-doing each other in their derogatory remarks about the Conservatives. At least Vince gets one thing spot-on (however, Vince the Cable is also calling for more quantitative easing from the Bank of England):
"Many of our problems are home-grown. Gordon Brown regularly advised the rest of the world to follow his British model of growth. But the model was flawed. It led to the highest level of household debt in relation to income in the world. It produced a dangerously inflated property bubble. It encouraged a bloated, banking sector while manufacturing declined at an unprecedented rate. Then, they socialised the costs of the crash though a massive budget deficit, the biggest of any major economy. His disciple, Ed Balls, has – sort of – apologised but advocates policies that would repeat the disaster."
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Obvoluted opinions...


"3, 2, 1...you're back in the room"
Tim Montgomerie notes that most of the ear big wigs: Hughes, Farron, Cable and Huhne all seem to be vying for position amongst themselves both in the 'who will take over from Clegg' stakes and in out-doing each other in their derogatory remarks about the Conservatives. At least Vince gets one thing spot-on (however, Vince the Cable is also calling for more quantitative easing from the Bank of England):
"Many of our problems are home-grown. Gordon Brown regularly advised the rest of the world to follow his British model of growth. But the model was flawed. It led to the highest level of household debt in relation to income in the world. It produced a dangerously inflated property bubble. It encouraged a bloated, banking sector while manufacturing declined at an unprecedented rate. Then, they socialised the costs of the crash though a massive budget deficit, the biggest of any major economy. His disciple, Ed Balls, has – sort of – apologised but advocates policies that would repeat the disaster."
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lunes, 19 de septiembre de 2011

Out, OUT or out...


The British allergy continues but is the 'British federasty' really dead? I would take the news that 120 Conservative MP eurosceptics want a 'clear plan' with a large pinch of salt; more HERE: "Holed below the waterline."

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miércoles, 14 de septiembre de 2011

Optimum outcomes: one organisation; one orthodoxy...


"What’s in a name?" Asks David Melding (My Christian namesake, my countryman -in part - and even born in the same week). Why change the name? They won't believe you all of a sudden. The BBC - as usual - prefers more polemic headlines: "Thatcher legacy hampers Welsh Tories"; the BBC hate her of course. David wants to change the name of the Welsh Conservatives because due to the 1980s pit closures "Many people say to us they could never vote Conservative"; however he assuages this by adding "About twice as many people say that of the Conservative Party as any other party in Wales"; I ask 'Is that all'? Instead of a name change perhaps a bit of truth.

In terms of both production and manpower employed Welsh coal output peaked in 1913 (yes, nineteen thirteen); this was the year my great grandfather died in the worse mining disaster in the UK in the Universal Colliery (Senghenydd Explosion). The 1920s saw depression in the coal industry and the 'decline of the coal industry during the period 1919-39 turned South Wales into an area of mass unemployment', [Link]: hundreds of pits closed and the number employed halved. During WW2 the government took control and the industry (as it had done in the Great War) but this time the industry moved towards nationalisation; (from 1943/44 my dad was a Bevin Boy) in 1945 the National Union of Mineworkers came into being.
"However, nationalisation did not prevent the long, steady decline of the coal mining industry in Britain nor prevent on-going pit closures. Throughout the 1950s, 60s and 70s the decline continued."
Distal smaller pits farther up the valleys were closed due to lack of manpower, workers went elsewhere and oil, natural gas and nuclear were growing; absenteeism in the 60s was about 20% (who'd blame them?) and those available were shifted to the bigger 'long life' pits further down the valley so those rural communities suffered. Maggie may not be a saint to most but she shouldn't be cast as the Devil.

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martes, 13 de septiembre de 2011

Ominous October...


“It’s now all about what the stress tests never tell you”...The Slog on Greeks' caring shifts (sorry) as they admit there's no money. Deutschemarks on the printer...?

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lunes, 12 de septiembre de 2011

Ollie on outstanding Olympians...


Whilst Britain seems to be fading from former glories in the track and field 'major' events (with of course honourable exceptions) we seem to be doing well at the other 'less popular' sports: sailing, rowing etc to name but two. However there is another where we could sweep the board if all goes well (now I've said that there's no hope!): "Why are the British dominating world triathlon?" Well Ollie Williams will tell you: and a clean sweep at U23 bodes well for the future. All the links in Ollie's blog-post are interesting; not least that of Jack Maitland one of the triathlon coaches, who remains the only non-Nepalese man in the fastest times list of the Everest Marathon.

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domingo, 11 de septiembre de 2011

Ottomans ousted...


Today many in the world will remember the terrorist attacks on the Twin Towers in New York - most will never forget. Today in London, a group of radical Muslims decided to protest and they burnt a US flag outside the American Embassy (click on image for news); amusingly - if anything about this can be amusing - they say it's the American's fault for being in Muslim lands etc conveniently forgetting centuries of Muslim invasions and atrocities certainly long before the USA was a world power.  Perhaps they have long memories:

September 11th 1693: one of the most important battles of the 17th century after the march for the Relief of Vienna ends in a decisive victory led by Jan III Sobieski - king of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth - over far superior numbers at the Battle of Vienna.

September 11th 1697: an amazing and crushing victory led by Eugene of Savoy (this was 'his first independent command'; it was to be 'the first of a series of spectacular campaigns' [Wiki]) over the superior numbered force at the the Battle of Zenta.

Islam will NOT dominate the world.

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miércoles, 7 de septiembre de 2011

Oblique, opaque organisation...


"Refounding Labour started life as a good old fashioned vanity project... ...But then things started to get out of hand... ...Then some strange rumors began to circulate about what was emerging behind the closed doors of this open and inclusive consultation... ...Then on Monday, via that traditional form of internal communication – a leak to the Guardian – Labour members learned how they’re planning to transform their own movement... ...A good, old fashioned opaque, tightly managed consultation is going to be followed by a good, old fashioned NEC stitch up and a good, old fashioned, our-way-or-the-highway resolution to party conference." LOL! Great stuff and well written by Dan Hodges, contributing editor of Labour Uncut. hat-tip Prodicus.

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Only one Obama...


Only one job he's looking to create that is: "Obama's Last Chance to Repair Damage and Change the Debate"...save his job.
"This is his State of the Union speech, given five months ahead of schedule by a White House justifiably panicked by polling data that indicates Obama's credibility on job creation has cratered--and with it his attachment to key reelection constituencies."
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domingo, 4 de septiembre de 2011

Obvious opener...


New Labour Project's Blair, Campbell, Mandelson and Darling plus a host of others and hundreds of underlings have all said the same thing but with different words: Gordon Brown was a seriously flawed effing loon. So, the big question: why let him become Prime Minister? In fact why give him so much leeway as Chancellor? In fact why was he Chancellor in the first place? Writing a history of the Labour party doesn't really show you've got what's needed: and there are plenty of 'clever' people, of 'mighty intellect' that are raving moronic fuckwits when common sense or similar is needed. And Why wasn't he SACKED years before? "The truth about Brown does not reflect well on him, but it also raises further questions about the people around him" writes John Rentoul in the Independent today; he also asks "How did Brown succeed unopposed to the leadership?".

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viernes, 2 de septiembre de 2011

Ongoing overcrowding...


...of a green and pleasant land [Owsblog 2006]. Before I go on just let me make it clear that this post isn't just a dig at the festering shite heap that was New Labour...but I do start off with that:
Every country must have firm control over immigration and Britain is no exception.” Labour election manifesto 1997
We know that in their 1st term - from 1997 - immigration tripled; in their 2nd term it quadrupled (from the 1997 figure) [MW - pdf]. This seemed bad enough and then we found out it was entirely intentional and had a 'subsidiary political purpose' and was not just the result of a booming economy and perceived skills shortage. Now, we learn of ANOTHER round of secret immigration intentions: "The secret immigration policy they tried to hide". "Behind closed doors, EU negotiations will trigger a new wave of cheap labour into Britain." Who and when will the public be informed? These are new,  irreversible commitments. Not Labour, 'even though Peter Mandelson initiated all the current agreements', not David Cameron or the Coalition...not UKIP, or the Greens or even the Unions (although apparently the RMT may yet force some sort of 'alert').

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