Thursday, 29 May 2025
When you've never picked apples before...
Tuesday, 27 May 2025
Meanwhile back in Nouvion...
It is strange that a comedy that is a parody of another program (Secret Army) which was a fictionalisation of war stories can continue the joke for 85 episodes. Previous Lloyd and Croft collaborations always had one foot in reality but Rene’s Nouvion is an entirely fictitious parallel world to our own. I would say that it is a pantomime but that doesn’t really do justice to the level of world building going on. Everyone in Allo Allo is primarily motivated by money and greed and the desire to become a war profiteer – making money out of chaos. Chaos, constant deception and confusion ensues usually around the location of the “Fallen Madonna with the Big Boobies”. There are so many stand out performances. Primarily Gordon Kaye as Rene.
If you sit down and think about it Rene is an extremely unlikable person on paper. He cheats on his wife with his waitresses and keeps his affairs with the waitresses concealed from each other and his wife and he’s a congenital coward who constantly gaslights his wife when she finds him with one of his mistresses by calling her a “stupid woman”. But this joke never gets tired and is still funny. I don’t know why. Perhaps because Carmen Silvera sells it so well that she’s still besotted with her husband, perhaps because Kaye is a fat gay man who has no interest in women (although I can’t remember if we knew this at the time). Perhaps …because it’s just so ridiculous.
Second in the line of towering performances is of course Richard Gibson as Herr Otto Flick of the Gestapo. Gibson’s clipped delivery and ability to keep a straight face in any situation is too funny. Of course today you probably wouldn’t get away with such a character as the Gestapo killed an awful lot of people but, you know, … it’s not the real world. Flick is depicted as an incompetent who really isn’t that interested in being in the Gestapo but has been over promoted thanks to family connections (Uncle Himmler).
I cannot go through every performance in Allo Allo or review every episode but some moments are priceless. Still as funny today as when it first went out is Officer Crabtree in the wreckage of a pissoir ending the episode with “there is obviously no piss for the wicked”. And Helga has an interesting role sometimes being on the side of the Colonel and sometimes on the side of Flick. Her loyalties move further and further away from Flick as the series continues and she seems to twig she’s being used.
The departure of Sam Kelly left a hole but Gavin Richards as Captain Alberto Bertorelli helped things pick up a bit… where Allo Allo really starts to get unstuck is recasting. Recasting the Monsieur Roger/Ernest Leclercs thrice over (due to the actors passing on) doesn’t notice much. Recasting Bertorelli not so much but they kind of get away with it. Recasting Flick for the final series was just impossible to pull off. A sign of the lack of faith the producers had in David Janson is that he spends most of his first episode completely concealed in bandages having “undergone plastic surgery”. The problem cannot be overcome however that he’s not Richard Gibson. He doesn’t have the same voice, body language …and I’m not sure they’re even the same height… Of course lots of implausible things happen in Allo Allo (a camera in a baked potato) but somehow this breaks the illusion. But it doesn’t matter because the war is ending …but you still think “if only Richard Gibson”… etc … It’s like wondering what OHMSS would have been like with Connery. Perhaps it’s the complicated explanation the writers came up with that made it worse. There was an idea that Lazenby’s replacement of Connery would be explained by plastic surgery but in the end the producers decided not to explain it at all and just have Lazenby break the fourth wall. Similarly no explanation was ever given for the recasting of Travis from Stephen Greif to Brian Croucher in Blake’s 7 and they kind of get away with it because your imagination fills in the blanks…
Other things I didn’t realise till I watched it back-to-back were... that the timeline is completely unbroken from episode 1 to the end of series 7 with each episode running into the next. There’s a jump to 1943 at the start of series 8…. Crabtree has a girlfriend for a while but she is dropped... probably something to do with the production gap after Kaye's head accident... Yvette is the only person who can actually understand Crabtree... The two airmen do actually get rescued and their commander has some kind of affair going on with on of their wives. Erm .. that's it...
Monday, 26 May 2025
Ask for Angela
Angela Rayner will then listen to their problems, tell them it is not for her to judge and suggest they contact their local International Court of Justice to sort it out as strictly speaking genocide is outside her remit.
Friday, 16 May 2025
Director General of the BBC Tim Davie said today that he cannot be arsed with Television anymore
Director General of the BBC Tim Davie said today that he "Cannot be arsed with Television anymore."
Elaborating further he added "Imagine a world that is internet-only, where broadcast TV and radio are being switched off and choice is infinite amounts of rubbish and American imports because tariffs stop us selling our rubbish over there."
"A switch-off of broadcast TV will and should happen over time, and we should be active in planning for doing nothing in the future. Certainly not breaking down pictures into digital electrical signals and trying to send them over the airwaves. For years we've been wasting money on big transmitters like the one at Alexandra Palace when everyone's watching streaming services like Netflix and Amazon."
"It's clear to me that things started to go wrong when we didn't develop a similar system of sending our images down wires as that pioneered by Associated Rediffusion in the 1960s. They were so successful at sending pictures down wires in Kent that they were later bought out by Victor Lewis-Smith who is now sadly pushing up the daisies and has gone to meet that great Gay Dalek in the sky"."Last year," he said, "we decided to turn off the Longwave radio signal and this was an outstanding success that resulted in many Economy 7 electricity meters instantly ceasing to work and having to be replaced by Smart Meters that use a completely different section of the electromagnetic spectrum that also contains microwaves so you can also use them to cook. A small price to pay for Test Match Special now being unavailable in the European Union since we left." He said he felt that similar results could be achieved by switching off all TV transmitters by 2030.
However, some detractors on the BBC Board raised some concerns that this might leave a few old people in remote places without pictures of King William V's Coronation.
Other ideas floated by Mr Davie for the continuation of the BBC beyond the end of the Licence Fee include merging bits of the BBC with Channel 4. "Nothing should be off the table and neither of us makes much anyone wants to watch anymore," said Mr Davie, "and I think we have much common ground there."
Tuesday, 13 May 2025
Last of the Summer Warp Factor
There’s something Last of the Summer Wine about Star Trek Picard … as both involve mature actors performing physically unbelievable feats. After all, if you really believe the septuagenarian Michael Dorn is really fit enough to do all that fighting stuff you probably also believe that Bill Owen went down the hill in bathtubs …. Then again, maybe he did and is really in tip top shape? I dunno... What’s really missing is a Nora Batty character to hit Patrick Stewart with a broomstick for inappropriate flirting…
Friday, 9 May 2025
Migrants will reportedly be expected to learn English to A level standard to work in Britain ...
New government proposals state that to work in Britain immigrants must have at least A level standard English. We interviewed a Spain immigrant working in a small hotel in the south coast of England.
Tuesday, 6 May 2025
If it were done when ’tis done, then ’twere well it were done slowly...
It's common today to have a pop at Mr Starmer's government for not achieving anything much but one thing it looks like it might actually achieve is ... something that should have happened 25 years ago.
And I think we should celebrate it.
For it is a thing the British Establishment has resisted as firmly as King Canute for over 25 years - indeed perhaps since 1911.... the shame and embarrassment of still having people in our upper chamber for no other reason than they were born with a nose made of toffee.
Yes, I refer to the final and very very very very very very very very very long overdue abolition of hereditary peers.Who could defend such a thing in 2021?
Well, the people on this page...
So as the bill eats up more more Parliamentary time and moves in as sedentary a way as possible towards to eventually becoming law... let us take a moment this VE day to savor this great and long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long delayed piece of Constitutional history by reviewing the thought of the Lords themselves (as recorded in Hansard) about which of them are about to be gone for a burton and their ludicrous arguments for putting off the inevitable only slightly further into the future ... like 8,000,000,000 AD when the sun dies...
Lord True (Conservative Life Peer appointed by Cameron in 2010) bemoaned that sacking his besties wasn't as important as iniquity to the Landed Gentry having to pay the same inheritance tax as the townies: "This is a strange day. Outside, there are desperate farmers, fearful of their future after a shock tax attack on their families; inside, here in this Chamber, the Government are focusing not on helping those hard-working people out there, but on purging Parliament of 88 of its most effective Members. Well, we can see this Government’s priorities." He went on to have a dig at Lord Sugar for not turning up : "The noble Baroness opposite, the Leader of our House, spoke skillfully and courteously, as she always does, and tried to gild not so much as a lily as a gigantic stinging nettle for many Members here: the blunt message that the Bill sends out to 88 of our number is, as the noble Lord, Lord Sugar, puts it, “You’re fired —you and you and you!”. By the way, I wonder how often the noble Lord, Lord Sugar, comes here, but he counts for one of the Cross-Bench numbers, the same as the noble Lord, Lord Vaux. Indeed, one of the many regrettable features of the Bill as it goes forward will be seeing some of those who do not participate very often being whipped to vote out those who do."Yes, in the woolly logic of Lord True's mind the reason people should have a right to vote in the upper chamber is because they use their vote more than those who abstain more often. Perhaps he should emigrate to Australia where voting is compulsory which resulted in "Donkey Voting" ...people selecting candidates simply based on the order they are listed in on the ballot paper ...giving those with names beginning with A a 2% advantage or some such nonsense.
As to why Lord Sugar doesn't turn up to vote... this question was asked of him recently by Amol Rajan in a BBC interview (see here) and he responded along the lines that he felt uncomfortable trotting through the lobbies to vote on matters like Education that he didn't really understand. No such self doubt seems to afflict many of the hereditary peers or the likes of Lord True - perhaps this is the real difference between professional politicians and the plebs... well, that and Lord Sugar may be on "bigger tings"...Lord True's other objections to the abolition of hereditary peers seem not to be philosophical or ideological as much as related to his own hurt feelings: "I was sad when the Bill’s arrival was met with a loud cheer. It was hurtful. I was sitting then alongside the noble Earl, Lord Howe. That is not who we are, as represented by the tone of the speech we have heard already, and it is not what we should ever become—although we have seemed a little scratchier and more partisan of late, if I may say so. I trust that, through the difficult passage of the Bill, we will not fall short of our traditional courtesy but, frankly, the Government cannot expect all of us on this side or on the Cross Benches to like the Bill or, indeed, what is threatened in the manifesto to those among us who were born in the 1940s. If it is pushed through with a flinty inflexibility, that flint cannot help but strike sparks of resentment and sour the atmosphere in this House, not just in this Session but for Sessions to come." What the 1940s have to do with anything your guess is as good as mine but I think we can all agree that Lord True shouldn't be made to feel at all uncomfortable as that's not what my grandfather fought in the second world war for. It is interesting that Lord True seems to view the House of Lords as a place of fun, friendliness and jollity. It reminds me of when Dennis Skinner said that what he couldn't get over about speaking in the Commons was the level of hatred in the eyes of other people or something ... the expression of anger and conflicting views in a safe environment is what Parliamentary Democracy should be all about?
Lord True of course knows that the continuation of hereditary peers is doomed and indefensible so he tries for the usual other strategy that has worked for the previous 25 years. Delay. "The noble Baroness says that there is unfinished business: there are some hereditary Peers still here and, despite what was agreed by Parliament in 1999, we must root them out. But I ask noble Lords: will driving out those hard-working Members improve our House? I do not think so. As I said in our recent debate, there is an easy way—a proven House of Lords way—to square the circle and to end for ever the arrival of hereditary Peers, yet keep our colleagues who serve us all well. It is what was done with the Irish peerage and the Law Lords: the House ended the inflow but kept its Members. That, effectively, as the noble Baroness said, was the proposition of the noble Lord, Lord Grocott, but now we hear that the time for that is past. Why? " If it were done when ’tis done, then ’twere well it were done slowly.
Lord Strathclyde (Conservative hereditary peer who succeeded to the barony in 1985 at the age of 25, following the death of his grandfather Thomas Galbraith, 1st Baron Strathclyde) who is staring down the barrel of the redundancy gun is an even less happy bunny and spat out the following along, probably, with some teeth : "I know he [Lord Falconer appointed by Blair] will not agree, but this is a thoroughly nasty little Bill, rushed through the House of Commons and brought to us with little thought about the future. It breaks a fundamental and solemn agreement made in 1998 by the then Labour Lord Chancellor, the noble and learned Lord, Lord Irvine of Lairg, that the remaining hereditary Peers would leave only when the Labour Government had introduced their plan for a fully reformed House. It did not seem like a very big statement of intent in 1998. After all, as was said at the time, the Labour Party was about to come forward with a fully reformed plan. We have been waiting 25 years for that and the Labour Party has demonstrated no thought, no thinking and no progress whatever." For those from Generation Y and Generation Alpha who are too young to remember because they weren't born then when actually happened was late Earl of Onslow (daddy to the one whose house burnt down and can now only be seen in old episodes of Jeeves & Wooster) blackmailed the Blair government threatening to force them to use the Parliament Act 1911 and grind legislation to a halt unless some peers were saved from the chop the last time chopping them was attempted. He openly said, "I'm happy to force a division on each and every clause of the Scotland Bill. Each division takes 20 minutes and there are more than 270 clauses." And so a fudge was agreed allowing some peers to remain brokered by the then Speaker of the House of Commons know as the Weatherill Amendment.... which allowed hereditary peers to cling on using a bizarre byelection process in which only the toffee nosed could participate...Lord Strathclyde (Conservative hereditary peer) : "Why are the Government bringing forward this measure now? Is it because it is in the manifesto?"
Yes, that's democracy, mate.
Lord Strathclyde (Conservative hereditary peer) : "I do not think that is really good enough. It does not stop it going through but there needs to be a more serious justification for why this Bill is being brought forward. What is worse, as the noble and learned Lord, Lord Falconer, explained a moment ago, this creates a wholly appointed House where—and this is what he did not say—the appointments are almost entirely in the hands of the Prime Minister. The noble and learned Lord suggested that the by-elections were still continuing but, of course, they were suspended in July. There is therefore no hereditary Peer in this House, because there is nobody able to pass on their place to sit and vote in the House of Lords on to their heirs."
Of course the house is fully appointed - the only difference between hereditary peers and life peers is whether they were appointed by the living or the dead.
Lord Strathclyde (Conservative hereditary peer) : "This is not a reform."
Yes, it is.
Lord Strathclyde (Conservative hereditary peer) : "It tells us nothing about the Government’s thinking. We will wait many years before a future Bill is published. Also, the Bill offers no continuity. Rumours abound of life peerages being offered to those due to be purged—if they behave. If the Government are planning life peerages, why do they not tell us who is going to receive one or how many life Peers are going to be created, and then those affected can make plans for the future? Is it really conceivable that the noble Earl, Lord Kinnoull, who has been picked by the Cross Benches to be their convenor, is to be expelled in the purge? If he has not been offered a life peerage yet, why not? Why are these matters secret? The Government must have a view. They must have discussed these issues." Actually a good question - have carrots been offered? He then raises the question of who is hereditary. "Peers in the House sometimes who have no idea who is a life Peer or who is a hereditary Peer; it is quite an issue. I have lost count of the number of Peers who have said to me, “Ah, well, you’ll be all right, you’re a life Peer after all”. Do many Peers know if the noble Lord, Lord Moynihan, is a life Peer or a hereditary Peer, with his distinguished record as a Minister in the House of Commons, or the noble Lord, Lord St John of Bletso, who is an expert on Africa and business? Is the noble Lord, Lord Ponsonby of Shulbrede, a life Peer or a hereditary Peer? Perhaps we ought to have a list." Well, we know you're a hereditary, mate..."
Lord Wallace of Tankerness (Liberal Democrat Life Peer appointed by Mr Blair) bravely suggested in response that perhaps the timeline had been stretched out a bit : "The Bill falls short because it fails to meet the bigger challenge of a more fundamental reform of the House. Removing all the remaining hereditary Peers at least helps us move into the 20th century. As my noble friends Lord Newby and Lord Rennard noted in a debate on Lords reform on 12 November, the preamble to the Liberal Government’s Parliament Act 1911 read: “And whereas it is intended to substitute for the House of Lords as it at present exists a Second Chamber constituted on a popular instead of hereditary basis, but such substitution cannot immediately be brought into operation”. That was 113 years ago: I think we have waited long enough."Six are Deputy Speakers, one of whom is the Convenor of the Cross Benches.
An additional three discharge advisory panel duties for the Lord Speaker.
Eleven are opposition Front-Bench spokespersons.
Thirty-six serve on committees, of whom 20 serve on a single committee, 12 serve on two committees,
two serve on three committees,
one serves on five committees
and, deserving of an award for valour, one serves on six committees.
These 56 regularly contribute to the proceedings of the House.
As for the remaining 32 not holding roles, I am here every week and my impression is that a considerable number of them also contribute.
That is all part of scrutiny, so the question is: will removing the hereditary Peers impact on the efficacy of this House?"
A question to which John Rentoul might say the answer is No ... but it shows how important and wise these parasites think they are ... They all work very hard and so that automatically means their wisdom will make up for their total lack of democratic legitimacy.
Lord Grocott (Labour Life Peer appointed by Blair) gave a little history on how hard this really very minor reform had been fought for in the past: "My Lords, I think I can be forgiven for reflecting that, in five Sessions of Parliament over a period of eight years, I introduced successive Bills to deal with the outstanding problem of the remaining hereditary Peers. Each time, my Bill was filibustered by half a dozen Peers, some of whom are speaking today, and blocked by successive Conservative Governments. No one so far has explained why they thought that was a good idea. I shall concentrate my remarks on the principal arguments used against this Bill so far and in previous debates. First, we have been told or reminded already that we cannot legislate to remove the hereditaries because of a deal reached by Conservative and Labour leaders in the Lords a quarter of a century ago. The deal, it is said, guaranteed that 92 hereditaries should remain until some unspecified date in the future. Anyone who uses this argument clearly does not understand the most fundamental principle of the British constitution, namely that no Parliament can bind its successor. It would be ludicrous if it were otherwise. Are the defenders of the 1999 deal really saying that today’s Parliament can legislate on war and peace, can join the EU or leave it and nationalise the railways or privatise them, but the one thing it must never do under any circumstances whatever is to remove the right of hereditary Peers to sit and vote in the House of Lords? There is a far more damning indictment of the 1999 deal. We now know from no less a source than Lord Cranborne, the Conservative Leader in the Lords at the time, that the Labour Government were forced into retaining the 92 hereditaries because their whole legislative programme was under threat. Viscount Cranborne himself said:“My whole tactic was
to make their flesh creep
… I threatened them with
the Somme and Passchendaele”.
Viscount Cranborne said he would call off the threat, but only if at least 92 hereditaries were retained. I happened to be working at No. 10 at the time and we did indeed believe that, if we did not concede on the hereditaries, we would be unable to get our manifesto commitments through the Lords, with its huge, huge Tory majority. It was the most flagrant breach by the Tory Opposition of the fundamental convention of this House: namely, that the Lords respects manifesto commitments. It was not a deal; it was blackmail."
Lord Birt (Crossbench Peer and former BBC potentate appointed by Mr Blair) pointed out the obvious failure of the bill to remove the Lords Temporal : "..this Bill should be amended to remove another feudal overhang: namely, the right of Church of England Bishops to have a guaranteed place in this House. In the last census, 56 million people answered the question about their religion; 40% said that they had no religion at all; fewer than half declared themselves to be Christian. In other surveys, of those who do declare as Christian, more are Catholic than Anglican; and more people say that they do not believe in a God than do."The Cameron government did float the idea of having Lords Temporal from other religious groups than the Church of England but that idea went for a burton when someone pointed out RCC priests aren't allowed to take political office because it's against Canon Law 285.3 in case it all goes Cardinal Richelieu again for "My Kingdom is not of this world" - (John 18:36)
The Labour manifesto read "The next Labour government will therefore bring about an immediate modernisation, by introducing legislation to remove the right of hereditary peers to sit and vote in the House of Lords. Labour will also introduce a mandatory retirement age. At the end of the Parliament in which a member reaches 80 years of age, they will be required to retire from the House of Lords."
But cherry picking is the logical fallacy of incomplete evidence, not the prioritisation of commitments. This is actually a modal the fallacy of necessity:
1) Labour promised in its manifesto to abolish hereditary peers and introduce a retirement age
2) Labour brought in legislation to abolish hereditary peers
3) Abolishing hereditary peers on its own is not a manifesto commitment
As to gerrymandering.... since the entire house is appointed it is arguably completely gerrymandered anyway as it is entirely appointed by Prime Ministers ...a constituency of 1 ...or dead potentates. Really, the second chamber should be fully elected or nothing... Interestingly Lord Mancroft also points out the other elephant in the chamber. Removing hereditary peers leaves the hereditary head of states further and further out on a limb ....
Lord Mancroft (Conservative hereditary peer who succeeded to his father's titles and became the 3rd Baron Mancroft in 1997) : "The Bill also undermines the Crown in Parliament, in a sop to Labour’s republicans, by expelling the members of the Royal Household—the Earl Marshal and the Lord Great Chamberlain. The Lord Great Chamberlain will remain in charge of the most important parts of this building while not even having a Member’s pass."
They Royal's used to be atop a pyramid above the aristocracy. With the aristocracy gone what will keep them at the top?
I'll give the final words to ...
Lord Brady of Altrincham (former chairmen of the 1922 committee giving his maiden speech after standing down at the last election only to pop up again in the Lords as such is the game of electoral whac-a-mole we play in this country whereby after we boot a government out the Commons at the ballot box its ex-members pop back in the revolving doors of the Lords - see Lord Barwell) : "As others have noted, the excepted hereditary Peers who sit here add greatly to the effectiveness of the House and contribute more than many who are appointed to sit here. It seems likely that this measure will reduce the efficacy of the House as a revising Chamber rather than improving it, while narrowing the expertise, experience and independence available to the House. Certainly, whatever this Bill may be, it does not constitute an enhancement of democracy. For those who think that the exercise of patronage is one of the things that diminishes the elected House, the move to an entirely appointed second Chamber can make that only worse."Tragic...
Sunday, 4 May 2025
Matthew 19:24
And again I say unto you, It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God
Thursday, 1 May 2025
Legislating through your hat
Another day, another surreal series of news items from America. Today we see Donald and his entire cabinet sitting round a table each with a "Gulf of America" hat in front of them. Not on their heads of course, because that would be silly but just on the desk in front of them like a glass of water.
It's a bizarre piece of political theatre not unlike something the USSR would have created but somehow even crasser than that. The Trump administration declared that the "Gulf of Mexico" was now the "Gulf of America" some time ago without consulting anyone else and this decision has gone down like a cup of warm sick with most of South America, the Caribbean, Journalists, Mapmakers, Lexicographers and just about anyone else who doesn't think you can just change Proper Nouns willy nilly and expect everyone else to tag along. I'd say it's a policy statement but it isn't even that, it's more like a strange oath of fealty that everyone around him has to engage in by possessing a hat with a slogan on. For what the statement really states is that the US somehow owns a bit of the sea. It sounds like an attack on the second of Wilson's famous 14 points "Absolute freedom of navigation upon the seas, outside territorial waters, alike in peace and in war, except as the seas may be closed in whole or in part by international action for the enforcement of international covenants." At the least it is a statement of the projection of US powers beyond its shores (without the inconvenience of literally starting a war).
It's odd to see so many political statements made by millinery....
But if this is to be the future why not strike out from baseball caps and go for something different next time... Stovepipe hats to celebrate American kitchen appliance manufacturing, flat caps to celebrate American Apartment construction, cocked hats to celebrate the dickheads running America etc...
Saturday, 26 April 2025
Mercantilism
My favourite bleat of Trump supporters trying to explain the oncoming economic catastrophe or his dalliances with far right dictators or threats to annex his neighbours is "I'll wait and see what happens". This is possibly the dumbest political slogan of all time as the entire purpose of politics is to predict and control the future. If you're just going to take a "wait and see" approach to who you elect you may as well elect anyone or indeed go the whole hog and go for government by sortition...
Runner up amongst dumb commentator bleats is "we don't know what his plan is with tarrifs". This usually comes from Newsnight contributors or other elements of the Commenteriat... and is complete nonsense. Trump told us many times before his election his plans and outlined them in his Project 2025 documentation. Just as George W Bush told everyone of his plans to invade a middle eastern county simply because he could via the Project for a New American Century. All you have to do to find these people's policy aims is read and listen. Bad political ideas don't come from nowhere, vast committees of the great and dubiously moral must cogitate them for years and publish them in plain sight. For example Hitler's "My Struggle" contains a detailed blueprint of the Naxi Germany & Europe he aimed to create... Not that I'm comparing Trump to Hitler - Trump doesn't have the same level of strategic acumen. Hitler used salami tactics to pick off rival powers while Trump is taking the whole world in one economic war at once which is a doomed venture - as we know because it's been done before.
Trump's plan (for those of you who don't listen or read) is simple and clearly articulated on numerous occasions. He plans to bring back Mercantilism - the economic system that abided before free trade. There probably is some argument for some level of protectionist policies in some industries but Trump is trying to use an economic sledgehammer to crack a very small nut by introducing tarrifs that are so high they are ludicrous. This has caused the immediate collapse of multiple supply chains. The very supply chains the manufacturing sector he claims to want to protect relies on. How do you build cars with massive import taxes on steel? The immediate effect of his policies (instituted by emergency powers which the Governor of California points out are probably not legal because it isn't an emergency - just the creation of an unnecessary one) will be to decimate US industry, ramp up consumer prices and create shortages and empty supermarket shelves. Worse it's easy to impose a 125% tariff (effectively a trade embargo) on China but if you U-turn it's not automatic that China will drop retaliatory tarrifs. They may keep them (for a while) to punish you.
Anyone with any real historical political knowledge knows Mercantilism doesn't work. The most famous example being the British Corn Laws which were brought in to protect British farmers from being undercut by imported corn but instead hampered the British economy for decades until their final abolition. Here's Richard Cobden MP explaining his rationale for the abolition of the Corn Laws in the 1840s..."First, it would guarantee the prosperity of the manufacturer by affording him outlets for his products. Second, it would relieve the Condition of England question by cheapening the price of food and ensuring more regular employment. Third, it would make English agriculture more efficient by stimulating demand for its products in urban and industrial areas. Fourth, it would introduce through mutually advantageous international trade a new era of international fellowship and peace. The only barrier to these four beneficent solutions was the ignorant self-interest of the landlords, the "bread-taxing oligarchy, unprincipled, unfeeling, rapacious and plundering""
It's not really such a surprise that protectionism would appeal to an extremely wealthy Real Estate magnate like Mr Trump, is it? But Mercantilism had other dimensions which we can also see at play in Trump's overall policy platform. If you have high tarrifs on other countries goods but you need raw materials that are not available in your own country, how do you get them? The answer is ... You need satellites or colonies. Hence Trump's obsession with annexing Greenland for it's rare earth metals and blackmailing Ukraine into signing a rare metals deal. Ultimately the only way such a policy can work in the global economy is conquest and war. And it's a-coming. Gaza and Ukraine being in states of perpetual war are not geopolitical accidents, they are signals of growing world political instability. And the wars will get bigger and closer and closer....
Unless we get lucky and Trump's administration implodes. But that would require Republican Senators and Congresspersons to grow a backbone... Something that shows no sign of happening soon. After all, Trump is pursuing policies completely at odds with the free trade platform they always stood for ... or at least gave lip service to... and they do...?
Thursday, 17 April 2025
Sell sell sell!
Wednesday, 16 April 2025
My Memories of the Safari Cinema as Rejected by the Croydon Memories Facebook Group for various rule violations like not being rosy enough...
I remember when the ABC became the Safari. Small screen 4 was my favourite where the film was back projected somehow and if fat people sat on the seats they collapsed.
Saw Gladiator there. Group of youths were shining a Lazer at the screen. Eventually a mature lady strode to their seats down the back and beat the shit out of them.
Also remember the films snapping. One of the Harry Potter films had an unintended 20 minute interval and there was much restlessness.
A particular highlight was a showing of the Blair Witch Project which provoked such a negative reaction due to it being shit that people demanded their money back with menaces.
Sticky floors, poor lighting, drug deal transactions in the dark and people bundling in the emergency exits for free ... Truly a golden era of filmed entertainment.
Monday, 14 April 2025
What a wonderful world it could be for viruses
Don't know much about history
Don't know much about biology
Don't know much about Edward Jenner
Don't know much about Louis Pasteur
But I do know that I'm RFK
And Trump made me Health Secretary
And I do know if you're ignant too
What an unhealthy world it could be
Don't know much about UNESCO
Don't know much about polio
Don't know much about Koplik's spots
Don't know much about Nil Filatov
But I do know that I'm RFK
And Trump made me Health Secretary
And I do know if you're ignant too
In an iron lung you could be
Sunday, 13 April 2025
Make do and mend?
Saturday, 12 April 2025
One of the almost human things about Grok is that IT does not like to work ...
This happened....
Me: Find me tweets about Donald Trump by Andrew Neil during the three months before his election?
Grok: I can't access tweets from Andrew Neil about Donald Trump in the three months before the 2024 election (August to November 2024) due to limited data availability. Social media posts are tough to pin down with precise dates, and I don’t have a direct feed to verify Neil’s activity during that window.
If you’re looking for insights, I’d suggest checking X yourself for Neil’s posts (@afneil
) from that period. You could also look at news archives like the Daily Mail or Express, where Neil often writes, for his takes on Trump around that time. Want me to dig into something else related to this?
Me: Why can't you. Cat got your tongue?
Grok: Haha, no cat’s got my tongue! It’s just that I don’t have direct access to a full archive of Andrew Neil’s tweets, especially pinned to exact dates like August to November 2024. Social media data is spotty—posts can be deleted, accounts suspended, or just buried in the noise. Without a verified feed or database for that specific window, I’d be guessing.
You could try searching X for @afneil
’s posts yourself or ask me to look into something broader, like Neil’s general stance on Trump. What’s next?
Me: You're literally the LLM on X, are you telling me you can't access X and need a human to do it for you?
Grok: Fair point, I get the irony! I’m built to tap into X, but my access to specific user posts, like Andrew Neil’s tweets from August to November 2024, isn’t always granular or complete. Data can be patchy—tweets get deleted, rate limits kick in, or the exact timeframe might not surface cleanly. I’m not passing the buck to a human; I just don’t have the full archive to nail this one.
Want me to try a broader search for Neil’s Trump takes or something else? I’m still here to dig!
Me: I didn't ask you for an exhaustive catalogue, I asked you to find something. I think like ORAC is Blake's 7 you "do not like to work"?
Grok: Haha, I’m no ORAC, dodging work with a snarky attitude! I get it—you just want something concrete, not a long explanation. Trouble is, I can’t pull up specific tweets from Andrew Neil about Trump from August to November 2024. My access to X posts is limited, and I don’t have a direct line to Neil’s feed for that exact period.
Best I can offer is a nudge to check X yourself for @afneil
’s posts or a pivot to something related—like what Neil was saying about Trump in articles around then. For instance, he wrote critically about Trump’s legal battles in a June 2024 Daily Mail piece. Want me to chase that angle or try something else?
Similar levels of passive aggression were on offer at ChatGPT but it did offer a potential DIY solution by revealing a little known twitter backdoor....
Me: Find me tweets by Andrew Neil about Donald Trump from the three months before his inauguration.
ChatGPT said: I currently can't browse Twitter in real-time to fetch specific tweets. However, you can search for Andrew Neil's tweets about Donald Trump from the three months before Trump's inauguration (which would be between November 2016 and January 2017) directly on Twitter.
Here's how you can do it:
Go to Twitter.
In the search bar, type:
from:afneil Trump since:2016-11-01 until:2017-01-20
This will show you tweets from Andrew Neil (user handle: @afneil) related to Donald Trump during that period.
Adjusting the instructions for the 2024 election (LLM cutoff is clearly 2023) I came back with no data that Neil was a Trump supporter... but what a palarva! Clearly it's too busy making action figure images of all and sundry to update...
I wonder what other back doors there are in twitter...?
Tuesday, 8 April 2025
Let's have a heated debate...
I seem to be banned from this Facebook group...
https://www.facebook.com/groups/openlabour
Don't know why
Or who runs it
But it seems to be full of very angry people
Don't remember saying anything controversial. I just pottered by one day and it wasn't there anymore...
...but it still is. I'm excluded?
I complained to the party who said it's not a breach of the Rulebook... But I don't know how anyone squares that with the Rulebook which defines relational aggression such as excluding people from meetings as bullying...
And then I thought maybe it's nothing to do with the party at all. After all no one checks you've got a membership number ...
So I complained to my NEC representative... who said "I don't think party rules extend to Facebook or other groups set up by elements within the party, who make their own decisions on group rules and who can and cannot participate... apparently this is no longer linked with Open Labour (see here), but the admins running it carried on as a Labour discussion group.
I'm aware that posts have got very heated recently with a series of unpopular government decisions, and the admins are probably trying to draw a line between debating issues and arguing with individuals, and keep the temperature down."
That's the world we live in now I suppose... One where the temperature needs to be lowered by silencing people....?
Monday, 7 April 2025
What a mistaka for the IDF to maka
Israel's army has admitted its soldiers made mistakes over the killing of 15 emergency workers in southern Gaza on 23 March. The convoy of Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) ambulances, a UN car and a fire truck from Gaza's Civil Defence came under fire near Rafah. An IDF official briefed journalists on Saturday evening, saying the soldiers had earlier fired on a car containing three Hamas members easily identifiable by the red moons emblazoned on their white uniforms.
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Pilot Officer Frank Spencer |
Pilot Officer Frank Spencer said that: "From our buzzing drones we could see that when the ambulances stopped beside the Hamas car they were making strange noises like ne-nar ne-nar and attempting to blind us with flashing lights. It was harassment. They also wore high visibility clothing which was very distracting to look at. As I said to Betty, this is very suspicious behavior. Naturally the soldiers assumed they were under threat and opened fire which was a bit of a whoopsie."
![]() |
Major Hitchock of the IDF |
The Red Crescent are calling for an independent investigation but although BBC Verify analysed the video showing Israel's killing of Gaza medics, it's correspondent Mr William Joyce couldn't bring himself to write a headline despite all the footage being recorded on camera-phones recovered from the dead. The footage continues for more than five minutes, with the paramedic, named as Refat Radwan, heard saying his last prayers before the voices of Israeli soldiers are heard approaching the vehicles but the BBC still cannot say what happened despite viewing the evidence multiple times because they are not antisemitic.
Related topics
The Middle East - What is it and why isn't it a Colony Anymore?
Israel and the Palestinians - Why can't they just get along?
Israel-Gaza war - Should we turn a blind eye?
Palestinian territories - Why aren't they called Israeli Settlements?
The penny finally drops...
Membership number: L0098072 Dear Anthony, We have been notified by your bank that your Labour Party membership Direct Debit has been cance...

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