Britaine

hit counter


A blog by Frank Adey

Tuesday, 29 March 2011

March for the Alternative - the counter-argument



What can't speak, can't lie. The clipping above shows why we need cuts.
Incidentally, my predictions in advance of the TUC rally last weekend were as much wrong as right - no-one got killed. Otherwise, the destructive mayhem was much the same as usual. The police haven't been accused of brutality - instead, they have been accused of not being brutal enough. My memories of public demonstrations span four decades, and nothing seems ever to have changed.

Saturday, 26 March 2011

Predictions (2) March for the Alternative



These are my own predictions for 'March for the Alternative' protest against government cuts being held in London today.

1. Lots of shop windows will be broken.
2. Hundreds of people will be 'kettled' by police, and will announce their intention to sue.
3. Papers the following day will tell of violence being caused by 'a minority of troublemakers'.
4. The police will be accused of provoking violence.
5. Someone in The Guardian will speak of a 'police riot'.
6. At least one person will die under mysterious circumstances.
7. Government policies will not be amended in the slightest.

For once, I hope all of my predictions will be wrong!

Predictions (1): Was Corbyn Right?


A few days ago (March 22) I blogged about Piers Corbyn's prediction of another earthquake following the Japanese disaster. Well, now we have one; this time in northern Myanmar (alias Burma). This one measured around 6 on the Richter scale, and is so far known to have killed seventy people and injured hundreds.
So, was Corbyn right? Or is it merely coincidence?

Twilight of the Arabs

I have just read an excellent article in The Spectator's by Matthew Parris.  It is titled "The Arab world deserves our pity, not our fear", and it points out that behind the hate-filled rhetoric of Al Qaeda
and Co. lies a culture in terminal decline.
Which brings me to the current protests and insurrections flaring across the Middle East. I'm afraid that I don't buy the 'Arab Spring' argument that they represent a mass movement towards democracy. Against corruption, incompetence and unemployment, yes. But democracy is still an alien concept in the Islamic world.
I have a theory about the current upheavals, which is that they represent the second act of a massive, unplanned cultural experiment. The first act of that experiment was the mass emigration - for the first time in history - of Muslims into the non-Muslim world. There can now be few Muslims - whether they be situated in the Middle East or elsewhere - who do not know of friends or relatives who live in what is vaguely know as 'the West', and who are simply better off, and safer, than they. It is that which is making them look critically at their own living standards.
As for the bombing of Libya, I'm agin' it. You can't bomb order into chaos, as we should have learned by now.

Thursday, 24 March 2011

R.I.P. Liz Taylor



Well, she finally bowed out.She may never have been the world's greatest actress, but my God, what a life! She was a one-woman soap opera for two generations.
Amazingly, I have managed to dig out a caricature of her which I pasted into one of the scrapbooks I used to keep when I was doing an arts foundation thirty years ago, and which shows her wearing the heads of her past loves as jewelry. It is by an artist called Charles Griffen. I am happy to share it with you.

Tuesday, 22 March 2011

UK Uncut protest



Here are a few protesters in town on behalf of the UK Uncut campaign. This aims to contrast tax avoidance with government cuts. The idea is to blockade shops belonging to those who, in the opinion of the campaigners, don't pay enough tax.
The arithmetic doesn't add up; the country's debt runs into trillions. The millions which the 'evaders' are supposedly hanging on to doesn't come near to balancing the books. Secondly, the fact that there is a moral justification for many of the cuts is not being addressed. Finally. and most importantly, tax avoidance (as opposed to evasion) is perfectly legal, and I suspect most people who are in a position to avoid paying excessive tax do so. In a country which made heroes of of fictional petty crooks like Arthur Daley and the Trotter Brothers, this campaign is a non-starter.

Corbyn predicts more doom

Piers Corbyn has issued another earthquake/extreme weather warning. See here.

UPDATE: Geologist Jim Berkland echoes warning, claims the  United States Pacific North-West likely epicentre.

Tuesday, 15 March 2011

Take That, St. Pat




The Chinese have announced that the St Patrick's Day march in Shanghai has been cancelled. The reason, apparently, is that the authorities are concerned that the mass assembly of people may be used as a cover for the sort of anti-authority riots we have been watching in the Middle East.
Good for them! It's high time we banned this booze-soaked bore in England. If it weren't for the marketing department  of  the Guinness brewery the whole thing would have sunk without trace years ago, except among the Irish community. As an Englishman, It is my birthright to get drunk as a skunk on any day of the year, not just one accepted as a safety valve by the Irish Catholic church. Anyway, this is a protestant country; we don't do saints. Which is why, incidentally, we don't celebrate St George's Day.
 That's Patrick, above. Note the snakes, to which the old lad is pointing. They are symbolic of Patrick, as the cross keys are symbolic of St Peter. That is because, according to legend, St Pat drove all the snakes out of Ireland. ( in reality, they were driven out by the last ice age). That is also why you will find similar posters of Patrick all over Haiti. Voodoo devotees use them to symbolise their serpent god, Damballah.
Not many people know that, as Michael Caine used to say.

Saturday, 12 March 2011

Tsunami horror



With estimates of the number of dead rising steadily, it is beginning to appear that the Japanese tsunami could turn out to be the greatest natural disaster in human history. Newsreel photographs of that wall of water and debris grinding inexorably across the landscape should remind us of our relative impotence in the face of nature's convulsions. Hopefully the world will unite to succour Japan in its hour of need.

There will be huge economic consequences. The financial damage to earth's already weakened economies will be incalculable. Ships full of goods have gone missing. Factories have had to be closed down. Five nuclear reactors have been damaged; there is danger of meltdown. The insurance payouts will run into billions.

And there may be more to come. Astrophysicist Piers Corbyn, whose long range weather forecasts now consistently out-perform those of the Met Office, had predicted - in advance of the present disaster - that the world would suffer major quakes and geological events for the next two years. Mr Corbyn's thesis is that weather on the Sun is the main determinant of what happens on Earth. The sunspot cycles have been abnormally low for a couple of years now, and the current quake was preceded by a coronal ejection of record size, hurling billions of tons of matter in our direction.
Let's hope that, for once, he is wrong.

Tuesday, 1 March 2011

Jerusalem Olympics 2012


Iran is threatening to boycott the 2012 Olympics on the grounds that its (in)famous 'collapsing outhouse' logo is racist, and incorporates the letters of 'Zion' . Well, I at once dashed to my Photoshop CS to see if the logo could, indeed, be rearranged to read 'Zion'.  The result is above.
So, what can we deduce? We have, it seems to me. three options:
1. The IOC is in the pocket of the Jewish World Conspiracy.
2. The Iranians are afraid that some, if not all, of their athletes will claim asylum in London.
3. President Ahmadinejad is as crazy as a shithouse rat.

NOTE: Options 2 and 3 are by no means mutually exclusive.

Followers