Wednesday, 27 October 2021
Buna dimineața, dragi tovarăși si prieteni!
Vaccinated and unvaccinated people dying from Covid
The Romanian Covid Vaccine Committee says that vaccines reduce the risk of infection to one fifth of what the risk would be without a vaccine and the risk of dying of Covid to one twentieth.
This does not mean people who have been vaccinated do not die of Covid. Not at all.
Monday, 25 October 2021
Autumn in Cișmigiu
The end of the Cold War robbed the world of its only interesting thing. Bucharest's Cismigiu Park would have been a great place for a dead drop, before the revolution.
Thursday, 21 October 2021
Tuesday, 19 October 2021
Monday, 18 October 2021
Saturday, 16 October 2021
David's murder
Back then I was in sympathy with the Harold Macmillan wing of the Tory Party and had worked for Mr Macmillan's (not yet the Earl of Stockton's) son Maurice two years earlier.
'We'll have to disenfranchise the unemployed. They'll be the majority next time.'
Friday, 15 October 2021
My old boss Sir David Amess has been murdered
A true conservative
I was extremely flattered indeed when a friend who reads my blog said I reminded him of Thesiger. Praise indeed.
What made him so interested in these people, and so capable of winning their trust, and so determined to spend his life among them?
The war by experts against the rest
The thing is that obeying experts is not following the science. The scientific method is to question received opinions and to test them repeatedly against experience.
This goes for history more than any other science, if history is one (I always found that debate completely barren, like the American one about whether the Nazis were left-wing).
This is the way people like taxi drivers and barbers work, which is why they know everything.
A war is going on in the developed world between graduates (especially ones under say 40) and the non-graduates, exemplified by the taxi driver and barber class.
It's part of the war between big cities and small towns and is essentially a battle for control by the expert class.
Covid is about that, obviously.
So is climate change.
Immigrants and refugees are too, because the expert class favours both.
So was Brexit. Lord Chancellor Gove's remark is misquoted often but was very true.
“I think the people of this country have had enough of experts with organisations with acronyms saying that they know what is best and getting it consistently wrong.”
Sunday, 10 October 2021
Are Scandinavians nearly perfect people?
He might be right in his second point.
Saturday, 9 October 2021
Is Uncle Sam committing suicide or being euthenised?
The death of the white hart
Sky news:
White stag shot dead by police after running wild around Merseyside streets
Police said the animal could not be left to find its own way to safety because it was becoming distressed and creating danger for motorists and members of the public.
Sweden has few Covid cases despite not having had a lockdown
Thursday, 7 October 2021
Ian Duncan Smith, the forgotten father of Brexit
I am reading All In It Together, Alwyn Turner's history of Great Britain from the momentous 1997 election and Tony Blair to the momentous 2015 election, the eve of Brexit. It came out in June.
It makes me even more grateful than ever that I came to live in Romania in 1998.
History is little more than the register of the crimes, follies, and misfortunes of mankind, according to Gibbon. That was certainly a good description of the history of Great Britain under New Labour from 1997 to 2010.
I didn't like Margaret Thatcher or Thatcherism but it was not true of the preceding years of Conservative rule from 1979.
In the end it became clear that she had restored England's self-confidence, as Ronald Reagan (someone else whose qualities I couldn't see) did America's. This was the test.
The UK was a cohesive, unitary state. Our wars were just ones. Our borders were by 21st century standards fairly secure. The country received fifty thousand 'secondary immigrants' (spouses from the Sub-Continent) a year and numerous asylum seekers.
It was interesting to learn from All In It Together that Brexit might well not have happened had Ken Clark been elected Conservative leader in 2001, rather than the completely ineffectual Ian Duncan Smith.
I presumably knew it at the time but had not retained it. This is the cleverness of the book. Mrs Thatcher was the first politician to propose a referendum on the euro and Tony Blair had promised he would not join the single currency without one.
Labour (it was Gordon Brown's decision) might have risked holding one had the Euro-enthusiast Ken been leader of the main opposition party, because it would have split the Conservatives in two. The third party, the Liberal Democrats, were the most enthusiastic about the euro of any party.
Instead, with Maastricht Treaty rebel IDS leading the Tories, they would have fought a referendum on the euro hard. It would have isolated the Europhiles in the Tory party and the euro referendum would probably (almost certainly) have been lost.
But had the UK adopted the Euro as Tony Blair wanted, Brexit would have been close to impossible.
The reason why IDS won the leadership was because Tory members had been given the right to vote on the leadership in 1998, following a similar decision by Labour in 1993.
This is also the reason why Boris Johnson became leader. Most Tory MPs did not want either man.
William Hague who changed the party rules is therefore another father of Brexit, strongly though he opposed Brexit.
David Cameron was not well known, had not been in the House long and was too inexperienced to be leader. Had only MPs voted it is unlikely that he would have won, though certain that the lazy, arrogant David Davis would have lost. MPs know one another.
Theresa May was very much worse even than Ian Duncan Smith, so the Tory electoral system has not worked well.
The previous one, invented by Humphrey Barclay who then became Labour and by the time I met him a Social Democrat, had done better. It produced Edward Heath and Margaret Thatcher, John Major and William Hague.
Michael Howard, who was the only excellent leader after William Hague, was chosen without a vote.
Perhaps best of all was the old system whereby leaders emerged and were summoned to Buckingham Palace to kiss hands.Meanwhile, Labour's 1993 decision to give party members a vote on the leadership led to Ed Miliband and Jeremy Corbyn being elected leader.
I was pleased to learn that one of Mr. Blair's speeches included the line 'I am proud of the British empire' and sorry that it was excised after strong protests from Robin Cook.
However, Gordon Brown did say ‘The days of Britain having to apologise for its colonial history are over’ in a speech in Tanzania in 2005. Good for him.
In fact, the
British did an immeasurable amount of good in Africa.
Africa owes much more to Europeans than vice versa.
This is obvious, except it no longer is obvious.
Freedom and especially freedom of speech became very much more limited in the UK after 1997.
In 2001 broadcaster Anne Robinson joked about the Welsh on BBC television, 'I've never really taken to the Welsh. What are they for?’
She and Greg Dyke, Director-General of the BBC, were questioned by police
in connection with the incident.
As I mentioned in a previous post, Tony Blair had earlier got into trouble for racism towards the Welsh. An account of the 1999 Welsh Assembly elections, serialised in The Mail on Sunday, revealed that he had railed against ‘the f***ing Welsh’.
North Wales Police immediately launched an investigation. ‘It is not trivial,’ said the chief constable.
Alwyn Turner disagrees. ‘It was, though. It was really very trivial indeed. It was a man shouting at the telly in the privacy of his own home.’
Repeating aloud Christian, Jewish, Muslim or Buddhist teaching on sexual morality was, and remains, borderline illegal.
"…there were still some who believed homosexual practices sinful and it was they who attracted the attention of the police. Both the Catholic writer Lynette Burrows in December 2005 and Sir Iqbal Sacranie of the Muslim Council of Britain the following month were investigated the following month for religiously orthodox comments made on BBC radio."
The BBC 'hurriedly distanced itself' from the words complained of:
"in a live radio show it sometimes happens that challenging and unpleasant opinions are expressed."
Police did not bring charges, but said they were obliged to speak to people after a homophobic incident was reported.
“'It is all about reassuring the community,' explained a spokesperson. Not everyone was reassured by this new role of the police as guardians of public manners, however.”
Monday, 4 October 2021
Saturday, 2 October 2021
Finding a refuge to, not from, reality
I found these two gems in Spectator USA today and yesterday.
Every diner and truck stop I’ve ever come across has presented a refreshing refuge to (not from) reality, hard to find in today’s woke world of pretend problems. Impervious to the affectations of modernity, these restaurants remain bastions of the freedom and honesty America was built upon.Teresa Mull