Category: Uncategorized

  • Things I do not understand part 2

    I find it extra ordinary that our leaders still pretend that we lead the world, and go on acting like it, trying to right the world at our expense, when the French take over our power supplies, the Dane’s take over our banks, and the Yankee crooks are allowed to cripple us financially? Once upon a time we built a large number of the railways across the world, our ships sailed all the seas, and we were a power to be reckoned with. What has changed all that? I suspect it’s because the other nations woke up to what we were doing. I just wish the politicians would lower their sights just a little, I can no longer afford to be a world leader.

    When the scientists proved to me that the gas used in my fridge would be causing global warming when I got rid of the fridge, and all the rest of the science that went with it, I was astounded, as I had done a course in geology years ago. I listened to all the political outpourings about what we were to do to save the world, and tried to do my little bit, which I thought was a total waste of time in the context of what was going on in the whole of the world. Now I see incredible change in the weather, in the conditions of the Earth with its flooding, tsunamis, eruptions, and on and on. I no longer believe all of this is as a result of global warming, on the contrary’ I think if some of the same scientists drilled through the ice, drilled through the rocks, examined fossils, they would find similar periods of unusually fast change in the earth’s history.

    Years ago people didn’t talk of initiatives all the time. It seems that this government is obsessed with initiatives, we get them two or three times a week. For example, nine universities are co-operating to ensure that the brighter pupils from poorer homes will take up university degree courses. I got the impression, true or not, that the pupils would have further training to make them acceptable to the universities. What was certain was that there were particular universities, thought to be more advantageous than others, that were grouping together with a system which allowed them, if they were not able to give a place to a deemed bright student, that student would then be recommended to other universities in the system for a place. If the idea is so good why are only nine universities involved instead of all, right across the board? I think that someone somewhere is missing the real point. I have said before as many have, that the educational standards have been steadily dropping, and that many universities, to maintain their attendance roles, have been reducing their acceptance levels, and in consequence having to degrade the degree levels. Retired secondary school teachers, will tell you the same thing. Have the politicians also forgotten the current enormous dropout rate? In the 40s it was probably as low as 2%, but we valued the experience, we didn’t take it as a right. Other people have called the system social engineering; I believe it is a publicity ruse.

  • Something I really do not understand

    At a time when Labour is fighting a rearguard action trying two stave off losing the next election, the Prime Minister comes out with a proposal in stages to ultimately give us all identity cards, a subject which I believe is a total anathema to the whole nation. The strangest part of it is that the Tories have stated categorically that if they come to power, they will do away with the proposal that we should ultimately all require to have a card. Labour proposes to bring it in, in stages, with immigrants being the first to require a card. This is a sop to those who feel that there are too many immigrants here without permission. I realise that in the next few days everybody with a blog will be bleating, some writing in the newspapers, or talking on television or the radio, and condemning that this proposal should be taken much further than the first stage, although the government is intending that the next stage includes students. I am writing because not only do I think the general scheme is wrong, too expensive and totally unnecessary in the wider context, but I am worried that we are opening a door to enable the world’s criminal elements to obtain all our vital information.

    When I was a student I was told that it was possible to duplicate someone’s fingerprints on to an article by using something like Sellotape, and that was 50+ years ago. If you study crime at all, you will find that from the dawn of time every scheme to thwart the thief was ultimately bypassed by the thieves. The greatest example of this is the level of criminality being perpetrated on the Internet, being cancelled year-on-year and bypassed year-on-year. The government seems to be making these cards too sophisticated for everyday need, with the result that they will cost a fortune to design, for the machinery to implement them and check their validity, with all that means in centres throughout the country, and with stop and such etc. At the end of the day more records are probably going to have to be kept by the various authorities, insurance companies, and employers, opening up more opportunities for fraud, and wasting the time of all those people keeping these records.

    The most heinous part of this proposal is that the government itself cannot keep control of the information, so why should we give it to them to hand out again, either by theft, negligence, or just plain pure stupidity? All I can say is that I’m grateful that I am so old I am unlikely to qualify for any more identity cards, discs or even secret handshakes, I’m just sorry that those coming behind may not be so lucky.

  • I beg to differ

    Having read a number of the reports of statements made by different MPs, I get the impression that all they are interested in is their own party politics, and the internal infighting that is coupled with it. The interests of the country seem to be on the backburner at a time of the greatest turmoil in our history since the First World War, when we are currently fighting two wars, and are facing not only national but international financial meltdown. I have been writing, as others have, that this government, ever since its inception, has been making change for the sake of change, without trial periods in test areas, and often against the advice of the professionals involved. The government spin doctors issue statistics of how various aspects are improving, when the man in the street knows full well that they are just publicity, and have absolutely no bearing on the true situation. When things go wrong Ministers come on television and give us spiels of rhetoric, but the outcome is no better, or even if there is one, it is short lived.

    Now we are faced with a Prime Minister in whom the country has little faith, and a government divided against itself. With the run-up to the next Labour AGM, we are hearing a lot of different inflections, issued by members of the Cabinet and senior Labour politicians, that are more to do with self-aggrandisement than the serious issues facing the country. It is therefore unsurprising, that as we are getting conflicting suggestions from the other parties, which also involve change rather than stability, that many of us feel that the political choices open to us are not for picking the best, but perhaps avoiding the worst. If this statement is true, then we would be best off with a hung parliament, which will involve the LibDems making inroads, by getting their act together. I am very old, perhaps losing the plot, but all I see on the benches of parliament are professional politicians, college rather than experience trained, led by young, relatively inexperienced leaders. It is long political experience which tempers rash statements and untried policies, and is cautious when dealing in international relationships, all of which have been lacking in recent years, and are still lacking. Lying to the electorate, either directly or by implication, has increased considerably since my day, when a Chancellor resigned because there had been a minor budget leak.

  • Logic and honesty in short supply

    I am referring mainly to this endless debacle of airlines going out of business. First of all I want to consider insurance, in the round. Over a period of nearly 60 years I have been duped a number of times, by allegedly responsible and trustworthy insurance companies, because the small print has been both ambiguous and basically interpreted in the interests of the company rather than the client. One of the aspects of this current scourge has been that many of the travellers have innocently believed that they were covered for such an eventuality. From my own experience I believe that the whole of the insurance industry should be more under government scrutiny, so the conditions are transparent to the most unworldly and innocent of clients.

    A writer on air travel and airway logistics, speaking on the television news, stated that there had been about 25 instances of aeroplanes being grounded without warning as a result of the firm going into receivership. He then blandly stated that this last instance was as a result of the accountants responsible for the receivership, refusing to permit the tour company to fly their planes home. What I found even more remarkable was that he blandly said that there will be many more occasions like this one. I would have thought, after the first two or three occurrences, and in the face of the occurrence being repeated as a result of the price of oil, that there would have been an international agreement whereby governments interceded in these situations and would have some agreement to arrange for the aircraft to return to base bringing with them as many of the holidaymakers as possible, and where necessary, utilise them further and bring back the remainder. To my simple mind the transportation logistics were in place and could have been triggered almost instantly. This would have had the effect of saving the individual vast sums of money for overnight stays, finding other transport, and the worry, especially for those with young children. The fact that after 25 such occurrences there is still nothing in place, seems to me a total lack of humanity by the travel industry and the governments involved.

    I am neither an accountant nor a logistical engineer, but there seems to have been more than a little sleight of hand when it came to the cost of fuel. As I understand it, when the fuel price rose so dramatically, whether by necessity or design, the tour operators felt it necessary to enter into supply contracts at a fixed price in order to remain solvent. It would seem that the information that they had upon which they made this decision was clearly wrong, because the price of fuel then dropped. A large number of the denizens of this world are going to be seriously affected over the next two years by the credit crunch, with no redress, many through no fault of their own. It would therefore seem logical that at times of serious need such as in the case set out here, some relief to the individual should be forthcoming, even if it is at the expense of the heavily taxed lower and middle-classes.

  • Are we over sophisticated

    Being without broadband for nearly 7 weeks and a telephone for a fortnight, together with my anti-virus becoming over sophisticated so that I can’t give it the answers it wants, and my Blog provider changing his system, have all given me time to reassess many things. One is whether we all need to be so sophisticated as others feel we should. My lack of sophistication, where I don’t understand jargon, and the questions that the computer asks me are merely the tip of the iceberg. I stopped being sophisticated in the early 90s, when I had retired for the second time, and I have never caught up since. So I question whether we, the simple denizens, need the level of sophistication that is thrust upon us, with or without our knowledge and consent. On the other hand, sophistication, particularly with respect to health, has also made it possible for more of us to receive an incredible progress in treatment. The sciences, and policing with the use of DNA, are all areas that show that sophistication and progress, if it is to the benefit of the individual, rather than that of the shareholder, is to the advantage of all. It is when the sophistication is introduced for its own sake coupled with greed, or is unregulated, then it can be detrimental.

    Technocrats naturally invent, reinvent, modify, in effect changing our lives, not always through necessity but because it will provide a new, have-to-have product, for those who want to appear sophisticated, thus increasing profits. In some areas, such as entertainment, progress has resulted from sophisticated changes in equipment and taste, with I believe, in the majority of cases a drop in standards on the back of cheaper production. I have seen watches costing two month’s salary, weighing a ton, and telling you a dozen things you might need to know once-in-a-lifetime. The list is endless. Forgive me repeating myself when I say, some want to make a lot of money for themselves, while the man in the street, is unconsciously funding this, and is suffering the consequent results and pressures. The worst example was the computerisation of business transactions that enabled those in the dealing rooms of the finance houses, who, without a thought for the future bought and sold anything that would give a short-term profit, to enhance their own salaries and gain golden handshakes. I also condemn the politicians we trusted with the finances of the country and failed to monitor and moderate that excrescence, which was reported daily in newspapers, in this blog, and many others.

    One of the causes of course, has been the rapid rise in the worldwide use of the Internet and the computer, that enables such speed of transaction, that deliberate thought, and the possibility of monitoring, is put on the backburner. The astronomical increase in the variety of abuses that have consequently been generated, from fraud, theft, murder in some cases, child pornography to terrorism, can all be laid squarely at the door of the information highway, and now the whole thing has got so out of hand that we are having to pay for armies of technicians to repair the government computers that are wrecking the lives of so many, and also the law trying to catch the miscreants. We oldies worry about the future for the sake of the young and the not so young, who have been told they have never had it so good, when my generation believes that, since 1935, while there are better washing machines, smarter cars, so much of the infrastructure and the way of life has suffered. Today stress is commonplace, dishonesty and aggression in all their forms at all levels, have grown like a cancer in our society. It is now endemic, and much of it as a result of so-called sophistication. The problem is we can’t turn back the clock, or will circumstances turn it back for us?

    The total change in our way of life, in which the corner shop has been replaced by vast supermarket complexes deciding, from their own selfish standpoint, our choice of products, has reduced the number of small manufacturers and specialist dealers in different areas of the country, that provided products that generations in those areas bought as staples. National, if not international, companies have swallowed up these independent manufacturers. The result has been that choice has been reduced, that quality has been sacrificed to mass production, and as takeover after takeover takes place, so the quality of the products and the number available are reduced.

    This current credit crunch is inevitably going to change our lives, something which has already begun, and we will find that as firm after firm goes out of business, and finances get tighter, the sophistication, which to some extent has been fostered by the throwaway society, may itself disappear.