Pages

Thursday, 20 February 2025

Lessons never learned



The other day found Mrs H and I having breakfast in a nearby Costa. Something we rarely do, but it was a cold, dull day so we decided to try something different. It's not much and we used to shun Costa, so for us, breakfast at Costa is something different.

I had a sausage cob and Mrs H had the egg version and both were pretty good and certainly cheap. We chatted about it, about the way corporate giants like Costa do what they do to a reliable standard and it may not be fashionable to say so, but that standard is pretty good. The coffee isn’t the best, we can do better at home, but it’s good enough and reliable enough.

From what we see, the Costa staff know what they are doing, do it well and cheerfully. It’s corporate, it’s the same everywhere, but it’s a good service, so no wonder the place is usually busy.

As a stark contrast, Keir Starmer and his Ministers have no notion of providing a service, let alone providing it to a good standard at an acceptable price, so here’s an idea. Politicians should spend a few years at least serving in Costa or some equivalent. Seriously – they should.

All politicians should find out what works and what doesn’t in the real world before being grossly impertinent enough to pass on lessons they never learned themselves.

Cyclist


In the video comments there are some guesses about the likely voting habits of this cyclist, but I wouldn't be surprised if we're looking at one of Keir Starmer's junior Ministers here.
 

Wednesday, 19 February 2025

JD Vance and the sacred omerta



James Price has a useful Critic piece on US Vice-President JD Vance passing on a few facts of life to European elites. For those who missed it, his speech in Munich is here. The Critic piece is well worth reading too. 


Vance’s truth bombs

He broke the sacred omerta that mass migration has been a security and cultural disaster

It has been a few days, but still the reverberations are being felt from US Vice-President JD Vance’s whistlestop tour of Europe this week. I’d have thought that the biggest shock was the joy all should have experienced at there being a US leader who could communicate in coherent sentences for the first time in a decade (let alone give policy-rich, philosophically and intellectually informed speeches with sound themes as I will contend Vance did).

But others apparently didn’t like having obvious truths spoken at them in settings that are supposed to be cosy, insular affairs where attendees can hide from reality. It was, after all, only a month ago that the Munich Security Conference’s former Chairman, Wolfgang Ischinger, suggested at Davos that Chinese troops be invited into Europe to provide security guarantees in Ukraine, because Germany couldn’t possibly be expected to stoop to do so.

Vance, however, was in no mood to join the fairies with which the Europeans are away. He delivered what the young call “truth bombs”. Their payload was not aimed at Europe, as facile analysts such as the BBC and, alas people like Rory Stewart (of whom I always expect better. He always lets me down). No, these truth bombs were aimed to shake the continent’s elites out of their suicidal reverie.

The rise and rise of the imaginative CV



Business Secretary claimed he was a solicitor... despite never qualifying

Jonathan Reynolds has been accused of fabricating his CV after it emerged he repeatedly described himself as a solicitor despite never qualifying...

He also told the Commons in 2014 that he “worked as a solicitor in Manchester city centre” before switching careers.

In fact, he didn’t qualify for the title because he never finished his training contract, having quit the course in 2010 to run for Parliament.


An enterprising person would start a betting book on CV "mistakes" by MPs for future elections, especially as CV claims seem to be more and more blatant. There are loads of possibilities -

A CV claim to have been an astronaut. 
A CV claim to have been kidnapped by aliens.
A CV claim to be a giraffe.
A CV claim to have advised Elon Musk. 
A CV claim to be an AI system.

Yes, lots of possibilities.

Musk on TDS

 

Tuesday, 18 February 2025

I'm not a vet, but I think there's a mistake in this ad

 


The Shadow of the Fabian



I once came across this quote in an old mystery novel, one of R. Austin Freeman’s Dr Thorndyke series. It encapsulates a Fabian outlook which never disappeared and if anything is as entrenched now as it was in Freeman's day.


“The commercial standard isn’t quite the same as the professional, you know,” Jack Rodney answered evasively, “and financial circles are not exactly of the higher morality. But I know of nothing to Purcell’s discredit.”

R. Austin Freeman - The Shadow of the Wolf (1928)