Pages

Tuesday, 24 June 2025

It's a pity pigeons aren't included



More than 500 bird species face EXTINCTION in the next 100 years due to climate change, experts say


From the bare-necked umbrellabird to the helmeted hornbill, birds come in all sorts of weird and wonderful shapes and sizes.

But hundreds of species could go extinct in the next 100 years, researchers have found.

A new study predicts that climate change and habitat loss could cause more than 500 bird species to disappear in the next century.



Presumably at least one of the researchers aims to check this finding in the year 2125. Or maybe the responsibility is passed down the generations like an heirloom. Or heirloon perhaps. 

It's a pity pigeons aren't included though. I'm thinking of those which crap on our brand new garage roof while making a survey of the garden.

Huge investment in shopping



Amazon to invest £40bn in UK - with more warehouses and thousands of new jobs


Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the investment into Amazon's third-biggest market after the US and Germany was a "massive vote of confidence in the UK as the best place to do business".

"It means thousands of new jobs - real opportunities for people in every corner of the country to build careers, learn new skills, and support their families," said Sir Keir.

The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, said it was a "powerful endorsement of Britain's economic strengths".


We use Amazon regularly for all kinds of bits and pieces where we prefer to avoid trawling around shops. The shop window has been replaced by the laptop or phone screen we might say. 

Nearly 150 years ago, Emile Zola saw a shopping revolution caused by ticketed prices clearly visible through the shop window. He saw success depending solely on what he called the orderly working of a sale. 

He then went on to sing the praises of the plain figure system. The great revolution in the business sprung from this fortunate inspiration. If the old-fashioned small shops were dying out it was because they could not struggle against the low prices guaranteed by the tickets. The competition was now going on under the very eyes of the public; a look into the windows enabled them to contrast the prices; every shop was lowering its rates, contenting itself with the smallest possible profit; no cheating, no stroke of fortune prepared long beforehand on an article sold at double its value, but current operations, a regular percentage on all goods, success depending solely on the orderly working of a sale all the larger from the fact of its being carried on in broad daylight.

Emile Zola - Au Bonheur des Dames (1883)


What we see with Amazon is that orderly working of a sale taken to an extreme Zola could not have foreseen, although he clearly saw some strong hints of it. 


He had put his elbows on the table, and was staring at her so hard that she felt uneasy. “But look here,” resumed he; “you who know the business, do you think it right that a simple draper’s shop should sell everything? Formerly, when trade was trade, drapers sold nothing but drapery. Now they are doing their best to snap up every branch and ruin their neighbors. The whole neighborhood complains of it, for every small tradesman is beginning to suffer terribly. This Mouret is ruining them. Bédoré and his sister, who keep the hosiery shop in the Rue Gaillon, have already lost half their customers; Mademoiselle Tatin, at the under-linen warehouse in the Passage Choiseul, has been obliged to lower her prices, to be able to sell at all. And the effects of this scourge, this pest, are felt as far as the Rue Neuve-des-Petits-Champs, where I hear that Vanpouille Brothers, the furriers, cannot hold out much longer. Drapers selling fur goods — what a farce! another of Mouret’s ideas!” “And gloves,” added Madame Baudu; “isn’t it monstrous? He has even dared to add a glove department! Yesterday, as I was going along the Rue Neuve-Saint-Augustin, I saw Quinette, the glover, at his door, looking so downcast that I hadn’t the heart to ask him how business was going.” “And umbrellas,” resumed Baudu; “that’s the climax! Bourras feels sure that Mouret simply wants to ruin him; for, in short, where’s the rhyme between umbrellas and drapery? But Bourras is firm on his legs, and won’t allow himself to be beggared. We shall see some fun one of these days.”

Emile Zola - Au Bonheur des Dames (1883)

Monday, 23 June 2025

The Vicky Whatsit Resignation



Alexander McKibbin has a delightful TCW piece on the resignation of Vicky Foxcroft as government whip. The whole piece is well worth reading for the way it skewers the notion of political principles.


Vicky Foxcroft, gone but not remembered

A political tsunami engulfed Westminster yesterday when high profile Labour MP for Lewisham North Vicky Foxcroft resigned her influential post as government whip. Politicians from all sides were unanimous in comparing this seismic act as being on a par with Eden’s resignation in 1957.

Media commentators were taken by surprise by the unexpected resignation and were quick to interpret what this devastating act meant for Sir Keir Starmer and his tottering administration. Many were predicting that this single act could spell the end of Labour and usher in a general election.

Quietly yet diligently going about her demanding job, she has attracted admirers from across the political spectrum.

Scams, Scams and Scams



One in seven people ‘have lost money to fraud in past year’

Some 14% of people surveyed in February said they had lost money to fraud in the past 12 months, financial insights company TransUnion found.


New £300 winter fuel payment triggers wave of scam texts - 'contact bank immediately'

Pensioners have been warned of a surge in scam texts targeting older people. Fraudsters are exploiting confusion around the newly expanded winter fuel payment scheme, which will see millions more pensioners across England and Wales receive up to £300 this year.


Avoiding scams has become a feature of life, so much so that that the second headline is a reminder that political claims have to be treated as an offshoot of the same sorry state of affairs. We don't trust political promises because past experience tells us we shouldn't, much like the dodgy phone calls, emails or text messages.

Government is so ludicrously expensive that we know a substantial part of tax revenue is wasted, and what is that waste if it isn't tax revenue ending up in pockets we would never approve of? Yet this loss isn't one where we can ignore the phone calls or delete the texts and emails. The wasters just take the money.

One of the first Tesla Robotaxis


Sunday, 22 June 2025

Redneck's Dream Lawnmower


Impress the neighbours with a lawnmower just like Ginger Billy's


The malign reach of the EU



John Rosenthal
has a very interesting free speech piece in the Claremont Review of Books.


Make Speech Free Again

How the U.S. can defeat E.U. censorship.

On January 20, 2025, the first day of his second presidential term, Donald Trump signed an executive order: “Restoring Freedom of Speech and Ending Federal Censorship.” The bad old days of the “censorship-industrial complex,” allegedly responsible for suppressing online speech under President Joe Biden, were over.

Except they weren’t. The driving force behind online censorship had never been the U.S. government, which meant that freedom of speech could not be restored by the stroke of a president’s pen. Rather, the European Union has wielded its Digital Services Act (DSA) to restrict the speech not just of Europeans but especially of Americans and other English-speakers. The E.U. has not violated the free-speech rights of Americans, since it has no obligations under the U.S. Constitution. But it has vitiated those rights, essentially nullifying the First Amendment in cyberspace.



The whole piece is quite long but well worth reading for the detail it provides about the widespread effects of EU censorship. Here in the UK, we did not escape that via Brexit.


Some supporters of President Trump might find this hard to believe. After all, the president’s most prominent ally and advisor is Elon Musk, whose purchase of Twitter in 2022 was said to be motivated by a desire to restore free speech to the platform. But Musk has always insisted that “freedom of speech is not freedom of reach,” and there’s the rub. Using platform algorithms to restrict reach artificially is a form of censorship, one that is not only compatible with the DSA but even encouraged by the E.U.

Perplexing



BBC Hits AI Startup Perplexity With Legal Threat Over Content Scraping Concerns

The BBC has sent a legal threat to Perplexity, citing allegations that the AI startup is scraping the British national broadcaster’s content...

The BBC argued that elements of its content were being regurgitated verbatim by Perplexity and links to its website appeared in search results. It added that some information was reproduced with factual inaccuracies and missing context.

The BBC letter said: "It is therefore highly damaging to the BBC, injuring the BBC's reputation with audiences - including UK licence fee-payers who fund the BBC - and undermining their trust in the BBC."


Content regurgitated verbatim eh? That's not necessarily a good idea for any AI system wandering around the internet hoovering up mainstream content. 

On the other hand given the pace of technical development, perhaps AI systems will soon be able to correct some of the "factual inaccuracies and missing content" the Beeb seems to be uncharacteristically concerned about.

Saturday, 21 June 2025

Mass Mapping



Every baby in UK to have DNA mapped under NHS ‘genomics revolution’

Every baby born in the UK will have their DNA mapped within a decade as part of a radical overhaul of the NHS designed to predict and prevent disease before it strikes.

Health Secretary Wes Streeting said advances in genomics could allow people to “leapfrog” life-threatening illnesses and receive “personalised” care long before symptoms appear.

Under plans due to be unveiled in a major 10-year strategy next month, all newborns will undergo whole genome sequencing to assess their risk of developing hundreds of conditions.


One of the comments -

simon bagshaw
Huh. Remember when those crazy tin foil hat wearers were saying the government want to create a national DNA database of everyone. Huh. Silly sods

Starmer's focus



Interesting video from Charlie Boyle where he says Keir Starmer defends institutions at all costs. Starmer does defend even useless institutions, but it's a way to bring the man into a useful focus where he only sees institutions, not business, technology, arts, science or people.


Friday, 20 June 2025

Transformational investment



Major sporting events and grassroots sport to receive £900 million funding


More than £900 million will be committed to major sporting events and grassroots sport across the UK in a “transformational investment” over the coming years, the Government has announced.

Euro 2028, the European Athletics Championships next year and the men’s and women’s Tour de France Grand Departs in 2027 are among the key events set to be hosted in the country that will benefit from more than half a billion pounds in funding.



It almost seems churlish to raise the issue, but presumably HS2 was supposed to be a "transformational investment" too. And Net Zero. 


Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said: “Sport tells our national story in a way few other things can, uniting communities, inspiring millions, and showcasing our nation on the global stage.

“This major backing for world-class events will drive economic growth across the country, delivering on our plan for change.


It's the way she tells 'em.

Tight Security



Pro-Palestinian activists break into RAF base and 'vandalise' aircraft

Sir Keir Starmer has condemned pro-Palestinian activists who broke into a RAF base in Oxfordshire as "disgraceful".

Palestine Action targeted RAF Brize Norton and damaged two military aircraft in what the Ministry of Defence (MoD) branded an act of "vandalism".


So then, spite of my care and foresight, I am caught, caught in my security. 

William Congreve - The Double Dealer (1694)

Adults make decisions



Ted Newson has a worthwhile CAPX piece on the damage being done to the UK by a bloated welfare state.


Community in Britain is dead, and the state has taken its place

  • Adults make decisions, children ask for handouts: Britain needs to grow up
  • There was a time when Britons actually took responsibility for themselves
  • The state’s safety net has left people feeling more on their own than ever

Last weekend, I was back home in North Essex celebrating my Grandad’s 88th birthday. I reflected on what the Britain of his childhood looked like – a nation of grafters, shaped by hardship, who embodied the ‘Blitz spirit’. I am often reminded of a story told to me of him as a child extinguishing an incendiary bomb that had landed in our family-owned clothes shop, and I wonder how he now views the country he and so many others fought to defend.


The whole piece is well worth reading, even if only as a reminder that there is no indication of this trend being corrected. We are now stuck with a government which does not even see it as a significant issue. 

Yet maybe it can't be a politically significant issue because there is no political solution, the damage has much further to go before a deeply unpleasant solution arises out of its own necessity. A trend towards one deeply unpleasant solution is already with us of course, the trend towards totalitarian government.  


The fundamental question we need to ask ourselves is whether it should really be the state’s responsibility to rectify everyone’s life difficulties. As much as we all would like some benevolent force to come into our lives and solve all of our problems, thinking that this should be the state is a dangerous fantasy.

Adults make tough decisions, accept risk and take responsibility. Children cry for help.

It’s time Britain grew up.

Thursday, 19 June 2025

The latest Honda

 

Unilateral coercive measures



General Assembly Proclaims 4 December International Day against Unilateral Coercive Measures, Elects Members to United Nations Commission on International Trade Law

Introducing that draft, Eritrea’s representative, speaking for the Group of Friends in Defense of the Charter of the United Nations, said that such measures — commonly cloaked in the misleading language of sanctions — are not instruments of justice, but “tools of political and economic compulsion”...

Expressing solidarity with Cuba and its people, Yván Gil Pinto, Minister of Popular Power for Foreign Affairs of Venezuela, said that unilateral coercive measures infringe on the sovereign and inalienable rights of States to choose their economic system without coercion. The humanitarian exceptions to these measures are a “fantasy” he said, calling for the establishment of a “safe space” free of such measures.



Of course, Yván Gil Pinto, Minister of Popular Power for Foreign Affairs of Venezuela, does not mean all unilateral coercive measures. In particular, he does not mean those internal measures used by his government. When applied internally to Venezuela, his concept of a “safe space” has a rather different meaning too. 


'From criminal hub to energy hub': Machado touts a post-dictatorship Venezuela

Venezuela is still firmly in the grip of a socialist dictatorship. But the country's popular opposition leader hopes to hasten the regime’s fall — in part by selling Venezuela’s big capitalist potential.

María Corina Machado is in hiding from the regime in Venezuela. But Thursday morning she appeared on a Zoom videoconference, hosted by the Americas Society/Council of the Americas, touting a major economic plan for post-dictatorship Venezuela.

It's crunch time again



World now in ‘crunch time’ to avoid higher levels of warming, UN scientists warn

Professor Joeri Rogelj, research director at the Grantham Institute, said: “Under any course of action, there is a very high chance that we will reach and even exceed 1.5C and even higher levels of warming.

“1.5C is an iconic level but we are currently already in crunch time… to avoid higher levels of warming with a decent likelihood or a prudent likelihood as well and that is true for 1.7C, but equally so for 1.8C if we want to have a high probability there.”



As we see from Google's Ngram Viewer, 'crunch time' occurrences rose rapidly from about 1980 to a peak in about 2011, since when there has been a slight decline. Almost as if the 'crunch time' rot set in round about 1980. Whatever the cause, we obviously need a more sustainable level of crunch times.


Reject



About 10 years ago I wrote the blog post below but didn't publish it, just held onto it as an idea I never used. Here it is –


The Acquisitive Society

I am not a socialist. I “did” socialism decades ago, but never subscribed to any political label. However, a few weeks ago I wandered into a charity shop and came out with a rather battered old copy of R H Tawney’s “The Acquisitive Society.” A quick browse showed it to be pleasantly fluent and it only cost me £1.50.

The book was published in 1920, shortly after the end of the First World War, amid a widespread feeling that there had to be a better future and that future had to be open to all, not just the elite and the middle classes. So I’ll read it and write a number of posts as I go.

The basic idea is to explore influences, how we reach conclusions and what it says about our preconceptions. How we might even change our minds if we risk delving into what has become mildly unfamiliar territory from an age where perhaps moral principles were less overtly political than they are today.

Most generations, it might be said, walk in a path which they neither make, nor discover, but accept; the main thing is that they should march.

R H Tawney – The Acquisitive Society (1920)

I don’t know how many posts this will amount to. If I sling the book in the charity bag, then not many, but at least I’ll explain why.

----------------------------------------------------


Ironically, ten years ago I did sling the book into the charity bag after a chapter or so. Not worth the effort I decided at the time. Why post now though? Because we move on and the lesson of Tawney’s book still stands - influential academic meddlers often do more harm than the social and economic world they disparage. It's yet another lesson about the corrupting nature of manipulative political idealism. 

To learn from the past there has to be something of lasting value, something which still applies today, at least as a contrast between then and now. From what little I read of it, R H Tawney’s book has that, but it isn’t the message he thought we should listen to.


Wednesday, 18 June 2025

An appalling mess



HS2 ‘in appalling mess’ and will be delayed beyond 2033

HS2 is in an “appalling mess” and the planned opening of the high speed railway line has been delayed beyond 2033, the Transport Secretary has said.

Heidi Alexander promised that the Government would be able to turn the project around, but said there was “no route by which trains can be running” by the target date...

Ms Alexander told the Commons on Wednesday: “I have to be honest – it is an appalling mess. But it is one we will sort out. We need to set targets which we can confidently deliver, that the public can trust and that will take time.


Yes, HS2 is an appalling mess, as with much else the UK government dabbles in. It has been an appalling mess for a long time, but a desire to blame the Tories while kicking at least one big can down the road seems to have promoted this particular mess to the coveted status of Major Problem But Not Our Fault.

Ms Alexander has a brainwave though, a way to deal with it well after this Parliament. Set some targets is the cunning plan. Not targets this government can be blamed for missing though, targets set in the distant future. Politically 2033 is the distant future as we know, even more distant than next week.

Is it worth checking with Ed to see if we'll have the electricity to run the trains by 2033? Probably not.

The TV Man and the Botanist

 

Informavores


Informavore

The term informavore (also spelled informivore) characterizes an organism that consumes information. It is meant to be a description of human behavior in modern information society, in comparison to omnivore, as a description of humans consuming food.


Somewhat nebulous this, but the internet is clearly encouraging more people to prefer reliable information over rhetoric and search for integrity over advocacy, analysis over partisan abuse.

Not only that, but a significant number of people are obviously tired of being gaslighted, are demanding better information and that number is increasing. Supply and demand perhaps. Not something we can easily measure, but suppose...

If an anti-gaslighting trend is developing along these lines, if enough people are becoming what we might call 'competitive informavores', then major social changes are on the way. The internet allows anyone with access to be a more competitive informavore who browses much more widely than the mainstream media. We already know that, however we express it. 

There are plenty of clues. It’s not only a question of scratching around for hints, but also a matter of interpretation and depth. How much is elite scheming, how much in incompetence, how much is the action of impersonal forces we cannot control?

To take a very topical UK example, Prime Minister Keir Starmer is an advocate of a global ideology he cannot admit to. His duplicity and incompetence are both obvious, as his his inability to make political use of sound information. 

That's a little weird though, the UK Prime Minister can't make good use of sound information but voters can. If they make the effort of course, if they choose to outcompete the Prime Minister. Which they can.

It's a trend which looms larger than we generally admit, but here’s where the obvious becomes less obvious – is it Starmer's duplicity or incompetence which hinders his ability to compete effectively? Maybe it’s incompetent duplicity, but why so absurdly obvious?

Merely politics we might say, but the widespread contempt Starmer and his colleagues attract feels too significant to be ‘merely politics’. Too many voters obviously know, and too many aren’t afraid of knowing more.

Maybe informavores are becoming more competitive.

Tuesday, 17 June 2025

It's like playing poker with buttons



Starmer to count rural broadband as defence spending


Broadband and bridge repairs are to be counted as defence spending under Sir Keir Starmer’s plans to redraw the definition of national security.

The Government’s national security review, due to be published before a Nato summit next week, will expand the definition to include economic stability, food prices, supply chains, crime and the internet.

It could allow the UK to hit Nato’s new defence spending target of five per cent of GDP without committing any further public money.



It's like playing poker with buttons. Surely, the thing to do is to see how many buttons are pledged by Macron then chuck in another handful of British buttons. 

They have no imagination, these people.

Seals



UK households urged to ‘seal all doors and windows' this week

An air conditioning expert is urging UK households to seal up all gaps around doors and windows as another heatwave bakes the country this week.

The Met Office is forecasting temperatures will soar as high as 30C this week - and could even hit 'mid 30Cs' by Monday, according to its latest hot weather predictions. It means that many of us will be sweating and sweltering, desperately looking for ways to keep rooms cool in the hot sunny conditions. According to Andrews Air Conditioning, one of the best ways to keep your house cool in a heatwave is to seal gaps around doors and windows.



What about those of us living in a house with chimneys? Nip out and find something substantial to shove up the chimney I suppose.

Front doors too - what about those of us living in a house with a front door? Do we seal that up too so nobody can get in or out? It's no good giving us all this incomplete advice.

Maybe the Met Office chaps could seal up the Met Office completely, in the approved manner, show us how it's done.

Self-assurance and opportunism come first



Warning as Vladimir Putin could attack Britain - by blocking out the SUN

The Telegraph reports that Kerry McCarthy, the climate minister, wrote in a letter: “The UK is a longstanding leader on climate action and an active international collaborator in scientific research. The Government recognises the need to understand the risks and impacts of [solar radiation modification] approaches that could be deployed by an independent or third-party actor. Robust scientific evidence is essential for informing responsible and inclusive governance.”



Robust scientific evidence is essential? It has not been essential in the past and Ed Miliband certainly manages without it. 

As Scott Fitzgerald wrote over a century ago, at the top of the greasy pole, self-assurance and opportunism win out over technical knowledge.

We've known that for a long time.


It seemed to him that the essential element in these men at the top was their faith that their affairs were the very core of life. All other things being equal, self-assurance and opportunism won out over technical knowledge; it was obvious that the more expert work went on near the bottom — so, with appropriate efficiency, the technical experts were kept there.

F. Scott Fitzgerald - The Beautiful and Damned (1922)

Monday, 16 June 2025

Upstairs Downstairs



Karl Pfefferkorn has an entertaining Brussels Signal piece on the Upstairs, Downstairs nature of the EU and its faltering attempts to keep Downstairs staff on their side of the green baize door.


Downstairs are heading Upstairs: It will be a shock to the drawing room

How do you keep the help down in the scullery and well away from the drawing room where they might upset their betters? For several decades, the EU thought it had the answer: The common taxpayer would be dealt with by member state governments who would in turn remain completely committed to the great European project. Suitably filtered and vetted, the democratic will in any member state would find expression in a single seat on the European Council. The Commission would be free to realise the vision of a federal European state unhindered by hoi polloi who’d shown their unfitness for the exercise of popular sovereignty during the 1930s. A pantomime parliament was bolted onto the basic structure, but with the assurance that its MPs would remain beholden to their standing on party lists rather than actual constituents.

Despite this elegantly designed power vertical, the commoners still manage to disrupt things by sending their chosen tribunes upstairs, where they sow disquiet among the EU loyalists. Viktor Orbán has taken up residence in the parlour, oblivious to the tut-tutting of his peers. Poland has again elevated a Euro-sceptic populist to the presidency, and Romania narrowly elected a reliable EU devotee only after a heroic intervention by the Romanian supreme court.


The whole piece is well worth reading as a reminder that the EU has no intention of allowing voters have a say in their political future. It is also a reminder that Two Tier comes from the same mould and deserves his nickname.


Rather than launch a good faith effort to address the various grievances motivating the supporters of populist parties, the EU has embarked on a campaign of disenfranchisement that amounts to genteel authoritarianism. Brussels quietly endorsed the cancellation of the Romanian election result, leveled no criticisms as Berlin mulled an outright ban on its second largest party, and winked at the conviction of Marine LePen for financial shenanigans widely condoned in the EU Parliament. These attempts to decapitate the leadership of populist movements are coupled with a truly dystopian effort to control the information available to European voters. Social media will be monitored by “independent” NGOs funded by Commission grants, and thus likely to unleash the full force of EU law on posts mocking the EU, skeptical about the benefits of migration, or dubious of open-ended support for Ukraine. Insults directed at European leaders will of course be investigated and punished, even if fully merited, as they often are.

So many will-o’-the-wisps



There was a general howl of derision. Government detectives naturally do not care to take advice from private ones. They distrust them, and look upon them as so many will-o’-the-wisps (intentional ones, often) in that swamp of crime on which the policeman’s bull’s-eye sheds its certain radiance.

J.M.W. van der Poorten Schwartz – The Black Box Murder (1889)


J.M.W. van der Poorten Schwartz, pen name Maarten Maartens, was a Dutch writer who wrote in English. One of many writers whose popularity faded to almost nothing after they died. In the quote above, he describes Scotland Yard detectives as government detectives which in a sense they were and still are, just as we could refer to the police as the government police.

Not that it matters in the context of a late Victorian crime novel, but today we tend to avoid the word ‘government’ in other contexts too. We refer to state education rather than government education, and state schools rather than government schools. We don’t refer to the meals provided by school breakfast clubs as government breakfasts, but we could.

The BBC is the British Broadcasting Corporation rather than the Government Broadcasting Corporation and we don’t refer to BBC News as Government News even though we could do so accurately enough. We don’t refer to BBC entertainment as Government entertainment either.

The NHS is the National Health Service rather than the Government Illness Service and NHS hospitals are not referred to as government hospitals even though that’s what they are. Instead we pretend they are more independent of government than they are.

This is not to say that a change of language would be worthwhile because we’d adapt to new terms anyway. Yet it is worth noting that we tend to veil the vast, monolithic nature of government in various terms which aren’t euphemisms for the Leviathan that is modern government, but aren’t as close to it as they could be.

For example, we could take another small step and refer to all the main UK political parties as government parties representing the permitted shades of political outlook. Instead, we pretend the parties are more independent of government than they are.

Sunday, 15 June 2025

Shutting out geniuses



Emma Munday has an alarmingly optimistic CAPX piece on what she calls a golden opportunity for Britain, the opportunity to attract disaffected academic talent from the US. 


America is shutting out its geniuses: let’s welcome them

  • Donald Trump's assault on US academia poses a golden opportunity for Britain
  • If we capture a fraction of the talent now looking to flee the US, we’ll supercharge our universities and economy
  • We need to broadcast a simple message: Ambitious and innovative? Britain wants you

America’s top universities have long been magnets for global talent. But now, they’re being dragged into a political storm – and Britain should seize the moment.

On May 5, US Education Secretary Linda McMahon barred Harvard from seeking federal research grants. Further threats followed: to over $1 billion in grant funding, and even to Harvard’s tax-exempt status – undermining due process while torpedoing a revered global brand. This assault on academia runs deeper: National Institutes of Health grants are drying up, nuclear scientists are being made redundant and visa chaos reigns. This isn’t fair politics – it’s America turning on talent.


Well worth reading as another insight into the arm-wavy fog which seems to have become a permanent feature of the political/academic landscape. The possibility that the UK will merely attract grant-hungry dullards is nowhere to be seen.

The article leaves a lingering impression that we need to be selective about our geniuses, in certain areas we need fewer geniuses, not more. For example, ARIA is mentioned with approval.


The Advanced Research and Innovation Agency (ARIA) - a government backed body - is funding nearly £60m that could allow real-world experiments, including in the UK.

As part of the Exploring Climate Cooling programme, projects in Solar Radiation Modification (SRM) will involve trying to thicken Arctic sea ice and make clouds more reflective.


Saturday, 14 June 2025

Souped-down



End of the road for noisy boy racers? Car makers are axing their beloved hot hatches to go electric

The days of noisy boy racers flying past in souped-up cars with offensively loud exhaust pipes look numbered.

That's because their beloved 'hot hatches' are accelerating towards demise as car makers cull them from their ranges as part of their transitions to electric vehicles.



Oh I don't know, I've seen plenty of lunatic driving in electric cars, the noise may come later.

Fake exhausts which emit a loud electric crackling noise from hidden speakers perhaps, or a siren-like whine under full acceleration. There are always possibilities.

Two Headlines



Crisis in Cornwall as locals have 'never seen it so empty

Cornwall locals have said the county has "never been so empty" despite tourism chiefs predicting a bumper year for visitors. Jon Hyatt, who chairs Visit Cornwall, blamed the cost-of-living crisis and bad weather at peak times on a drop in visitor numbers last year.


‘Bloody tourists’ don’t ‘get’ Cornwall, says tourism boss in charge of attracting visitors

Heading to Cornwall on holiday? Respect the locals, the region’s tourism boss has urged in an expletive-heavy tirade.

But according to Malcolm Bell - the outgoing chief executive of Visit Cornwall - some of these holidaymakers are “f***ing emmets”.

‘Emmet’ is an old English word for ant, and is a negative Cornish slang word for tourists.

I'm Fake


Lots of similar material around, but this is impressive as a demonstration of where we are in the world of AI fakes.


Friday, 13 June 2025

Mosh Pit



Police are warning festival attendees to leave smart watches at home for unexpected reason

Police have warned smart watch users heading to festivals this summer to check their devices, after an uptick in the number of accidental emergency calls...

That's because Apple Watches have a safety feature that can detect when a user is in a 'car crash' and automatically alerts the police - however, it's also apparently been going off while music lovers are getting thrown around in a mosh pit.



Having led a sheltered and somewhat innocent life, I had to look up 'mosh pit' in order to make sense of this story.

A zero click search tells me -

A mosh pit is an area in front of a stage at a rock concert where high-energy, volatile dancing takes place. Participants push or slam into each other, often to aggressive styles of live music such as punk rock and heavy metal.

Fine, it now makes sense in a technical sense, but doesn't make sense in an enjoying the music sense, so I'm heading back to that sheltered and somewhat innocent life. Assuming I can find it again.

Cover it up



Keir Starmer urged not to 'cover it up' as bombshell new migrant crime figures released

Keir Starmer must choose between publishing migrant crime data or instigating "yet another shameful cover up", Robert Jenrick has declared.

The Shadow Justice Secretary warned Afghans and Eritreans are 20 times more likely to be convicted of sex offences, while Albanians are 153 times more likely to be convicted of drug offences...

Research by the Centre for Migration Control revealed there were 104,000 foreign national convictions between 2021 and 2023.



We could ask an interesting question here - does Starmer have the power to hide the crime figures in a digital age?

Organisations such as Centre for Migration Control seem to acquire enough data to highlight the severity of the issue and apart from that, anyone paying attention has known for years that there are significant correlations in crime statistics, including national correlations.

As we already know, Starmer's instinctive approach appears to be censorship, but at the moment this mainly works on those strange souls willing to be censored. Everyone else knows well enough what is going on.

Thursday, 12 June 2025

Scary toys on the way



Barbie-maker Mattel teams up with OpenAI, eyes first AI-powered product this year

Mattel has teamed up with OpenAI to develop toys and games with artificial intelligence, and expects to launch its first AI-powered product later this year, the Barbie-maker said on Thursday.

The company, which also makes Hot Wheels and Uno cards, plans to "bring the magic of AI to age-appropriate play experiences with an emphasis on innovation, privacy, and safety," it said...

"With OpenAI, Mattel has access to an advanced set of AI capabilities alongside new tools to enable productivity, creativity, and company-wide transformation at scale," said OpenAI operating chief Brad Lightcap.



Sounds scary if Mattel comes up with a Barbie doll which is smarter than Keir Starmer's Cabinet. Not a high bar that one, but still scary.

Apparently Brad Lightcap isn't one of their products.

Measly Morphing



Glastonbury warning over 'highly infectious disease' as festival-goers urged to take action

Glastonbury festival-goers have been urged to get vaccinated against a "highly infectious" disease amid ongoing outbreaks across Europe.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) has warned that measles is "circulating across the country", with high numbers in the South West.

The UKHSA confirmed last week that 109 cases of the Victorian-era disease were recorded in April and 86 in May. Unvaccinated children aged 10 years and under have been the worst hit.


Britain morphing into ‘National Health State’, says think tank

Britain is turning into a “National Health State”, a think tank has said after the Chancellor gave the NHS a major funding boost in her spending review.

The health service was the big winner of Wednesday’s spending review, receiving an extra £29 billion per year for day-to-day spending and more cash for capital investment.

Wednesday, 11 June 2025

Maybe she expects a downturn in her career



Angela Rayner to decriminalise rough sleeping

Rough sleeping is to be decriminalised as the Government abolishes a 200-year-old law that made it illegal.

The Vagrancy Act, introduced in 1824 to tackle a homelessness crisis after the Industrial Revolution, is to be repealed by next spring, Angela Rayner has announced.

The Deputy Prime Minister said the move would “draw a line under nearly two centuries of injustice towards some of the most vulnerable in society, who deserve dignity and support”.



Or maybe it's a hint about the level of confidence Angela Rayner has in her own housing policy, plus one or two other aspects of the government she adorns with such grace, wit and charm.

How to reduce phone thefts in Birmingham



One in four Gen Z Brummies ‘bog browse’ on every visit


One in four Brummies check their phone every time they’re ‘on the throne’, a new survey can reveal.


Research from mobile network operator Talkmobile – who believe mobiles should help not hinder everyday life – has delved into how distracting the devices have become.


Highlights a problem with internet browsing too, stumbling across things we didn't want to know.

Quick Shed

 

Tuesday, 10 June 2025

Couldn't Happen Here



All is not going well with North Korea's relentless drive to reach official housing targets. 

Fortunately, the intolerable failures reported below cannot occur in the UK under the wise guidance of Very Dear Leader Keir Starmer and his Highly Respected Deputy Angela Rayner. 


New homes in flood zones show major defects less than year after construction

Serious problems have surfaced in new homes built in flood-hit regions last year, less than 12 months after construction finished. People say the issues were unavoidable due to shoddy construction as authorities rushed to meet deadlines despite supply shortages...

A photo of some of the homes obtained by Daily NK shows roofs with tiles that have fallen off or been damaged. Someone can be seen fixing the roof tiles. The houses’ exteriors look patchy, as if they’re damp.

The photo shows new houses built in parts of Kimhyongjik county that were flooded last year. The homes are occupied.

GIGO Reeves



Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves have been reduced to uttering total garbage

They could actually have regained some trust. They could actually have demonstrated integrity. They could even have inspired respect. All they needed to tell us was that, in retrospect, the cut to the winter fuel allowance had been a mistake, that it had gone down badly with the voters and that they were prepared to admit they'd got it wrong. Simple.

But no. Oh no. This Labour government is so lacking in any common decency, let alone competence, and so devoid of any sense of honesty, that it chose to pretend that a decision that the whole country knows was forced upon it for political expediency was actually taken because the economy is now apparently "strong enough".



A fine example of garbage in, garbage out (GIGO).
In goes a (politically) garbage policy.
Out comes a garbage rationale.

Monday, 9 June 2025

A perfect storm of policy incoherence



Steve Loftus has a useful Critic piece on the way Labour is giving employers more and more reasons to replace humans with AI.


Britain is not ready for the AI revolution

Labour are making it more difficult to employ people even as AI threatens jobs

The future of work is arriving faster than Westminster imagined, and Britain is sleepwalking into a jobs crisis of its own making. While artificial intelligence and humanoid robotics advance rapidly, the Government has chosen this precise moment to make employing humans more expensive than ever before. It’s a policy collision that threatens to accelerate job displacement just when the economy needs breathing room to adapt...

From April 2025, employer National Insurance contributions have jumped from 13.8 per cent to 15 per cent, while the threshold from which employers pay NICs for each employee has dropped from £9,100 to £5,000 per year. This means employers will pay an additional £900 for each employee on median average earnings. Simultaneously, the national living wage has risen by 4 per cent in real terms for 2025, while the Employment Rights Bill promises to further increase the cost and complexity of hiring. The message to British businesses could hardly be clearer: humans are expensive, risky, and getting more so by the month.



The whole piece goes over familiar ground but is well worth reading, because the situation is moving so rapidly and our political class isn't. 

Steve Loftus describes it as 'a perfect storm of policy incoherence' and he is obviously right, as if this is the real tipping point - political policy incoherence has suddenly accelerated.


The solutions are neither simple nor painless, but they exist. Instead, we’re witnessing a perfect storm of policy incoherence. At the moment when technological change demands maximum flexibility and support for human employment, the Government has chosen to make hiring more expensive, firing more difficult, and automation more attractive. The result will be a jobs crisis that seems to have appeared overnight but was actually telegraphed years in advance.

Ghosts from the Past



I've downloaded a few old ghost stories to my Kindle for holiday reading. We're staying in a seventeenth century cottage so it seemed fitting, although the stories tend to be bizarre or nutty rather than scary. It was probably much different when they were read by the fire and the shadowy light of an oil lamp.

The quote below was worth posting as it illustrates how social perspectives changed as mass communication spread across the UK. 


"Was the house empty long?"

"Oh dear yes. People don’t care for remote places nowadays. Everyone is for railways and telephones and cinemas. The house-agent told us he only had to say ‘In the Cotswolds’ and intending tenants fled."


G.M Robins - The Haunting of White Gates (1900)

Sunday, 8 June 2025

Diminishing before our eyes



Prince William warns world's oceans are 'diminishing before our eyes'

Prince William has warned the world's oceans are "diminishing before our eyes" and called on the world to "think big" on how to revive them.

Speaking at the Blue Economy and Finance Forum in Monaco on Sunday, he said everyone is responsible for change - both negative and positive.

"What once seemed an abundant resource is diminishing before our eyes," he said.


Yet another meaningless royal pronouncement. 

There are bound to be certain problems with our oceans with varying degrees of importance and tackling them is bound to have varying levels of practical feasibility, political feasibility and cost. Then we have the issue of who stumps up those costs. Then the biggest issue of all - what's the level of fraud likely to be?

To describe the world's oceans as 'diminishing before our eyes' doesn't work at any level beyond virtually worthless rhetoric. It's lazy.

Inventing the iKeir



Rachel Reeves turning around UK's finances 'like Steve Jobs did for Apple', claims minister


Science and Technology Secretary Peter Kyle compares the chancellor to the late Apple founder, who brought the company back from the brink of insolvency.

Rachel Reeves will turn around the economy the way Steve Jobs turned around Apple, a cabinet minister has suggested ahead of the upcoming spending review.


Where does a chap begin? 

Associating Rachel from Accounts with Steve Jobs may remind even loyal Labour voters about the jobs Rachel is busy destroying. That's one mistake, an avoidable problem with word association, but the whole piece is worth reading because it gets much worse.


"Just bear in mind that how Apple turned itself around when Steve Jobs came back to Apple, they were 90 days from insolvency. That's the kind of situation that we had when we came into office.

"Steve Jobs turned it around by inventing the iMac, moving to a series of products like the iPod.



Ah, Rachel is going to invent something. Could it be the iKeir? Bonkers - unambiguously bonkers.

Saturday, 7 June 2025

Hols


We're whizzing off on holiday early tomorrow morning, so probably no blogging until late afternoon. There isn't much going on anyway, apart from wars, widespread political insanity and the collapse of the developed world.

Keir Starmer is being duped by the EU



Brian Monteith has a useful CAPX piece on the EU and its non-tariff barriers to trade. 


Keir Starmer is being duped by the EU

  • The EU doesn't innovate, it only regulates
  • The European Union is disguising economic punishment as conservation regulations
  • Non-tariff barriers to trade are often even more damaging than tariffs

If we are to believe all the ballyhoo surrounding Keir Starmer’s recent ‘trade deals’ with the US, India and the EU, anyone could be forgiven for believing the Prime Minister has solved our economic future by taking a couple of long-haul flights and welcoming Ursula von der Leyen to a jolly in London.


The whole piece is well worth reading as a reminder of how absurdly difficult is is to negotiate with EU bureaucrats on any terms but theirs. 


With the EU, ‘nothing is agreed until everything is agreed’ – this is a negotiating technique that means what you have already conceded can be reopened and fresh concessions demanded. The EU will always offset attempts to alleviate inspections for goods crossing the Irish Sea by one of its member state proxies demanding, say, the manning of Gibraltar border checks or maintaining access to our fisheries. This time round it will cost us £1 billion of fish lost to foreign boats – £12 billion until 2038.

This points to the failure of the British public and media to realise it is not tariffs (which have been removed by the EU-UK trade and co-operation agreement), but the EU’s non-tariff barriers that represent the greatest problem when dealing with the bloc.

Lost Wean

 

Friday, 6 June 2025

Nothing will ever change



Liz Truss has a useful Critic piece on how so many politicians fail to offer serious analysis of past failures. It's also a reminder that political mendacity is failing, but nothing will change until this is accepted. At the moment we merely see more and more of it. 


What Mel Stride should really be apologising for

The Conservative Party failed when it rejected change

There are few more fatuous acts in public life than a politician attempting to curry favour with voters by apologising for something for which they had no responsibility at all or opposed in the first place.

These acts are all the more preposterous when they fail to offer any serious analysis of the matter in question or gloss over inconvenient facts which would provide the public with a fuller and fairer account of what really happened.

So it was that we were treated to a brazen display of the genre on Thursday when Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride trooped along to the RSA (motto: “regenerating our world through collective action”) to trash my 2022 Growth Plan, otherwise known as the Mini Budget.


The whole piece is well worth reading as another pointer to the difficulties in the way of worthwhile political change and how unlikely it is that this will change.


Until Mel Stride and his allies admit the real economic failings of the last Conservative Government, the British public will not trust the party with the reins of power again. He should be repudiating the globalist, leftist agenda they pursued which has dragged our country down with the Conservative Party as collateral.

What is needed — and fast — is an acknowledgment of those failings and the need for wholesale reform of how our country is governed. Because nothing will ever change so long as the existing broken system and its acolytes remain in control.

Embarrassment for Ursula



Richard Ings has an interesting piece on Poland and its efforts to escape the stultifying effects of progressive politics and the EU.


Poland’s inspiring vote for traditional values

‘WE won. I will bring people together, I will be constructive, I will be a president for all Poles. I will be your president.’

Just a few hours after making this statement, in response to marginally positive exit poll results, the defeated Polish presidential candidate and Brussels favourite Rafał Trzaskowski tweeted ‘I congratulate Karol Nawrocki on his win in the presidential election’. Embarrassing.

Embarrassing not just for this Mayor of Warsaw who, in a live televised debate in April, quickly hid a rainbow flag, presented to him by rival Nawrocki to emphasise Trzaskowski’s championing of LGBT rights over those of socially conservative Poles. Embarrassing also for the current Polish Prime Minister Donald ‘special place in hell for Brexiteers’ Tusk, who has, since 2023, led a ragtag bunch of progressives down the primrose path to political defeat, having ridden to power on a promise of giving left-wing women all the abortions they could handle.



The whole piece is worth reading because Ings may be right and Poland is once again shaping up to be the naughty boy of Europe.


By proxy, of course, this means embarrassment for Tusk’s handler back at European Union headquarters, Ursula von der Leyen. VDL, while studiously declining to back political candidates publicly, was so delighted to see Tusk elected in 2023 that she immediately released 5billion euros, with tens of billions to follow, as Poland promised to restore the ‘rule of law’ after eight years of conservative rule. Of course, what the EU means by ‘rule of law’ is the supremacy of EU law over national law and allowing sexual and/or ethnic minorities to dictate social and legal norms. By seeking to wrest back judicial and political control over Polish affairs from its slavish EU-friendly judiciary and civil service, the pre-Tusk government was denied the scrapings from the bottom of the EU money pit by a resentful von der Leyen.

Now Poland is once again shaping up to be the naughty boy of Europe with the politically untested and inexperienced Nawrocki rising to power, scraping in Brexit-style with a 51 per cent share of the vote. Other than his widely shared hostility to talk of gay marriage, other reasons for his self-exclusion from polite Brussels salons will be his fervent belief in protecting unborn life, and his increasing scepticism towards the million-strong ‘refugees’ from war-torn Ukraine.


The Black Dog



Even in the midst of his best music, it sat in the middle of him, this invisible black dog, and growled and waited, never to be cajoled. He knew of its presence—and was a little uneasy. For of course he wanted to let himself go, to feel rosy and loving and all that. But at the very thought, the black dog showed its teeth.

D. H. Lawrence - Aaron's Rod (1922)


The black dog is Lawrence’s metaphor for the way his principal character protects what he sees as his soul, the vastly important core of what he is. If anyone comes too close to that core, then the black dog shows his teeth and the approach is rejected.

Aaron Sisson, son of a mining family is that principal character, but it is easy to envisage Lawrence himself using much the same metaphor in his own case. As if he is equally determined to preserve the core of his being, equally determined to keep his soul to himself and keep something precious away from contamination by the outside world.

Lawrence was an artist, he could take us on a railway journey from Rome to Milan in a third class carriage crowded with Italian peasants, he could show us what it is to wake up alone on a bright, cold November morning in a cheap hotel in Florence. Yet when it came to people, Lawrence could paint a picture showing greater depth than the reality we see.   

We could go on to say that the fictitious Aaron Sisson was wary of what isn't within him becoming known, wary of being understood even though that may not have been Lawrence’s intention. Perhaps Lawrence himself was wary of being understood. As if a metaphorical black dog also guarded the core of what he was, guarded it against it being leaked to the wider world like stolen plans in a spy movie.

From the same novel we have Aaron Sisson in a country house party at the other end of the social spectrum. He becomes aware that the lives of country house people are in a sense already known to him and to everyone else via the cinema. Known more vividly in our day, as is much else which was previously known through the fogged lens of newspapers, books and gossip.


He had fallen into country house parties before, but never into quite such a plushy sense of riches. He felt he ought to have his breath taken away. But alas, the cinema has taken our breath away so often, investing us in all the splendours of the splendidest American millionaire, or all the heroics and marvels of the Somme or the North Pole, that life has now no magnate richer than we, no hero nobler than we have been, on the film. Connu! Connu! Everything life has to offer is known to us, couldn't be known better, from the film.


There is a curious sense of unease detectable here, unease about old mystiques ceasing to be mystiques. A suspicion that we could be more shallow than we suppose, easily known and understood. Most of us have some kind of social position to preserve, some kind of mystique about what we think we are. The unease leaking into Lawrence’s novel is where the black dog has nothing to protect apart from a flimsy mystique which others see through whenever they come close.

Perhaps rulers are wary of being understood too. Perhaps they are afraid that their mystique as rulers has gone, their abilities merely human, their failings too visible. The idea fits well with the strangely transparent incompetence of modern governments in our digital world. 

We have gone well beyond the cinema of Lawrence's day. If we pay attention to what can be known, then we are closer to our rulers than we ever were. We see what the governing classes are, their shallowness, motives, conceits, errors, facile ideologies and contorted justifications, their shallow mendacity.

There is nothing they can do about it, there is no black dog.

Thursday, 5 June 2025

When our gods are our weaknesses



Green rules ‘stop Europe preparing for Russian invasion’

European countries have blamed EU environmental regulations for hindering their preparations for defending against a possible Russian invasion.

In a leaked letter obtained by The Telegraph, the nations’ defence ministers argued that the rules had stopped the expansion of military bases and prevented fighter jet pilots from training...

In 2023, the European commission published its Greening the Armies report, highlighting ways in which militaries present a challenge to tackling climate change.



It isn't always easy to know what to say about EU absurdities, but this quote from John Buchan's novel 'Greenmantle' seems appropriate.


The world, as I see it, had become too easy and cushioned. Men had forgotten their manhood in soft speech, and imagined that the rules of their smug civilization were the laws of the universe. But that is not the teaching of science, and it is not the teaching of life. We have forgotten the greater virtues, and we were becoming emasculated humbugs whose gods were our own weaknesses.

John Buchan – Greenmantle (1916)

Bungler v Bungler - Bungler Wins



Reeves forced to back down in net zero row with Miliband


Ed Miliband has defeated an attempt by Rachel Reeves to raid one of his key net zero programs in next week’s spending review, The Telegraph understands.

The Treasury has for months been considering cuts to the £13.2 billion warm homes plan, which aims to insulate properties and make them more energy efficient.

But Mr Miliband, the Energy Security Secretary, and Ms Reeves, the Chancellor, are understood to have reached an agreement in the past few days after fraught negotiations and the scheme will remain largely unaffected.


Destiny does not make mistakes. Destiny apparently does not even punish you for sins. Half the time you can get away with murder before that august and inscrutable visage. On the other hand Destiny is ironic and punishes your stupidities by means of endless, sticky entanglements....

Ford Madox Ford - Henry for Hugh (1934)

Nothing to see here...


Our friendly bus driver tells us that Trentbarton, a local bus company, no longer allows e-scooters on its buses. Fortunately we aren't likely to be affected by the ban, but there must be some kind of precautionary reason for the decision .


Wednesday, 4 June 2025

Irrelevant



No Madame Tussauds waxwork for Starmer over fears he will become 'irrelevant' despite replicas for other PMs


Madame Tussauds has revealed it will not currently be making a wax work of Sir Keir Starmer, as they cannot be sure he will stay relevant for long enough.

The waxwork museum has made a model of almost every British prime minister up until recently, including David Cameron, Theresa May and Boris Johnson.

However, the tradition appears to have ended after a rapid turnover of leaders post-Covid, particularly Liz Truss’s brief tenure as Prime Minister lasting just 49 days.



I reckon it has more to do with the possibility of Free Gear setting a new record -


In the three-year term that Gordon Brown was prime minister, Madame Tussauds asked the public to vote on whether he should get a waxwork before the next election, to which 83.8% said no.

Rip-It-Up Reeves



Reeves to rip up 'pro-London' Treasury rules as she announces £15billion for transport outside South-East


Rachel Reeves is set to tear up Treasury rules as she announces billions of pounds of investment in public transport in the North and Midlands.

The £15.6 billion package for mayoral authorities is expected to include funding to extend the metros in Tyne and Wear, Greater Manchester and the West Midlands, along with a renewed tram network in South Yorkshire and a new mass transit systems in West Yorkshire.



Presumably this funding is coming out of the black hole, or it is spending which was in the pipeline already, or the State Sofa is bigger than we've been led to believe, or it all depends on that mysterious abstraction we never catch a reliable sight of - Growth.

Of course it's really about the dread spectre of Nigel Farage and Reform snaffling all the votes and making everyone else look silly, particularly the Blob and its acolytes. As a certified and accredited Blob member, Rachel from Accounts has been told to Do Something.

Tuesday, 3 June 2025

I do want universal funding



BBC boss offers major update on 'reform' of TV licence fee

BBC director-general Tim Davie has said he supports "reform" in the way the corporation is funded. The Government is set to launch the review of the BBC's Charter, looking at how it should be funded, after committing to increasing the licence fee in line with inflation each year until 2027...

Mr Davie said: "I want to justify the value that we have. I want that protected.

"I think there is reform (needed) in terms of potential (changes to the) licence fee, how progressive it is, and you'll debate the enforcement question."

He added that he does "not want the same system" in the future, but said: "I do want universal funding, and I want a proper investigation of begrudging, grinding cuts that we've seen over the last 10 years, which has just not helped."



And there we have it - "I do want universal funding..." Apparently there is to be no free choice in BBC Land, not that we ever thought otherwise. 

Able to rationalise truly bizarre things


The post title is taken from a Liz Truss observation in this video made a few months ago - UK elites are able to rationalise truly bizarre things. Anyone paying attention will know this already, but she is very good at articulating the internal government issues degrading UK democracy. 


During my time



Second indyref not a ‘priority’ during my time as Prime Minister – Starmer

Sir Keir Starmer has said another Scottish independence referendum is not a “priority” and he cannot imagine one taking place during his time as Prime Minister.


So what are we talking about here? Weeks? Months? No more than that we hope.

Of course he's trying to create the impression that his time as PM is destined to be some kind of epoch in our political history. At least he didn't say 'during our time as Prime Minister' - that's positive...

Blimey - I'm grasping at straws here.

Monday, 2 June 2025

We must prepare for madness



'We must prepare for conflict,' says Starmer with new weapons to down Putin missiles targeting UK 'homeland'


Britain must “prepare for conflict” by moving to be war ready to deter an attack by Vladimir Putin or other adversary, says Sir Keir Starmer.

The Prime Minister stressed that the Strategic Defence Review (SDR) aimed to keep the peace by strengthening the UK’s military and discouraging attacks on the homeland and its allies.



Good grief, what the blue blazes is the imbecile playing at now? 

Burning Rubbish



Huge site in South East England will burn household rubbish - to make the food we eat greener


Forty hectares of greenhouses, heated by the burning of rubbish, are set to be built in Essex - making it the largest low-carbon horticulture site in Europe.

These greenhouses will be the first of their kind and could provide around 6% of the tomatoes consumed in the UK.

It should begin operating in 2027, when almost all the county's household rubbish will come to the Rivenhall site, where it will then be burnt in an incinerator.



Sounds like a fine idea even if it's something we could have been doing for many years already.
 
I once worked at a lab which collected hundreds of river samples per day in PET bottles. Once the samples had been analysed, the bottles were emptied and disposed of via a local incinerator.

Unfortunately, one load of bottles wasn't emptied before collection, nobody noticed at the incinerator and apparently the water left in the bottles doused the incinerator.

The Essex scheme still sounds like something we should be doing though, if only similar schemes aren't doused by bureaucracy.


But the National Farmers Union says further projects like Rivenhall could be hampered by the government's new biodiversity net gain strategy, which forces all developers to benefit nature through their builds.

Weed Farmers



Innocent neighbours at risk as gangs use rented houses and flats for cannabis farms


The gangs often use crude methods to bypass electricity meters to avoid paying for the high levels of energy the farms require, creating an increased fire risk.

Rival gangs also carry out raids on each other's farms - a practice known as 'taxing' - carrying out "significant violence" to anyone who gets in their way, police say.

Greater Manchester Police detected 402 cannabis farms between May 2024 and April 2025, and Sky News was given access to an operation by its officers at a semi-detached house in a quiet suburban street in Wythenshawe.


Bypassing electricity meters suggests weed farmers don't share Ed Miliband's enormous confidence in the value of solar panels. 

As we are told that Greater Manchester Police detected 402 cannabis farms in a year, it would not stagger the imagination if not all of those neighbours were innocent. Some were probably quite relaxed about it.

Sunday, 1 June 2025

Even Glastonbury



How your summer plans indicate which political party you're likely to vote for

Middle-class voters are turning to Reform UK, with more Wimbledon fans saying they will vote for Nigel Farage’s party than any other.

Even Glastonbury festival-goers are following suit – with Reform coming in second behind Labour among people planning to watch it this summer.



Ah, so Glastonbury festival-goers still tend to see Labour as the best option. Must be an effect of the music or something.

Dyson Farming

 

Loses control?



Keir Starmer ‘loses control of border' as over 1,000 migrants cross Channel in single day

Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of having "lost control" of Britain's borders after more than 1,000 migrants crossed the Channel in a single day - the highest total so far this year. The latest crossings forced British and French rescue services to deploy 11 vessels and two aircraft to deal with the surge...

In one case, Coastguard officers were forced to issue a radio appeal asking fishing boats to assist with a yacht and several kayaks in distress, as every available Border Force and RNLI vessel was already occupied with rescuing migrants from the 18 dinghies in the Channel.


It's hardly worth pointing out that a chap can't lose what he never had.

Hollow laughter from Nemesis. 


A Home Office spokesperson said: "We all want to end dangerous small boat crossings, which threaten lives and undermine our border security.

"The people-smuggling gangs do not care if the vulnerable people they exploit live or die, as long as they pay, and we will stop at nothing to dismantle their business models and bring them to justice.

"That is why this Government has put together a serious plan to take down these networks at every stage - through intelligence-sharing under our Border Security Command, enhanced operations in northern France, and tougher legislation in the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill."


Ah, a "serious plan" sounds like a Starmer plan, it has his stamp on it. 

Nemesis laughs louder. 

Saturday, 31 May 2025

Some visitors find the ambiance lacking in vibrancy



Tripadvisor AI summary of reviews of Gloucester Services on the M5.


Reviews summary

This summary was created by AI, based on recent reviews.

Gloucester Services restaurant garners mixed reviews, with guests praising its convenient location and scenic views for a travel break. Despite the well-designed, spacious setting, some visitors find the ambiance lacking in vibrancy. 

While the establishment receives compliments for fresh produce, opinions on the food are polarized, with criticisms of it being overpriced and sometimes underwhelming. Additionally, the service has disappointed numerous guests due to its slow and disorganized nature, contributing to extended wait times that often lead to cold meals and a lessened dining experience.

Stand-off



Angela Rayner and Rachel Reeves in stand-off over Labour’s spending plans

Angela Rayner and Rachel Reeves are at loggerheads over the crucial spending review as the deputy prime minister’s department passed an unofficial deadline to settle its budget until the next general election without securing an agreement.

With the spending review set to be unveiled on 11 June, departments have told The Independent that the Treasury wanted its plans agreed by the start of this weekend.

But The Independent understands that Ms Rayner’s Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) is one of several departments yet to settle with Ms Reeves and her deputy Darren Jones.


A duel is the only honourable way to settle it, or a joust. Or maybe they could go down-market with a pie-eating contest. There are many suitable possibilities, but a rational debate is off the table.

Skeptical of medical science reports?



A piece by Carlton Gyles from a link passed on by dearieme in the comments to this recent post about AI being used to churn out dodgy scientific research. Published in 2015, quite short and well worth reading.


Skeptical of medical science reports?

“It is simply no longer possible to believe much of the clinical research that is published, or to rely on the judgment of trusted physicians or authoritative medical guidelines. I take no pleasure in this conclusion, which I reached slowly and reluctantly over my two decades as editor of The New England Journal of Medicine” (1).

More recently, Richard Horton, editor of The Lancet, wrote that “The case against science is straightforward: much of the scientific literature, perhaps half, may simply be untrue. Afflicted by studies with small sample sizes, tiny effects, invalid exploratory analyses, and flagrant conflicts of interest, together with an obsession for pursuing fashionable trends of dubious importance, science has taken a turn towards darkness” (2).

Friday, 30 May 2025

Notes



Government AI note-taking trialled by 25 councils

Launched by government earlier this year, the Minute software designed to listen in on meetings and provide automated transcripts and other notes is being tested by authorities around the country

A government-developed artificial intelligence tool designed to automate note-taking is being trialled by 25 local councils around the country.

The Minute software – which forms part of the wider Humprehy [sic] suite of AI programs – “uses generative AI to turn meetings into notes and adds unique tools to help tweak and correct summaries more efficiently”, according to the government.


The AI fly on the wall may become confused.

I didn't say that, I merely coughed.
It wasn't a promise, merely a possibility, we didn't actually commit.
I certainly didn't say anything about lying.
I was talking about the biscuits over coffee.
 I thought the AI thing was turned off at that point.
It was supposed to be a joke.
I wasn't snoring, how could it accuse me of snoring?

Embarrassing to watch



Jill Biden was complicit in husband’s cover-up, says White House

Jill Biden was “complicit” in covering up the decline of her husband while he was in office, the White House has claimed.

The former first lady “needs to answer” for her role in “shielding her husband away from the cameras”, Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said accusing her of continuously “lying to the American people”...

She is accused of shielding the former president from media scrutiny and convincing him to continue his ill-fated election campaign for a second term.



Everyone knew this at the time, but still the show carried on well past the point where it was embarrassing to watch.  

It may not be strictly comparable, but there is a "show must go on" aspect to Keir Starmer's continuing attempts to be a credible Prime Minister. Unfortunately for the rest of us, he isn't remotely credible and everyone knows it. 

Starmer has become embarrassing to watch too. Different reasons of course, but embarrassing to watch.