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Wednesday, 6 August 2025

And nobody is surprised



Lisa Nandy: I won’t watch new Gregg Wallace MasterChef series


Lisa Nandy has said she will not watch the new series of MasterChef because she was “absolutely appalled” by the conduct of sacked presenters Gregg Wallace and John Torode.

The Culture Secretary said she “certainly won’t be watching this series” and believed many members of the public would feel the same.


Ah - the Culture Secretary has a TV licence, watches pap and nobody is surprised.

Less than 40 hours

 

What larks



'Stupid and Sneaky!': London Restaurant Slammed for Adding Hidden £1.23 Carbon Charge to Diners' Bills

Diners at a London restaurant have been left fuming after discovering a stealthy charge on their bills.

A new, undisclosed fee, purportedly for carbon offsetting, has sparked outrage, with customers branding the move as both 'stupid and sneaky'.



By gum, this is fun, could even wake up a few believers when such entertaining games come to light. 

Was Ed Miliband gagging because he'd just seen a carbon charge added to his bacon sarnie? 

Could be, could be.

 









Tuesday, 5 August 2025

Scams, Pap and Clickbait



I received a scam text and a scam email this morning, so nothing unusual from our digital world.

To my mind the main digital world headache isn’t so much the scams, but what seems like an increasing morass of pap and clickbait infesting the media instead of material which might possibly be worth a bit of attention. For example, political pap inserted into mainstream news creates a kind of pap fog where features of Keir Starmer’s long reign…

…hang on - er - he hasn’t been PM for that long has he?

Correction indicated, but that’s the issue with political pap, it becomes more difficult to look back on brighter days. Partly because they weren’t much brighter and partly because of pap fog obscuring the perspective.

But Starmer’s long, long reign must surely end eventually…

Impact



From Wikipedia -


Destruction under the Mongol Empire

The Mongol conquests resulted in widespread and well-documented death and destruction throughout Eurasia, as the Mongol army invaded hundreds of cities and killed millions of people.



But jump to the final paragraph and -


Environmental impact

According to a study by the Carnegie Institution for Science's Department of Global Energy, the annihilation of so many human beings and cities under Genghis Khan may have scrubbed as much as 700 million tonnes of carbon from the atmosphere by allowing forests to regrow on previously populated and cultivated land.

Monday, 4 August 2025

The planet-wide city



Jorge Álvarez has an interesting LBV piece on those who have imagined the merger of all the world’s major cities into one planet-wide city.


Ecumenopolis, the Future Merger of All the World’s Great Cities into One

Coruscant, the capital of the Republic in the Star Wars films, is an overwhelming planet-wide city, completely urbanized and crisscrossed by millions of flying vehicles. It’s a concept previously used by Isaac Asimov with Trantor, the imperial capital in his famous Foundation literary saga, as well as by other writers and artists in numerous novels, comics, and video games. The idea of global-scale conurbation was named ecumenopolis in 1967 by a Greek architect named Constantinos Doxiadis, who predicted an initial phase involving the merger of London, Paris, Amsterdam, and the Rhine and Ruhr river basins.

In truth, Doxiadis was not the first to imagine planet-sized cities. Strictly speaking—although from a poetic rather than a scientific standpoint—that honor should go to the inimitable Thomas Lake Harris, who included a similar proposal in his verses. Lake, born in England in 1823 but emigrated to New York as a child, was a devout Baptist Calvinist who leaned toward universalism (a philosophical doctrine asserting the existence of a universal, objective, and eternal truth that governs everything), which led him to found the peculiar Spiritualist Community of Mountain Cove.


The whole piece is well worth reading as a reminder of the kind of ideas which may float through any gathering of globally influential people, or those who aspire to be globally influential. 

It's one of many airy concepts which may be unworkable and probably bonkers but interesting enough to attract the attention of globalist sentiment with too little practical experience.


It is also appropriate to clarify another concept, that of the global city, which differs from that of ecumenopolis in that it acts as a key player in the world economy—not only because of wealth generation but also because of large pockets of poverty—culturally and politically, without needing to spread over the entire planetary surface. The term was coined in her eponymous work by the Dutch sociologist Saskia Sassen (recipient of the 2013 Prince of Asturias Award for Social Sciences), who explicitly distinguishes it from the megalopolis or megacity (one or more united metropolitan areas—another definition speaks of urban agglomerations, i.e., zones of continuous growth—with more than ten million inhabitants and/or a population density exceeding two thousand people per square kilometer).

The danger of being rich in China


A Ken Cao video on the perils of being too successful as an entrepreneur in China.

Sunday, 3 August 2025

From Freedom's Whispers



Zhang Yingyue has a powerful FSB piece on growing up in Maoist China and how the BBC and VOA, once the voice of freedom have lost that voice in pursuit of yet another empty totalitarian ideology.


From Freedom's Whispers to Tyrant’s Tools: How the BBC and VOA Lost Their Soul

"The freedom to speak means nothing if you only whisper what you’re told to say."

When I was a teenage girl growing up in the iron grip of Maoist China during the Cultural Revolution, I dreamed of the outside world and risked everything to listen to its voices. While classmates denounced their parents and teachers under red banners and revolutionary slogans, I stayed up into the night, crouched beside a battered shortwave radio, tuning it inch by inch until the static gave way to a foreign miracle: “This is the Voice of America.” Or: “This is London. The BBC World Service.”

To be caught listening to such broadcasts was dangerous. Not merely “frowned upon,” but life-ruining dangerous. A neighbour’s son had disappeared after being overheard repeating a joke he’d heard on the BBC. My father and mother, both CPP members and a senior civil servant in the security department and a university lecturer respectively, were denounced as counterrevolutionaries and sent to labour camps. And yet, I listened. Terrified and in secret, but I listened to those calm, reasoned, and often warm voices—my lifeline to the world beyond claustrophobic, hysterical Beijing.


The whole piece is well worth reading as warning that nothing is forever, including the freedoms we once thought were permanent.


The tragedy is not just what the BBC and VOA have become but what they’ve left behind. In silencing dissent, they have silenced curiosity. In enforcing conformity, they’ve extinguished courage. In replacing inquiry with ideology, they’ve traded journalism for propaganda. To the editors, producers, and journalists within those institutions who still remember what free speech actually means: speak up. Or if you can’t, walk away. The machinery you serve no longer deserves the loyalty of free minds.

To readers across the world, especially in places still fighting for the freedoms the West once championed: don’t be fooled. The loudest voices are not always the bravest. Sometimes, the real dissidents are the ones being deplatformed, not those on the front page.

And to my younger self, crouched beside a radio in the dead of night: I’m sorry. The voices we trusted changed. But the truths they once whispered, that freedom is fragile, that speech matters, that tyranny wears many masks, are still true. Even if you have to say them alone.


Suppose we turn it round



UK has got ‘fat’ on decades of women’s unpaid labour – Jess Phillips

Jess Phillips says that the UK has grown "fat" on the unpaid labour of women, a practice she deems "fundamentally sexist".

The minister for safeguarding and violence against women and girls argued that the nation has depended on women’s charitable contributions for decades.

That had led to a reluctance from the government to provide services itself, she said.



Suppose we turn it round. There is paid labour we could do without, both men and women. Keir Starmer, Rachel Reeves, David Lammy, Bridget Phillipson Ed Miliband and Jess Phillips for example. There are considerable collective advantages to coping without their labour.

Suppose we turn it round a little further and change it into a can of worms simply because it's so easy to turn Labour ideology into cans of worms.


NHS maintained 93% of planned care during resident doctors’ strikes

The NHS maintained care for an estimated 10,000 more patients during the latest doctors’ strike compared with last year’s industrial action.

Early data shows that 93% of planned operations, tests and procedures went ahead during the five-day walkout across England.

Saturday, 2 August 2025

Of course you are going to disappoint people



Reeves: Of course you are going to disappoint people as Chancellor

Rachel Reeves admits Labour has “disappointed” people while in government.

The politician said she understood that being Chancellor meant making unpopular decisions.

She told an audience at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival that Labour had got the balance right between tax, spending and borrowing.

But she said that balancing the books meant making tough decisions, even if the are unpopular.


It seems unlikely that the word 'disappoint' is strong enough, but she hasn't disappointed everyone.


Ms Reeves pointed to Labour’s £200 million investment in carbon capture in the north east of Scotland, which she said was welcomed by the industry.


Presumably that 'investment' comes from the Arrangement for Renewable Subsidy Expansion.

Expert issues chilling warning

 



Exact date 'alien probe' could strike Earth revealed as expert issues chilling warning

A Harvard scientist has issued a chilling warning about a mysterious interstellar object hurtling through our solar system, and says it could spell disaster for Earth.

Professor Avi Loeb, who is well-known for pushing bold and often polarizing theories about extraterrestrial life, has been tracking the object, named 3I/ATLAS, since it was first spotted on July 1.

If the object is an alien craft, Loeb warned it could be carrying a probe or even a weapon. He predicted that such an intercept vehicle would reach Earth between November 21 and December 5, 2025.

The timeline is based on calculations that 3I/ATLAS will pass behind the sun from Earth's perspective this October, a time he ominously suggested could be used to prepare the attack.


It's worth adding that experts are supposed to issue chilling warnings or they wouldn't be experts of the calibre required by the media.

Does Harvard offer courses on chilling warnings tailored to media requirements? It should do because demand is high.

‘Fair pay’ is a dangerous fiction



Charles Amos has a useful CAPX reminder that doctors and nurses are demanding higher pay in their own interests, not ours.


‘Fair pay’ is a dangerous fiction

  • Doctors and nurses should be honest about their true motive for demanding higher pay
  • ‘Fair pay’ across the whole economy would result in both huge labour shortages and unemployment
  • Upholding freedom of contract forms the fundamental basis for widespread prosperity

Nurses have now decided to follow the example of resident doctors, and reject the Government’s latest pay offer. The Royal College of Nursing announced this week that 91% of its members voted against accepting a 3.6% pay rise. Resident doctors were offered a 5.4% pay increase but went on strike for a 29% pay increase to ensure ‘full pay restoration’ to 2009 levels.

Both unions are demanding that their members receive ‘fair pay’. Yet as Friedrich Hayek once argued, the only meaningful sense in which we can even debate whether any wage is ‘just’ is by asking if it has been agreed in a free market without deception, fraud or violence. ‘Fair pay’ doesn’t exist; thus, the pleas of doctors and nurses can be rejected outright at the bar of justice.

These medical professionals ought to be honest about their true motive: they want higher pay because it is in their self-interest. Fine, but once this is acknowledged, it’s entirely proper that taxpayers defend their self-interest too and resist their pay increases.



The whole piece is well worth reading as yet another reminder of the misleading way in which the media commonly present these disputes. They give too much credence to the 'fair pay' claim and its many variants and nowhere near enough to human behaviour, and the ancient motive of self-interest.

It is surely reasonable for Wes Streeting to defend taxpayer interests against the claims of medical professionals, our interests against theirs. Unfortunately for Wes, this isn't how it will be presented in the media, hard-nosed realism isn't popular enough for that.


Resident doctors and nurses are ultimately campaigning for their own self-interest – not any empty notions of ‘fair pay’ – and there is nothing wrong with that per se. However, Wes Streeting ought to reject their demands to protect the public’s interests from ever higher taxes and more borrowing. Crucially, resident doctors and nurses must all have their contracts renegotiated, with their right to strike stripped from them, to make sure they can’t hold the taxpayer to ransom once again. Nothing short of that will do.

Friday, 1 August 2025

I never thought I would hear that



‘I never thought I’d see a Labour PM more hated than Thatcher’: Sunderland local’s staggering claim

Keir Starmer is “more hated than Maggie Thatcher in Sunderland”, a local caulker burner has claimed on GB News.

Since his landslide election victory last year, the Labour Prime Minister has faced a tumultuous time in office, and now Gary McDonald has joined the chorus of growing dissatisfaction...

“I never thought in a place like Sunderland a Labour Prime Minister would be more hated than Maggie Thatcher.”

He continued: “I never thought I would hear that in my town. Sunderland is so Labour but he is more disliked than Maggie Thatcher ever was.

The quality of the observation



'There's a lot of knife crime in London,' admits police minister after crackdown on muggers targeting pupils


Police minister Dame Diana Johnson admitted on Friday that “there is a lot of knife crime in London”.

She was highlighting a series of initiatives in knife crime hotspots across the country to reduce the number of offences.

Asked to list the seven key areas, she told LBC Radio: “We have got the Metropolitan Police obviously because there is a lot of knife crime in London.”



But it is in matters beyond the limits of mere rule that the skill of the analyst is evinced. He makes, in silence, a host of observations and inferences. So, perhaps, do his companions; and the difference in the extent of the information obtained, lies not so much in the validity of the inference as in the quality of the observation. The necessary knowledge is that of what to observe.

Edgar Allan Poe - The Murders in the Rue Morgue (1841)

Modern cars which won't last

 

Thursday, 31 July 2025

Keir Shortage



Sorry, Prime Minister! No newborns called Keir since the PM took office - but Angela, Boris and Nigel are still in vogue

The Prime Minister's name has been banished by parents, with no newborn boys being called 'Keir' since the PM took office.

For the first time on record, no parent decided to give their boy the same name as the Labour leader last year.

The figures were released this morning by the Office for National Statistics, as part of the most popular names for newborns in England and Wales.


Some adults may not be too keen on surnames such as 'Starmer' or 'Reeves' either. 

Wes and the Sadim Touch



Nurses move closer to strike action as record numbers reject pay offer


Nurses have inched closer to strike action after a record number rejected the Government’s pay offer.

More than nine in 10 nurses rejected their 3.6 per cent pay rise for this year in a fresh blow to Wes Streeting, the Health Secretary.

The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) has threatened a strike ballot unless the union’s demands are met this summer.


Not that Wes Streeting is alone with in having the Sadim Touch, and this chalice was poisoned anyway. Unfortunately it's not easy to think of anyone without the Sadim Touch among Starmer's unlovely crew.

Polarising language version 2



North Korea says it has ‘no interest’ in dialogue with South Korea

North Korean leader’s powerful sister, Kim Yo Jong, dismisses Seoul’s outreach efforts under new president.

The Lee administration’s “blind trust” in South Korea’s security alliance with the United States and “attempt to stand in confrontation” with Pyongyang are little different from the policies of the previous conservative administration of Yoon Suk-yeol, Kim said.

“We clarify once again the official stand that no matter what policy is adopted and whatever proposal is made in Seoul, we have no interest in it and there is neither the reason to meet nor the issue to be discussed with the ROK,” Kim said, using the acronym for South Korea’s official name, the Republic of Korea.



There has always been something unhinged about North Korea, but this looks like an attempt by Kim Yo Jong to imitate Donald Trump's version of unpredictably hard-nosed negotiation. 

It still sounds unhinged though, while anyone paying attention knows that Trump is negotiating from a position of strength. It makes a difference.

Wednesday, 30 July 2025

Polarising language



Green Party leadership candidates accuse Polanski of using ‘polarising’ language


Candidates on a joint ticket for the Green Party’s leadership have accused their opponent of using divisive language and threatening progress made by the party in the last year.

Ellie Chowns and Adrian Ramsay, who both became MPs last year when the Green Party achieved its best general election results, said Zack Polanski would risk the party losing support it has gained.

The co-leadership contenders did not give specific examples of “polarising” language he had used.



Good gracious, imagine Greens using polarising language within the EcoChurch.

As with all political movements, their polarising language is supposed to be reserved for unbelievers. As sceptics have known for years, unbelievers includes anyone with a marked tendency to snigger at the vast corpus of imminent doom predictions.

Other indications of green laxity are a lack of interest in electric cars, domestic heat pumps, solar panels and conspicuous green anguish. 

Unfortunately for Greens, competition for the imbecile vote may be heating up. Now is not the time to poke green sticks at each other, although for unbelievers it could be fun. 


Ms Chowns said: “As the current Labour government balances the books on the backs of the poorest, and backslides on its commitments to counter climate breakdown, it’s crucially important that the Green Party keeps its distinctive identity as the only party in British politics with climate and environment front and centre.

“To win under first-past-the-post, we have to connect with a wide range of voters. We do that not through polarising language that appeals only to a narrow segment, but with the language of fairness, compassion and hope for a thriving, sustainable future.”

She added voters had indicated they would be more willing to back the Green Party than the new party which is being set up by former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and ex-Labour MP Zarah Sultana.

The bitter fruits of managerialism



Mani Basharzad has a useful CAPX piece on the Online Safety Act and the destructively futile political philosophy behind it.


The Online Safety Act stands against Britain’s liberal tradition

  • We live in the age of managerialism, and the Online Safety Act is one of its bitter fruits
  • A law intended to protect children has ended up exposing many of them to a broader, darker internet
  • This growing obsession with correcting people is not the solution – it’s the problem

Marx was wrong, Burnham was right: capitalism wasn’t replaced by communism, but by managerialism. In ‘The Managerial Revolution’ (1941), James Burnham wrote that the bourgeoisie weren’t sinking into the proletariat – they were being replaced by ‘administrators, technicians, managers’. If, like me, you love Edmund Burke, this might remind you of his mournful line: ‘The age of chivalry is gone. That of sophisters, economists, and calculators has succeeded’. We live in the age of managerialism – and the Online Safety Act is one of its bitter fruits.



Familiar because the trend is familiar, but the whole piece is well worth reading while we still can. It may be an exaggeration to put while we still can, but we don't yet know if it is an exaggeration. There are no free speech fans in this government and nobody who seems to understand the vital corrective functions of free speech.


More broadly, the Online Safety Act stands against our liberal tradition – the one that runs from John Stuart Mill to Frank Knight. For Mill, free speech is a process of discovery; for Knight, democracy is ‘government by discussion’. In both views, progress happens through debate and dissent – not by bureaucrats deciding what we are allowed to say.

This growing obsession with correcting people is not the solution. It’s the problem.

We Are Surrounded By Fantasists


Tuesday, 29 July 2025

Messing about in planes

 




“Believe me, my young friend, there is nothing—absolutely nothing—half so much worth doing as simply messing about in planes. Simply messing,” he went on dreamily: “messing—about—in—planes; messing——”

With apologies to Kenneth Grahame

Or - Don't eat the yellow snow



Trump tells Starmer: Slash taxes and migration to beat Farage


Donald Trump told Sir Keir Starmer how he should slash taxes and stamp out illegal immigration if he is to beat Nigel Farage during an extraordinary hour-long press conference on Monday.

The two leaders held talks at the US president’s Turnberry golf course on the Scottish coast before flying together to Aberdeen.

But when journalists were invited in for a quick chance to take pictures and ask a few questions, Mr Trump seized the opportunity to offer Sir Keir some advice.

“You know, politics is pretty simple,” he said. “I assume there’s a thing going on between you and Nigel, and it’s OK. It’s two parties.

“But generally speaking, the one who cuts taxes the most, the one who gives you the lowest energy prices, the best kind of energy, the one that keeps you out of wars… a few basics.”

“Keep people safe and with money in their pockets and you win elections,” he said.

“And in your case a big immigration component, because I know that your attitude has become strong on immigration, strong on the toughness of immigration,” he said.


By gum, Trump knows how to show up Starmer and his EU cronies. Glaringly obvious advice on a par with don't eat the yellow snow. Wasted on Starmer though.

Trump is having fun of course, he knows Starmer is more likely to carry on digging his hole and if anything dig deeper. Starmer's ideology is a hole-digging ideology where everyone else is supposed to dig too - or just fall in. 

Monday, 28 July 2025

Tesla FSD in the UK

 

Numbers Gaffe



Chancellor in new gaffe over £425bn pension reform


Rachel Reeves has been accused of a 'shocking grasp of detail' and ordered to correct the record after getting basic facts about one of her flagship pension reforms wrong, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

She wants to kickstart sluggish growth by encouraging pension funds to invest more of their money in home-grown ventures. One of her plans is to create a series of town hall 'mega-funds' in the biggest overhaul of the £425 billion Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS) in a decade.

Replying to a question from former Chancellor Lord Lamont, Reeves claimed the LGPS was managed by '96 different administering authorities' which she wants to reduce to 'eight pools'. She repeated the erroneous claims despite being flanked by two Treasury officials and reading from copious briefing notes.

But the LGPS is managed by 86 local authorities, while the number of pools is being cut from eight to six under controversial new laws that will force two pools covering the Tory shires of southern England to find new homes by next March.


It's an interesting gaffe this one. Numerate people would remember the numbers with ease as they are part of the overview of the plan. Many people who have read this article only once will remember the numbers easily enough.

A Chancellor who gets such simple numbers wrong is either easily flustered over numbers or not very good with them anyway. A Chancellor who blagged her way into a job she can't do - well here's another clue to reinforce that view.

Sunday, 27 July 2025

But is it Art?

 

Spotted at Matlock this morning

Toe Tale



Pensioner, 82, convicted of not paying car tax while in hospital having toe amputated

An 82-year-old pensioner has been convicted of not paying car tax while he was in hospital having a toe amputated.

The OAP, who is in assisted living in Liverpool, was pursued through the criminal courts by the DVLA when the bill went unpaid last December.

When prosecuted in the scandal-hit Single Justice Procedure, a secretive fast-track court system, the octogenarian wrote in to explain his medical woes – even including a copy of a hospital treatment record.

But it was not enough to avoid a criminal conviction for keeping an unlicensed vehicle.



These stories are already mounting up, but the problem could have been foreseen when the Single Justice Procedure was devised. Easily foreseen at that, because the media thrive on the tales of woe which were bound to occur.


The Ministry of Justice is considering reform, having promised last November a “fair and effective” system while hinting at “fundamental reform”. But eight months later, no significant changes have being made.


There is an impressive ability to make things worse too, because endless discussions and delays about reform just add another dimension to every story. 

Not that it's likely to make much difference, there is indifference to consequences in there too - part of a wider trend.

Saturday, 26 July 2025

In the absence of truth there is only a struggle for power


An interesting video on the bizarre approach to veracity we see in so many influential media people. Even the word 'bizarre' understates how irrational it is possible to be when striving to undermine rational analysis in the interests of power. 

Nothing to see here



The dizzying fall of the King of Davos

Klaus Schwab was the undisputed “King of Davos” for 55 years. But when his downfall came, it was swift.

The 87-year-old founder of the World Economic Forum (WEF), which holds the annual conference in the Swiss alpine ski resort, fought until the end...

The WEF’s founding bylaws state “the Founder himself designates his successor”, and stipulates he or “at least one member of his immediate family” is on the board of trustees.

Mr Schwab’s plan was to move to a role as non-executive chairman and retire in stages, picking his successor.

But then whistleblowers sent a letter in an email to WEF trustees, including luminaries such Al Gore, the former US vice-president, and cellist Yo Yo Maa.

It accused Mr Schwab and his wife, Hilde, of misusing WEF funds. It said Mr Schwab had used company funds to pay for private massages, and he had redirected WEF resources and staff in a vainglorious bid to get nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.



Even if not all of the allegations are true, nobody paying attention is likely to be even mildly surprised about this. There has never been the smallest hint of integrity about the WEF. 


The title of his book “The Great Reset” – about how the pandemic could remake global economies – has become shorthand for online extremists convinced that plots to create a world government are hatched at Davos.


Very few people realise Al Gore is a luminary but gosh, in spite of these allegations, how could anyone be so cynical about what have essentially been saintly gatherings of smart and well-intentioned people? They understand why they should direct the course of global affairs far better than we do -

Al Gore, Ursula von der Leyen, Emmanuel Macron, John Kerry, Joe Biden, Rachel Reeves, Angela Merkel...

Friday, 25 July 2025

Labour's Danegeld Problem



BMA could sue Labour over plans to fight doctors’ strikes


The British Medical Association (BMA) could take legal action if the Labour Government makes doctors “feel pain” for striking.

Dr Tom Dolphin, the BMA council chairman, said he was “disappointed” to see the Government “taking such a hard line against trade unions”.

His comments came after The Telegraph revealed that Wes Streeting had told NHS leaders that strikes should not be “pain-free” for doctors.

Taking AI seriously



Harry Law has an interesting CAPX about AI and the UK government response to it.


Trump is taking AI seriously – why aren’t we?

  • The Government says we may be four years from AGI, but it doesn't act like it
  • The UK still lacks the core ingredients needed for building a competitive AI industry
  • In the age of Turing, the countries that get rich will have the greatest reserves of compute

AI is an expensive enterprise, one that is as much about raw materials and energy as it is clever algorithms. You need to get hold of chips, stick them in a data centre somewhere and ask them to multiply matrices until the sand starts to think. This is the basic reality at the heart of any attempt for middle powers like the UK to build independent AI capacity. You need cash; you need energy; you need know-how – in that order.

Despite some impressive recent models from Chinese labs, the United States currently leads AI development. That’s because it has deep capital markets willing to spend big on chips to train and serve models, which allows individual companies to spend more on compute than the whole of the UK. The US also has Nvidia, which builds the chips that keep the AI show on the road.


The whole piece is well worth reading, not so much because of what is implied about the future of AI, but because of what is implied about Net Zero. It highlights the futile ideological aspirations which should not dictate any government policy anywhere in the world, but have been dictating UK government policy for years. 

Here in the UK we probably have to cling onto the hope that AI turns to be a failure, because it may be too late to join in. Otherwise the smart people will leave, if they haven't left already.


Of course, the Government isn’t acting like AGI is four years away. If it was, it would be looking to increase compute by 100x from the current floor. It would pull out all the stops to make energy cheaper. And it would offer US firms tax breaks to build compute capacity at home. This would all be small beer, but it might take us from ‘bad’ to ‘somewhat bad’ for the UK’s size relative to Uncle Sam.

Thursday, 24 July 2025

It’s not messy at all



Corbyn launches hard-Left ‘Your Party’ to challenge Starmer

Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana have confirmed the launch of a new hard-Left party to fight Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour.

The pair have invited voters to sign up to the Left-wing faction via the website yourparty.uk, although The Telegraph understands the new project will not be called Your Party and that its name is to be confirmed...

On Thursday, Ms Sultana was forced to clarify that the new political party is not called Your Party in response to a post on X by the news site Politics Joe, which claimed that it was.

Ms Sultana wrote in response, “it’s not called Your Party!”, prompting Mike Tapp, a loyalist Labour MP, to respond with a laughing emoji.

When it was put to Mr Corbyn that the party “looked a bit messy”, he told reporters: “It’s not messy at all. It’s a totally coherent approach. It’s democratic, it’s grassroots and it’s open.”

Asked what the party would be called instead of Your Party, he replied: “It’s your party. We’re going to decide when we’ve had all the responses, and so far the response rate has been massive.


No doubt Jeremy and Zarah will eventually come up with an appropriate name and maybe even a logo and some not at all messy policies. 

Meanwhile, confidence in UK political sanity slips back another couple of notches. 

The Failure of We Know Best



Why Starmer is pinning his hopes on economic growth as he faces eye-watering choices in which there can be no compromise

After the end of the Cold War, leaders across the West banked the so-called "peace dividend" that came with the end of this conflict between Washington and Moscow.

Instead of funding their armies, they invested in the welfare state and public services instead.

But now the tussle over this question is something that the current prime minister is grappling with, and it is shaping up to be one of the biggest challenges for Sir Keir Starmer since he got the job last year.

As Clement Attlee became the Labour prime minister credited with creating the welfare state after the end of the Second World War, so it now falls on the shoulders of the current Labour leader to create the warfare state as Europe rearms.


Strewth - this latest political fashion for militaristic twaddle is unconvincing. It comes across as a weak distraction from endemic government cowardice and incompetence. Leaves a chap wondering about AI systems too - surely they can use one to polish up the twaddle. Apparently not. 

As we know too well, UK nomenklatura still live their professional lives on the basis of We Know Best, but they clearly don't. They don't even try to grapple effectively with that ridiculous tangle of unaccountable ministries, agencies and NGOs we call government. Effective decision-making has been designed out, We Know Best left in.

Yet in spite of We Know Best, the UK cannot support current levels of government taxation, wasteful spending and bureaucratic obstruction amid the relentlessly expansionist nature of the public sector. 

It's not working, can't work and Starmer is not the man to change anything worth changing. He doesn't even understand the problem because the need to understand anything but twaddle and back-stabbing has been designed out of the political system too.

Unfortunately for We Know Best, a significant number of people know it isn't so. The number appears to be growing. 

The Great Race



Trump declares US is going to 'win' AI race as administration unveils action plan

The new blueprint is designed to speed up the building of energy-intensive data centres - which run AI products - by loosening environmental rules, while also vastly expanding the sale of AI technologies overseas.

The plan, which includes 90 recommendations, comes as America attempts to maintain its edge over China, with both superpowers investing heavily in the industry to secure economic and military superiority.



Meanwhile Ursula von der Leyen and Team EU can't be far behind. 




















Wednesday, 23 July 2025

Court makes bad weather illegal



UN's top court says healthy environment is a human right in historic climate ruling

A "clean, healthy and sustainable environment" is a human right and, if countries fail to take "appropriate action to protect the climate system", they could be in violation of international law, according to the UN's top court.

Judges at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) have just delivered a long-awaited advisory opinion on nations' climate obligations and the consequences they face if they don't fulfil them...


Wait for it...

Wait for it...

It also said that countries harmed by climate change could also be entitled to reparations, but what they are owed must be decided on a case-by-case basis.

They never disappoint do they?

Small steps


Grace-and-favour without the grace



Angela Rayner ordered two beds costing £7k for her grace-and-favour Government flat

Angela Rayner ordered two beds costing nearly £7,000 for her grace-and-favour Government flat, it emerged yesterday.

The Deputy Prime Minister bought them in January, and they were installed on Valentine's Day.

Ms Rayner lives in Winston Churchill's old Westminster home, Admiralty House, which was originally built to house the First Lord of the Admiralty.



The person who coined the phrase champagne socialist did us all a favour, as did the person who coined the phrase prosecco socialist

No doubt there are others, well suited to Ms Rayner.

Tuesday, 22 July 2025

It's only money



Only 4% of councils filed full audited data for FY24 public sector-wide accounts


Auditors once again decline to give the green light to the annual roundup of the finances of organisations across government and beyond, with 167 councils providing no data at all

The National Audit Office has refused to sign off the Whole of Government Accounts for the second year running because of concerns about unaudited data submitted by hundreds of local authorities.

Fumigation Month



N. Korean military launches ‘month of fumigation’ to combat bedbug infestation

"The summer is already such an exhausting time, and then you get so itchy at night you can't get any sleep," one soldier said

General Staff Department inspectors realized the severity of the infestation when they saw numerous soldiers with red insect bites on their faces and necks during morning roll call at a company in a Reconnaissance General Bureau communications unit during the July 1-3 observation period...

While each platoon’s barracks is being fumigated, the soldiers are temporarily housed in the barracks of a different platoon. After the doors and windows are sealed, the beds and other furnishings are sprayed with pesticide and the barracks is filled with fumigant gas, which is allowed to work for 48 hours.

The General Staff Department has ordered that each barracks be fumigated two to five times during the month of July, so long as the extermination work doesn’t interfere with the schedule of the summer exercises.


A chap is bound to wonder if Fumigation Month has more health benefits than Veganuary or Dry February. Wes Streeting may know.

Torpedo



Rayner demands tourist tax in clash with Reeves

Angela Rayner is pushing for councils to be given new powers to tax tourists, despite opposition from Rachel Reeves.

The Deputy Prime Minister has argued that councils should be given the power to tax visitors’ hotel stays amid a scramble by cash-strapped local authorities to cash in on booming demand.

It comes as a record 43 million foreign visits to the UK are expected this year, on top of British families travelling within the country.



Rayner is unlikely to care whether the idea is useful or not, she is merely looking for an idea to call her own while aiming a tax torpedo at the sinking ship of a major political rival. 

Unedifying of course, but Rayner doesn't do edifying and the idea is politically smart as the tax is common enough elsewhere.


Treasury officials are opposed to a tourism tax amid fears it would be a fresh blow for hospitality businesses already hit by Labour’s tax raids in last year’s Budget, as well as snuffing out a post-Covid revival in visits.

The row aligns Ms Rayner with powerful regional mayors, including Sir Sadiq Khan and Andy Burnham. It marks her latest clash with the Chancellor after previous disagreements over how to plug a multi-billion-pound fiscal black hole.


Two solid reasons for Angela to fire the torpedo in weepy Rachel's direction. As for any economic consequences - they don't come into it.

Monday, 21 July 2025

It's worse than we thought



Compulsory water meters proposed and warning bills to rise by 30% - landmark report into 'broken' water industry released

• Single integrated water regulators - a single water regulator in England and a single water regulator in Wales. In England, this would replace Ofwat, the Drinking Water Inspectorate and water-environment related functions from the Environment Agency and Natural England. In Wales, Ofwat's economic responsibilities would be integrated into Natural Resources Wales...

• Eight new regional water system planning authorities in England and one national authority in Wales to be responsible for water investment plans reflecting local priorities and streamlining the planning processes...


• Greater consumer protection - this includes upgrading the consumer body Consumer Council for Water, into an Ombudsman for Water to give stronger protection to customers and a clearer route to resolving complaints. Advocacy duties are to be transferred to Citizens Advice.



This is likely to result in the same functions and the same people subsumed into a larger hierarchy. It's how these things are done. Not that reform of some kind isn't worthwhile, but here in the UK we don't have the political will to deliver it, hence the 30% increase in bills and it won't stop there.

It's not the 'broken' water industry, but the broken politics we have to be concerned about. Listen carefully and the anguished cry is almost audible already - "it's worse than we thought." 

Pinheads



Bluetongue has been detected in England. Here’s what you should know

A tiny midge, no bigger than a pinhead, is bringing UK farming to its knees. The culprit? A strain of the bluetongue virus that’s never been seen before.


Time for a routine word search...

Ah - here we are -


Climate change is making outbreaks like this more likely. Milder winters and cooler, wetter summers are ideal for midges, increasing both their numbers and their biting activity.


But strangely enough -


As UK faces third heatwave, is this 'just summer'?

2025 is already shaping up to be an extraordinary year for weather records in parts of the UK.

Spring 2025 was the UK's warmest and sunniest on record. Hot on its heels, June became the warmest month on record for England. And now, we're already experiencing the third heatwave of the year—and it's not even mid-July.


Slow to catch on



UK consumer sentiment suffers first big fall in nearly 3 years, Deloitte says


LONDON (Reuters) -British consumer sentiment had a marked fall for the first time in nearly three years last month, reflecting increased worries about job security, a Deloitte survey showed on Monday.


Councillor claims people being made 'poorer' due to net zero targets

Lancashire residents are being made “poorer” by “unachievable” attempts to hit net zero targets by 2050, according to the new environment cabinet member at Lancashire County Council. Reform UK’s Joshua Roberts criticised the government’s legally binding carbon reduction commitments – and also left unanswered a direct question about whether he even accepted “the science” behind climate change.


"But they're so slow at their lessons," grumbled Joan. "One repeats it and repeats it; and then, when one feels that surely now at least one has drummed it into their heads, one finds they have forgotten all that one has ever said."

Jerome K. Jerome - All Roads Lead to Calvary (1919)

Sunday, 20 July 2025

Oh! what tangled bungs we weave



Middle-class families could face higher water bills to subsidise poorer households

Labour ministers will be urged to introduce a nationwide scheme that would see poorer families given huge discounts on their charges.

The recommendation on creating a national social tariff will be presented to Sir Keir Starmer in a Government-ordered review of the water industry on Monday.



This probably has more to do with rebuilding Labour's traditional class structure. Could become complicated though, as some poorer families already subsidise Ed Miliband's middle-class windmill fantasies via their electricity bills.


Oh! what tangled bungs we weave
When first we practise to deceive!

Not quite Sir Walter Scott

Saturday, 19 July 2025

Alarmingly Silly



My family want to live a sustainable life – but how can we trust firms are eco-friendly?

Which? research has raised the alarm about problematic environmental claims being made on a huge scale, which can result in consumers buying products that are not as sustainable as they thought. Our researchers trawled through more than 20,000 online product listings using AI software trained to find green claims.

We then delved deeper into 1,000 online product descriptions in a range of categories, including food, cleaning, electronics, clothing and personal care items, sold at popular UK retailers such as Argos, Next, Ocado and Tesco...

A Chad Valley Wooden Puzzles set (from Argos) carried the claim that because it was made of wood it was “more kind to the environment”. But without being clear what specific environmental aspects are being compared – its carbon footprint or the resources it uses, for example – or what it is kinder than (e.g. plastic toys), this could also be misleading.


Oh dear, there is eco-danger here, the danger of having to define terms instead of allowing them to float around the ecosphere where unauthorised users can take unauthorised advantage of their unsustainable silliness.

It leads a chap to wonder if there is more to be gained from curing silliness than sickness, but of course this isn't the underlying problem. It's about government controlling everything, including Chad Valley Wooden Puzzles. 

They don't really like puzzles.

You may fool all the people some of the time...



You may fool all the people some of the time; you can even fool some of the people all the time; but you can't fool all of the people all the time.

Abraham Lincoln


We live in strange times. So much is unconvincing and becoming even less convincing year on year. So much that was supposed to convince a few decades ago now doesn’t. 

Suppose we begin with UK politics which never was convincing, but politicians did at least play the role with some conviction. Not now.

Most UK MPs don’t do politics in the sense that they don’t provide voters with some attempt at political oversight of the machinery of government. They don’t repeal and enact legislation towards that end. They act out the role of politicians but don’t do it well and barely attempt the hard bit, the political oversight.

In this sense, Keir Starmer isn’t the UK Prime Minister in that he doesn’t even act out the role to any worthwhile standard. Overseas meetings, reliance on threadbare ideology and a few photo opportunities do nothing to enhance his attempts at the role. His ministers are just as poor.

We have no Chancellor of the Exchequer, no Foreign Secretary, no Home Secretary and so on. All we have is an excessive reliance on weak acting and not enough ability to flesh out the role into something worth voting for. Weak slogans, transparent evasion and dim-witted intransigence are not enough to play the role, let alone do the political oversight.

We see all of this at the moment. UK politicians appear to know well enough that they have to be more convincing, yet most don’t know how. Perhaps it’s voters too, maybe the willingness to be convinced is fading.

Friday, 18 July 2025

But illusions don’t last forever



Damian Pudner has a useful CAPX reminder of the dire state of UK fiscal sustainability.


Britain’s fiscal fantasy is over – and time is running out

  • Investors are beginning to rethink Britain’s long-term fiscal sustainability
  • We don’t need higher taxes. We need a better state
  • Rachel Reeves' Autumn Budget will be a moment of truth

It will begin, as financial crises so often do, not with a bang, but a murmur.

A failed gilt auction. A modest rise in yields. A subtle but persistent shift in investor sentiment. No panic, no headlines – just the quiet sound of markets beginning to lose faith.

For years, Britain has indulged in a fiscal illusion. Ministers promised what they couldn’t afford. Civil servants massaged the assumptions. The Bank of England quietly underwrote it all. Cheap money, the legacy of interest rates held too low for too long, enabled bad habits. And for a while, the bond market played along.

But illusions don’t last forever. And now, the spell is breaking.


A familiar illusion but the whole piece is well worth reading as a reminder that this one is finally coming up against the real world.    


Public spending is now above 44% of GDP, the highest on peacetime record, and equivalent to around £45,000 per household. The tax burden is at a 70-year high. Productivity across public services remains stagnant at best. Reeves has ruled out increases to income tax, VAT or National Insurance. But not stealth taxes. Fiscal drag – the silent squeeze of frozen thresholds – is expected to raise £44.6bn by 2028, according to the OBR, most of it from middle earners.

Luxury he can’t afford

 

Thursday, 17 July 2025

Every cloud...



Labour 'won't be able to govern' unless revolts against Keir Starmer stop, warns minister Jess Phillips


Labour will not be able to govern if the revolts against Sir Keir Starmer continue, a minister warned after he suspended four MPs over “persistent breaches of party discipline”.

Alloa and Grangemouth MP Brian Leishman, North East Hertfordshire MP Chris Hinchliff, York MP Rachael Maskell and Poole MP Neil Duncan-Jordan have been stripped of the Labour party whip after helping to organise the welfare reforms rebellion.



There are many things a chap could say about this, few of them constructive. 

Yet there is of course an entirely obvious way to stop the revolts against Keir Starmer - one which could be mildly constructive. Not something I'd bet on though - the constructive possibility.

What a shower.

Faith in our institutions



16-year-olds to be able to vote
at next General Election in landmark shake-up which could backfire on Labour


Announcing the reforms, Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said: “For too long public trust in our democracy has been damaged and faith in our institutions has been allowed to decline.       

“We are taking action to break down barriers to participation that will ensure more people have the opportunity to engage in UK democracy and delivering on our manifesto commitment to give sixteen-year-olds the right to vote.   

“We cannot take our democracy for granted, and by protecting our elections from abuse and boosting participation we will strengthen the foundations of our society for the future.” 



Something we have learned again from this and previous governments is how unreliable calendar age can be as a guide to the use of accurate adult language embedded in the real world. We have known this for a long time.


Tsz-lu said to the Master, "As the prince of Wei, sir, has been waiting for you to act for him in his government, what is it your intention to take in hand first?"

"One thing of necessity," he answered—"the rectification of terms."

"That!" exclaimed Tsz-lu. "How far away you are, sir! Why such rectification?"

"What a rustic you are, Tsz-lu!" rejoined the Master. "A gentleman would be a little reserved and reticent in matters which he does not understand. If terms be incorrect, language will be incongruous; and if language be incongruous, deeds will be imperfect. So, again, when deeds are imperfect, propriety and harmony cannot prevail, and when this is the case laws relating to crime will fail in their aim; and if these last so fail, the people will not know where to set hand or foot. Hence, a man of superior mind, certain first of his terms, is fitted to speak; and being certain of what he says can proceed upon it. In the language of such a person there is nothing heedlessly irregular—and that is the sum of the matter."


The Analects of Confucius
  

Voting for the Magic Money Tree



Labour voters back doctors over five-day strike and think Wes Streeting should meet pay demands

Labour voters support junior doctors’ plans to stage a five-day walkout next week, even as public support for the strike collapses, according to a new poll.

Overall people oppose the industrial action due to start next Friday by a margin of 44 per cent to 34 per cent, pollsters More in Common found.

However, Labour voters support the strikes, with 47 per cent in favour and 35 per cent against, in a major challenge to the stance taken by the health secretary Wes Streeting who has vociferously pressed doctors’ leaders to ditch their plans.



Yet another broad hint that incompetent voters should be included in the broader social and political incompetence mix. 

To say this is not to say that one side is right and the other wrong, or that there are lines professional people such as doctors should not cross, even though there are such lines. The problem here is voters who among other shibboleths, effectively vote for an NHS which cannot be reformed in any worthwhile sense.

Wednesday, 16 July 2025

Labour empowering HR professionals



Len Shackleton has a useful CAPX piece on the futility of Labour trying to boost growth and empower HR professionals at the same time. 

Interesting because it reflects a remarkable absence of business acumen - or a remarkable increase in whatever the opposite of business acumen might be.


Labour won’t boost growth by empowering HR professionals

  • Labour's Employment Rights Bill punishes both employers and workers
  • A well-functioning labour market is one which adapts rapidly to change
  • Tying up employers in red tape will do nothing to promote economic prosperity

The Government came into office hoping that by boosting economic growth it could maintain and expand welfare provision and pursue its many other objectives without excessive levels of taxation. It has not so far been successful; indeed, GDP appears to have fallen in the last two months.

The UK’s poor growth performance in recent years has many causes, but one important factor has been the way in which our labour market has been increasingly hampered by regulations and mandates imposed by successive administrations of both major parties.


The whole piece is well worth reading as yet more confirmation that Keir Starmer's focus on growth was dishonest from the beginning. 


An increasingly scelerotic [sic] labour market will particularly penalise new labour market entrants, who will struggle to find suitable work; expect higher youth unemployment and inactivity. But we will all suffer as faster economic growth, which could in principle ameliorate our desperate fiscal position, becomes a lost hope.

Politics – a casual activity

 


There are some senior politicians who seem to saunter through the corridors of power like Valentine in the Wilkie Collins quote below - without quite knowing their own motives.

They are confident within a secure carapace of easy mendacity, comfortable and unlikely to suffer unduly from disasters they casually initiate or just as casually promote because that’s the easier path to take.
 

It was a common predicament with him not to know his own motives, generally from not inquiring into them. There are men who run breathlessly—men who walk cautiously—and men who saunter easily through the journey of life. Valentine belonged to the latter class; and, like the rest of his order, often strayed down a new turning, without being able to realize at the time what purpose it was which first took him that way. Our destinies shape the future for us out of strange materials.

Wilkie Collins - Hide and Seek (1854)

Tuesday, 15 July 2025

Must annoy those who contribute



BBC stars handed bumper pay rises for podcasts

Laura Kuenssberg and Nick Robinson pocketed some of the BBC’s biggest pay rises last year thanks to podcasting and other BBC sidelines.

Robinson’s annual salary was £410,000-£414,999, making him the corporation’s highest-paid journalist.

The rise from £345,000-£349,999 in the previous financial year was thanks to his weekly hosting of The Today Podcast, plus his interviews with party leaders during the general election. This comes on top of his main role hosting Radio 4’s Today programme.



It can be useful to describe BBC journalists as instructors rather than journalists. From this perspective they instruct viewers on what to notice and what to ignore, how to think about those things they notice and how to discuss them socially.


He allotted a salary from his own funds to the two instructors, a salary twice as large as their meagre official salary, and one day he said to some one who expressed surprise, "The two prime functionaries of the state are the nurse and the schoolmaster."

Victor Hugo - Les Misérables (1862)

The Howell Effect



Drought declared in the Midlands - as people are urged to 'use water wisely'

Drought has been declared in the West and East Midlands, with dry weather continuing to "impact water resources across England".

The Environment Agency said the National Drought Group (NDG) had stepped up its operational response and "asks people to play their part in managing the drought and use water wisely".


It's been raining for hours in our corner of Derbyshire. Not that one wet day will fill the reservoirs, but it's an entertaining reminder of Denis Howell's role as Minister for Drought in 1976 and the heavy rainfall which occurred a few days after his appointment.

A shriek in the supermarket



A shrieking child in the supermarket - familiar enough to all so there is no point paying much attention to it, but it does raise the issue of how long it can take to come down from an emotional outburst.

Worth pondering because there are adults who also take too long to come down from an emotional outburst even though they don’t fill a supermarket with unappeasable shrieks. At a quieter level though – that may be just what they do and it may go on for much longer than the shrieking child.

If we go off at a tangent to this problem of not letting go, then we come across another familiar type of behaviour. We come across people who can’t let go of a weak argument, dubious standpoint, misplaced loyalty or even a factual inaccuracy. It can be emotionally disturbing to let go in such cases. There are no shrieks in the supermarket, but it can seem undignified.

Yet if enough members of the same social class share the same dubious standpoint, the same loyalties and even the same factual inaccuracy, then no dignity is lost by holding onto it. Being wrong can be the dignified standpoint. Even a pompous idiot can be dignified in these circumstances. There is such a thing as dignified idiocy, as Dickens frequently highlighted.


Mr Podsnap, as a representative man, is not alone in caring very particularly for his own dignity, if not for that of his acquaintances, and therefore in angrily supporting the acquaintances who have taken out his Permit, lest, in their being lessened, he should be.

Charles Dickens - Our Mutual Friend (1864–1865)

Monday, 14 July 2025

Oh dear



OPEC bans media outlets accused of advocating transition to “a net-zero economy”

The Oil-price outlet is reporting that OPEC has refused accreditation for Reuters, Bloomberg, the New York Times, the Financial Times, and the Wall Street Journal for its meeting in Vienna, which is taking place this week.

“We believe that transparency and a free press serve readers, markets, and the public interest, and we object to this restriction on coverage,” Bloomberg quoted a Reuters spokesman as saying, adding that it had been given no explanation by OPEC for the decision to refuse it accreditation.


"We believe that transparency and a free press..." 

As long as it allows the one-sided advocacy of expensively fashionable politics our social class supports.

Lord Ridley v the 'Experts'

 

Under threat



‘Extreme’ heat and rainfall is becoming the new normal in the UK, says Met Office

The Met Office has warned that extremes of heat and rainfall are becoming the normal as the climate continues to warm in the UK.

The latest state of the UK climate report, published in the Royal Meteorological Society’s International Journal of Climatology, shows the impact of human-caused global warming on the UK’s weather, seas, people and wildlife...

The Energy Secretary called the findings “a stark warning” to take action on climate and nature.

“Our British way of life is under threat,” Mr Miliband told the PA news agency.



No it's not a stark warning, nobody thinks it is a stark warning, or even a warning. Only a few loons believe that. 

As for "the new normal", it seems to be a constant stream of low grade official propaganda, but this particular blob of drivel comes across to this observer as transparent distraction politics. 

“Our British way of life,” began fading away some time ago under the influence of a range of pressures, including persistent government incompetence, overspending, mendacity, fashionable ideology, ignorance and neglect. One of those pressures on “our British way of life” comes in the shape of Edward Samuel Miliband, but there are many others.

It's desperate stuff though, trying to distract voters from the unlovely mess by pointing a flaky finger at what on the whole is better weather plus a few extremes we've always had to deal with, even if dealing with them via arm-waving has become the new normal.

Sunday, 13 July 2025

Two Tier Fairness



Tax 'fairness' comment is latest hint from government increases could be on way at next budget

Speaking to Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips, Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander was asked if Sir Keir Starmer and the rest of the cabinet had discussed hiking taxes in the wake of the government's failed welfare reforms, which were shot down by their own MPs...

Ms Alexander said she wouldn't comment directly on taxes and the budget at this point, adding: "So, the chancellor will set her budget. I'm not going to sit in a TV studio today and speculate on what the contents of that budget might be.

"When it comes to taxation, fairness is going to be our guiding principle."


Labour to spend millions on electric car handouts

Labour will unveil £700 million of taxpayer-funded subsidies to encourage the public to buy more electric vehicles (EVs).

Heidi Alexander, the Transport Secretary, will this week announce grants for drivers to help cover the cost of a new EV, as well as more cash for charging points.



To be fair, it's worth adding that two tier fairness is a key point of socialism.

Unlocking



'
New beginning' for Peak District landmark after major windfall

A popular Derbyshire landmark in the heart of the county is looking forward to a 'new beginning' after scoring a huge grant. Cromford Mill's Arkwright Society has announced that the site has secured £1.3 million in "vital" funding from the National Lottery's Heritage Fund that will allow a "once-in-a-generation" project to take place.

Éilis Scott, chief executive of the Arkwright Society -

"Restoring our vacant historic industrial buildings is about unlocking new opportunities, sparking innovation, and using the stories of creativity and enterprise to inspire. Cromford Mills is for everyone, whether you work here, volunteer or visit. But keeping the mill gates open isn’t easy. Continued support is vital to conserve these buildings and ensure they remain open, welcoming and full of life - relevant for today and for generations to come.”



Whenever anything is being promoted, it's remarkable how the same words tend to be used over and over again, like an outline script where the subject can be filled in later. For example, there is a lot of 'unlocking' going on at the moment and it's not necessarily a good thing. 


Unlocking billions in private capital to tackle climate change


The UK’s International Climate Finance (ICF) mobilises billions in public and private funding for clean energy projects in developing countries.

Saturday, 12 July 2025

Reeves plots



Reeves plots £1.7bn tax on businesses

Rachel Reeves is plotting a £1.7 billion tax raid in the autumn which retailers have warned will accelerate the decline of high streets.


Is this Britain's most depressing ghost town?

Nowhere sums up the decline of the British high street quite as graphically as Burslem.

Once a thriving, mega-rich market town, it is now so dominated by boarded-up buildings that there seem to be more empty storefronts than occupied ones.

Breaking the away day curse



Starmer aims to break cabinet away day curse

Sir Keir Starmer was hoping to break the curse of the cabinet away day as he summoned his ministers to Chequers for the launch of a summer "refresh" of his troubled government.

The aim: to plot a course for a recovery during Labour's second year in power after a first 12 months blighted by economic woes, rows over freebies, humiliating U-turns and rebellions.

In the past, the away day rules from the No 10 high command have included no woolly jumpers and no sandwiches. This time, the rule to ministers was: "Don't call it a reset."



Lifting the curse is simple.

An away day is far too short.

An away year would lift the curse.

Privilege denied



Donald Trump may be denied privilege of addressing parliament on UK state visit

The fact that that parliament isn't sitting for much of September could help resolve a potentially awkward issue.

Donald Trump may be denied the honour of addressing parliament on his state visit to the UK later this year, with no formal request yet submitted for him to be given that privilege.


Strewth, the transparent language they use to spin their nonsense.

Whatever privilege there is will occur if one or two of the failures, grifters, loons, charlatans, dullards, professional whiners, creeps and deranged ideologues were to learn a lasting lesson about leadership and realpolitik.

Won't happen.

Friday, 11 July 2025

Net Zero Won't Fix This



Inside London’s school closures crisis as more than 30 primaries set to shut or merge within weeks


London is one of the busiest cities in the world. A major global metropolis home to nearly nine million people, with 22.7 per cent of those people under the age of 18, according to the most recent census data. And yet, many of the city’s primary school children have only a handful of classmates.

An investigation by the Standard has found that at least 30 primary schools could shut or merge across the capital by the end of the academic year, with politicians warning that the problem “is only going to get worse” as families continue to be driven out of the city...

Last September, the Education Policy Institute predicted that there would be another drop of around 52,000 primary school-aged children in London by 2028. In Lambeth alone, there are nearly 1,000 fewer children in local primary schools compared to 10 years ago, council figures show. Over in Wandsworth, as few as eight children have been turning up to start reception in some schools last year.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the city, the issue has become so bad that the maternity unit at one of the capital’s biggest hospitals, the Royal Free Hospital in north London, was forced to close due to falling birth rates.

You fellows are all doomed



Heat deaths in England and Wales could surge 50-fold, study warns


It comes as areas of the UK face another heatwave, with temperatures over the next few days forecast to be above average and exceed 30C (86F) for many.

Annual heat-related deaths might climb into the tens of thousands in the coming decades, according to research by University College London (UCL) and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

They say today's baseline figure of 634 heat deaths a year could hit 10,317 in the 2050s and, in a worst-case scenario, 34,027 in the 2070s.



“Nothing can be more certain,” he continued, “if corn con­tinues to be imported from America, in a hundred years from now there won’t be a single peasant left in all France. Do you think that our land can contend with yonder one? Long before we have had time to put these new plans in practice, the foreigners will have inundated us with grain. I have read a book which tells all about it. You fellows are all doomed—”

Emile Zola - La Terre (1887)