We shouldn’t be distracted by Johnson’s shambolic performances
in parliament and at the daily briefings. Behaving like a clown whilst dangling
on a zip-wire didn’t stop him going on to become a ruthless liar of a PM. And
his current reality-defying smoke & mirrors tricks, scripted by
gaming-meister Cummings, don’t take away the government’s world-beating result
of excess deaths per capita during the pandemic – see
more details here, nor the steady approach of a Brexit & US trade
agreement car crash see
more details here and here.
4 June 2020
28 May 2020
The emperor's empty wardrobe
When the going gets tough and his braying cheerleaders are
stuck at home, not only does the manipulative and cynical world king reveal
that he has no clothes but that he has no substance of any sort whatsoever
beyond that of a deflated charlatan.
The schadenfreude bells will be ringing
out across the globe, but that's scant compensation for us in the UK, stuck
with this sociopathic incompetent as our so-called prime minister, potentially for
another 4 long years.
Looking on the bright side, if we survive it, and if Nietzche
was correct, we could be very, very resilient by 2024.
25 May 2020
Theatre of the Absurd. Farce & tragedy combined
#JohnsonMustGo
#CummingsMustGo
#HancockMustGo
#PatelMustGo
#GoveMustGo
#RaabMustGo
#ShapsMustGo
#TrussMustGo
#CummingsMustGo
#HancockMustGo
#PatelMustGo
#GoveMustGo
#RaabMustGo
#ShapsMustGo
#TrussMustGo
24 May 2020
UK lock down since March 23 (except for select members of the government advisory team, obvs)
We can't trust any of these mendacious & arrogant hypocrites - they should all resign.
We pay our taxes and obey the laws (well, some of us). In return, the government's responsibility is to protect its citizens. So, how's that going ?
Stay Alert
Save Lives
Sack The Government
#SelectiveMemory #Cummingsgate #JohnsonIsADisaster
We pay our taxes and obey the laws (well, some of us). In return, the government's responsibility is to protect its citizens. So, how's that going ?
Stay Alert
Save Lives
Sack The Government
#SelectiveMemory #Cummingsgate #JohnsonIsADisaster
14 May 2020
10 May 2020
Day 49 of UK lock down: More Oliver Hardy than Winston Churchill
Stay alert – for what ?
For sub-microscopic
infectious agents lurking in dark doorways ?
For more absurd hyperbole
being used in an attempt to distract from the hypocrisy & failures ? (5
points for every use of fantastic,
amazing or world-leading)
For Johnson and his mendacious
crew of Brexit-monkeys giving back-door bailouts to the aviation industry in
their rush to get back to planet-wrecking business as usual ?
For desperate trade
agreements with the US being snuck in through the back door whilst nobody is looking ?
7 May 2020
Day 46 of UK lock down: VE Day
Tomorrow marks the end
of the European chapter of the bloodiest conflict in global history, involving a
total of 190 countries. Over just 6 years an estimated 60 million people died -
20 million military and 40 million civilian (almost half of whom were in
Russia). Many, many, millions more were injured, traumatised or displaced. And
the damage wasn’t confined to people – the impact on marine and terrestrial
ecosystems is still being felt.
To commemorate the 75th
anniversary of that day by flogging the dead horse of British exceptionalism, or
by using bunting & flag-waving to distract either from the clusterfuck of the UK
government’s handling of the Covid-19 pandemic, or from the impending car crash of a hard Brexit
at a time of global economic meltdown, would be a grotesque abuse of the memory
of all those millions.
Instead let’s remember,
and celebrate, the collective international effort which transcended petty
nationalism to bring that appalling and devastating war to an end.
Labels:
#Coronavirus,
#DisasterCapitalism,
#ledbydonkeys,
#VEDay
6 May 2020
Day 45 of UK lock down: Dead cat day
32,000 people in the UK have
so far died as a result of the virus – putting the country at the top of the
league table of deaths in Europe. Dominic Raab predictably brought his
junior
barrister’s mind into gear to point out that the positioning on the league
table is just speculative and not to be taken literally. Fair enough Dom, but
32,000 deaths juxtaposed onto the UK government’s slow and inept handling of
the crisis is not speculative and should be taken very seriously indeed,
regardless of how we compare to Italy.
#hypocrisy #LedByDonkeys #disastercapitalism
Labels:
#Coronavirus,
#DisasterCapitalism,
#Disinformation,
#ToryLiars,
Covid-19,
Dominic Raab,
hypocrisy,
lies,
Matt Hancock,
NHS
5 May 2020
Day 44 of UK lock down: No such thing as a free trade lunch
In 1776 Adam Smith wrote, in the
Wealth of Nations: “It is the maxim of every prudent master of a family, never
to attempt to make at home what it will cost him more to make than to buy. If a
foreign country can supply us with a commodity cheaper than we ourselves can
make it, better buy it of them with some part of the produce of our own
industry, employed in a way in which we have some advantage”.
By ignoring the whole-life cost, which
takes into account the social and environmental price of manufacture, use &
disposal of goods, Smith’s legacy has been one of gross inequality, back-door imperialism, sweatshops,
wage slavery, and minimal to non-existent protection of workers and environment. Oh, and, in the case of smiley International Trade Secretary Liz Truss, the “inadvertent”
and illegal shipping of military supplies to Saudi Arabia, twice.
That’s the same Liz
Truss who was promoted as a reward for supporting Johnson in his leadership
campaign and for being the architect for plans to cut taxes for people earning
over £50,000. And who is now embarking on free
trade negotiations with the US to “help the economy bounce back” from the
Covid-19 crisis. True, this may
adversely effect the much-clapped NHS, but things are definitely looking
up for UK exports of pork pies and shower trays.
2 May 2020
Day 41 of UK lock down: Just Stop Lying
The lock-down is giving
a good opportunity to reflect and prepare for what comes next, but the
uncertainties are so bewildering, that it’s difficult to focus.
However, what seems as certain as night
following day is that the UK’s Conservative government will continue to spin
and lie in response to every challenge. Johnson’s track
record of lying is thoroughly recorded, as is that of Gove
, Raab,
Patel,
and Hancock.
Yet they keep going. The tactic, from the same dezinformatsiya black propaganda & disinformation playbook that has
worked for Trump, Putin, Bolsonaro, seems to be to spout whatever bollox suits the
narrative of the moment, in the hope that more people will believe it than not,
before quietly withdrawing it later when attention is elsewhere.
The Tories did it about
Brexit. They’re doing it about Coronavirus. And they’ll be doing it about the
climate and ecological emergency when it’s back on the mainstream agenda.
Extinction Rebellion’s
first demand is Tell the Truth. Not
complicated but massively important. This is reality we need to confront, not
some computer game. If we allow lies and
spin to become the norm of discourse, then we are simply, and comprehensively, screwed.
1 May 2020
Day 40 of UK lock down: The writing is on the wall for fossil fuels
The oil industry is foundering,
and even traders
in futures markets are beginning to seek more buoyant ships.
Meanwhile, forward
looking companies that read the writing on the wall some time ago, such as Danish state-owned oil & gas company (Dong) morphed into a renewable
energy company (Ørsted), are now thriving despite the pandemic. See
report here.
In a recent article
in the influential Science Magazine, Daniel Rosenbloom & Jochen
Markard summarise very lucidly the global opportunity created by the current
circumstances for a rapid move to a cleaner future.
At the same time, they highlight the need not only to
avoid bailing out fossil fuel companies and industries, but also to support affected
workers and communities in the form of temporary relief, retraining, and
retirement benefits. The choice of a cleaner and more sustainable future
involves a fair and regenerative approach to human resources too.
And opinion
from within the oil industry is beginning to shift in the same direction !
30 April 2020
Day 39 of UK lock down: Smoke, Mirrors and Walpurgis Night
So far the UK government
public response to Covid-19 has focused on vague concepts of Britishness, determination,
wrestling, and a nice old chap who’s been walking up and down his garden. The
motivation is probably two-fold, in part to deflect attention from the
uncomfortable and scandalous behind-closed-doors underbelly of the real response,
and partly to maintain the myth of British exceptionalism for when the headlong
rush to a catastrophic hard Brexit re-emerges into the daylight from behind the
pandemic.
Vagueness and lack of
attention to the truth are characteristics of the politics of personality much used
to prop up dominant conservative ideologies. As a conjuring trick, its success
does rather depend on the charisma of the politician, which has evidentially
been a problem for the charisma-free UK government during Prime Minister
Johnson’s frequent absences from office. Johnson’s stooge Raab had all the
conviction and charisma of a UPVC window salesperson at Prime
Minister's Questions 29 April 2020, when confronted by a real grown-up
politician in the form of Keir Starmer – who is one of the few silver linings
in the political clouds currently sitting over Westminster.
Tonight is Walpurgis
Night when pests, smoke, and useless politicians are traditionally chased
away to clear the air. If only !
Read
a detailed and precise account of the UK government's shameful pandemic response here
29 April 2020
Day 38 of UK lock down: The End is Nigh
BP has gone from a $2bn
profit this time last year to a $500m loss, but is still issuing a dividend to
their investors, which looks like delivering a 7%
yield , albeit by drawing on their capital & depleting their resources.
This is clearly is not a sustainable long term strategy, but then neither was what
the fossil fuel industry has been doing to the planet for the last 300 years.
Oil prices are currently
at the lowest point for 160 years, although that’s not quite as dramatic as it
sounds, since prices were almost as low in the 1970s and late 1990s. Nevertheless,
Jeremy Cliffe, writing
in the New Statesman, makes the point that, regarding the end of the Age of
Oil, it’s now a matter of not if but when.
And the answer to that
rather depends who prevails – short sighted investors and their populist
politician puppets, or people prepared to seize the moment and change to a
regenerative & circular economy.
28 April 2020
Day 37 of UK lock down: psychology time
So, since the pandemic
started, Trump has, in his press briefings and White House statements, taken
the opportunity to praise
himself 600 times, excluding his relentless tweeting. Narcissist who really really believes in himself, or fragile ego in constant need of support ?
Equivalent data for the
number of times the UK government spokespeople have invoked the
language of war and conflict, or has parrotted patronising and hypocritical
sound bites about the NHS, is not available, but must be reaching similar
numbers.
Meanwhile, the New
Zealand government has got on with the job, contained the outbreak, and is
now ready to lift the lock down .
27 April 2020
Day 36 of UK lock down: Johnson's return
Johnson, B is back in Downing Street, with a note from
Matron to excuse him from answering any difficult questions about Cummings
cherry-picking the scientific advice, about not
treating the public like adults, about lying
about herd immunity strategy, or about opportunistically accelerating towards a
crash-out from the EU. And he’s to stay indoors at playtime, and restrict
his public statements to occasional crowd-pleasing soliloquies about pluck,
heroism and other uniquely British qualities, which have already created a
patriotic flutter amongst much of the UK press, especially those outlets owned
by billionaires and aristocrats. Young master Hancock is also very relieved.
Labels:
#Coronavirus,
#DowningStreet,
#ledbydonkeys,
#waffle,
Boris Johnson,
Brexit
26 April 2020
Day 35 of UK lock down: Too much oil
Over the last months
demand for oil has collapsed, sending the price through the floor, but oil producers have
continued production regardless, because closing a well is an expensive procedure which
could also lead to reduced production after re-opening. As a result, global storage
is nearly at full capacity and already oil tankers, and probably bathtubs and
saucepans, are being called into use to hold the unwanted oil.
If demand doesn’t
recover in the next few weeks many oil wells will have to close, which may also
mean closing many oil-based businesses. Those governments showing signs of managing
the pandemic in a rational and effective way seem very unlikely to return to “normal”
any time soon, so mass oil well closure is looking increasingly probable.
Predictably, this is
being characterised from within the fossil fuel industry as a looming energy
crisis on an unprecedented scale. So, we are being asked to save the status quo
of trashing the global ecosystem to produce polluting and climate-wrecking
hydrocarbons, which also have, by the way, been the cause of many of the armed
conflicts of the last 100 years, with casualty figures way beyond those of
Covid-19.
As an opportunity to reboot
and move rapidly to sustainable, renewable, more localised energy production
this is equally unprecedented and equally massive. And we already have the
technologies. If we don’t seize the day, future generations will never forgive
us.
25 April 2020
Day 34 of UK lock down: distressed billionaires
The queue for financial
bailouts from the lock-down is getting longer, with not only Richard Branson,
Victoria Beckham, and various owners of huge grouse-slaughtering estates in
Scotland seeking support from the UK government (aka UK tax payers), but also
the Trump Organisation . Yes, that Trump, the
sarcastic one, because seemingly his loss-making golf courses are now making
even bigger losses. Not that losses from golf courses are his biggest problem just now. See NY Times analysis here
Christiana Figueres pointed out, in the recent BBC radio
programme Fallout, that
there are some important parallels in dealing with Corona virus and with the climate
& ecological emergency. In particular, those countries which understood the
science and the need to give speedy attention to areas of high probability
&, high impact risk, are those which have done much better in mitigating
the problems. Those countries led by idiots or sociopaths not so much.
When it comes to giving public funding to help prop up
business affected by the pandemic, the choice seems very clear – we can follow
the clamour from the greedy rich, and return to an unsustainable “normal” which
created the environmental mayhem in the first place, or we can take the
opportunity to support those businesses which help us move towards a
sustainable and regenerative way of being.
24 April 2020
Day 33 of UK lock down: Hiding in a fridge at Chequers
Having mooted injecting disinfectant, and shining really really
bright lights inside Covid-19 patients, as possible cures, Trump has shone his laser-like
stable genius on a medical assessment of the UK’s missing prime minister, whom
he thinks is “ready to go”. Quite a lot of people in the UK have already been
thinking that Johnson should go, along with his cronies, to make way for a competent
government which is capable of dealing with this crisis, instead of the Dad’s
Army tribute act we’re currently saddled with.
Meanwhile, back in the grown-up world, Caroline Lucas has put
it very succinctly: “This global health emergency has laid bare the failings in
our current system. But, if we choose to, we can lay the groundwork for a
fairer, greener recovery, and rebuild a society that is more equal and more
resilient, and where people and Nature thrive.”
And the Dutch government have also been putting the
lock-down time to good use, producing a clear and convincing plan for a Green
Recovery from the pandemic, which could serve as a model for any responsible government.
23 April 2020
Day 32 of UK lock down: Pinning the Tale on the Donkeys
In an attempt to deflect the tidal wave of blame looming
over this inept and mendacious UK government, Dominic Raab boasted at PMQs yesterday:
”People said that we
couldn’t build a hospital in this country at that kind of speed, and we’ve
built several, with more to come.”
Unsurprisingly,
he neglected to mention the 100,000 unfilled staff vacancies arising from 10
years of neglecting the NHS, which mean that there aren’t enough ICU staff for
those new hospitals, and patients are being turned away (see report here). Not to mention the homicidal
negligence shown by the government with regard to PPE procurement, so even if
there were available staff, they’d be inadequately protected (See
Philip Pullman's excellent essay on the subject here).
More proof, as if
it were needed, that we can’t rely on Johnson & his cronies to lead the
country anywhere other than a crashing out of the EU. (See
analysis here) Except when it comes to keeping access to Europol databases, obvs (See
report here)
One bit of good
news is that the Labour party seem to have elected an effective leader of the
opposition, capable of holding the complacent and useless bastards to account.
Labels:
#ledbydonkeys,
#wecanchange,
Boris Johnson,
Brexit,
Coronavirus,
Covid-19,
Dominic Raab,
Europol,
hypocrisy,
lies,
PMQs,
PPE,
shameless,
Westminster
22 April 2020
Day 31 of UK lock down: Earth Day

A telling reminder that the
environment has been firmly on the international agenda for at least half a
century and yet, despite some very significant advances, GHG emissions are still rising, and we’re
still devastating ecosystems in pursuit of our consumerist addictions.
What’s different this
year is that Earth Day is happening in the midst of a once in a generation
global upheaval that has thrown normality up in the air, giving us a real
chance to make changes at the scale they need to be made. We have come to a
major fork in the road, where we must choose our future, and it’s not about
survival or not. Survival isn’t enough – it’s about what kind of Earth do we
want.
Charles Eisenstein sets
out the stark choice very clearly in this short (6 minute) video
#WeCanChange !
21 April 2020
Day 30 of UK lock down: we don't have to be led by any kind of donkeys
Covid-19 travel
restrictions and slowing down of business & industry have led to a dramatic
drop in demand for oil, and an equally dramatic drop in oil price, and oil
producers are now racing to reduce production. The US was too slow off the
mark, and over-production there, coupled with full reserves, led to negative
pricing for the first time ever, which is a revealing indication of the power
of market demand over these allegedly unstoppable Molochs.
Blaming the oil
companies for what they do is like blaming lions for eating antelope, which is
not a solution. Move the antelope elsewhere, and the lions will go away.
We have a huge
opportunity here to seize the moment and push for a swift transition to
renewable energy, and for a radical review of our underlying energy demand. We
can change, and this is the moment to do it.
20 April 2020
Day 29 of UK lock down: Carpe Diem
Despite the catastrophic impact
of the pandemic, the global governmental responses, and the environmental
consequences, are highlighting a very real opportunity to make some positive
changes to our existence.
19 April 2020
Day 28 of UK lock down: Ecology begins at home
![]() |
After Munch, via Ise & Conaglen Estate |
The pandemic is showing the need for all of us to be responsible custodians
of our environment, and not just the pretty, cuddly or tasty bits but the whole
biome.
Custodianship means guardianship – ie looking after something, nurturing
it, and keeping it safe. What it doesn’t mean, in the case of land, is creating
a barren wasteland, whether in pursuit of some biocidal ideal of “garden tidiness”,
“sport”, or industrialised monoculture. Nor does it mean disrupting delicately
balanced ecosystems for commercial gain.
If we ignore the biodiversity in our own backyards and gardens, it’s an
easy step to ignoring the entire ecosystem, and to being prepared to trash it in
pursuit of commodity and easy gratification. Conversely, if we engage with and
respect that local diversity, so it becomes easier to apply the same
perspective to the whole planet at a societal level as well as individual.
Regardless of what our title deeds say, we don’t own the land we occupy, any more than we own air, water or
sunlight. We simply have a legally enshrined right of access, and what we need
to move towards is an equally enshrined legal obligation to protect and
regenerate.
A common dispute is between governments claiming that an action is the responsibility of individuals, and individuals claiming that the same action is the responsibility of the government, in an endless circle of us-ing and them-ing. What we should be learning from this pandemic is that there isn't a them, just an us, and the responsibility is shared by all.
A common dispute is between governments claiming that an action is the responsibility of individuals, and individuals claiming that the same action is the responsibility of the government, in an endless circle of us-ing and them-ing. What we should be learning from this pandemic is that there isn't a them, just an us, and the responsibility is shared by all.
Labels:
#ledbydonkeys,
biodiversity,
biome,
Coronavirus,
Covid-19,
Donald Trump,
ecosystem,
lockdown
18 April 2020
Day 27 of UK lock down: something else to clap for
To be fair, most countries were ill-prepared for the Corona pandemic. In
Britain, the situation has been exacerbated by a government formed from
insouciant, Brexit-fixated, exceptionalists who apparently felt that the dastardly
virus would think twice before daring to arrive in the land of Horatio Nelson
and Winston Churchill. And anyway, pouring vast amounts of money & effort into white
elephant vanity projects like HS2 gave much more instant gratification in
Downing Street than all that boring forward planning. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/apr/17/hs2-white-elephant-coronavirus-recession-conservatives?
Against this woeful background,
something positive and important has just happened. Mercedes-AMGHPP have
collaborated with mechanical engineers and clinicians from University College,
London and, in less than 100 hours, developed an open-source, easily reproducible
breathing aid for Corona patients.
As an example of collective
and generous positive action this will be important to remember when the
pandemic has passed and we are re-focussing on the technical obstacles to
reducing GHG emissions as a matter of life-threatening urgency.
Labels:
#ledbydonkeys,
Boris Johnson,
Brexit,
british exceptionalism,
Coronavirus,
Covid-19,
HS2,
Mercedes F1
17 April 2020
Day 26 of UK lock down: Food for Thought
Food accounts for
over a quarter (26%) of global greenhouse gas emissions;
Half of the world’s
habitable (ice- and desert-free) land is used for
agriculture;
70% of global freshwater withdrawals are
used for agriculture;
78% of global ocean
and freshwater eutrophication (the pollution of waterways with nutrient-rich
pollutants) is caused by agriculture;
94% of mammal
biomass (excluding humans) is livestock. This means livestock outweigh wild mammals by
a factor of 15-to-1. Of
the 28,000 species evaluated to be threatened with extinction on the IUCN Red
List, agriculture and aquaculture is listed as a threat for 24,000 of them.
Yet one third of all food produced globally is lost or wasted
each year, amounting to 1.3 billion tonnes.
Meanwhile, 1.9 billion adults are overweight or obese, while 462 million are
underweight.
Bon appetit !
16 April 2020
Day 25 of UK lock down: preparing to race to the bottom
There are several convincing economic forecasts that suggest we could be
heading for a post-pandemic global recession as bad, if not worse, than that of
the 1930s. We have also recently seen how lack of cooperation with the EU has
led the UK to be even further behind in procuring adequate amounts of PPE for NHS
and care workers.
Nevertheless, the cabal of fuckwits in Downing Street have concluded
that, somehow, Covid-19 increases the case for avoiding regulatory alignment
with the EU and for hastening down the path towards a no-deal Brexit, with all
the additional economic damage that will bring.
Whether this is a true reflection of what they are pursuing, or just
some mad and divisive negotiating stance designed to disorientate their EU
counterparts, probably won’t be clear until Hogmanay, but neither option bodes
well for the future.
https://www.newstatesman.com/covid19#update-32426315 April 2020
Day 24 of UK lock down: truth in the time of Covid-19
According to Felipe Fernández-Armesto, the pursuit of truth is "the
quest for language that can match reality." He identifies four key methods
of determining the truth - what we feel, what we are told, what we figure out,
and what we observe. Applying the correspondence theory of truth, favoured by
Socrates, Plato & Aristotle, to those methods, if a message corresponds to
the actual state of affairs, then it is true.
Yet, each new day of the
pandemic brings more politicians making public statements which are either so
vague that they have no tangible content, or so demonstrably disconnected to
reality that it makes your head spin.
It’s probably fair to
say that waffling and lying are not new human character traits, but now we can all
do our own fact checking from the saturation media coverage. When Matt Hancock
denies the initial UK strategy of herd immunity, or when Trump claims to have
taken the pandemic seriously since January, it’s easy to find proof that they
are talking bollox. What’s more worrying is the question of why they think they
can get away with it.
Labels:
#ledbydonkeys,
Aristotle,
Boris Johnson,
Coronavirus,
Covid-19,
Donald Trump,
fake news,
lies,
Matt Hancock,
Plato,
Socrates,
truth
14 April 2020
Day 23 of UK lock down and counting

Sadly, just like the climate and ecological emergency, and our addiction
to consuming global resources, the problem hasn’t gone away, and Trump is still
nominally in charge of, at last count, 2,821 nuclear warheads, and a war budget
of nearly $700 billion, as well as the well-being of 330 million US
citizens.
That’s the same Trump who, yesterday, lost the plot spectacularly and
incoherently when confronted by some mildly critical questioning from
journalists at a press briefing. Ye gods !
Labels:
#ledbydonkeys,
Coronavirus,
Covid-19,
Donald Trump,
press briefing,
White House
12 April 2020
Day 21 of UK lock down: Happy Oestre
Whilst the pandemic is not a competition, it’s interesting
to look at the responses from different governments. There are two clear
instances of decisive action by leaders of integrity and principle (Jacinda
Ardern in New Zealand, and Mette Frederiksen
in Denmark) resulting in astonishingly few deaths from the virus. There are
also two clear instances of indecisive action by leaders wholly devoid of
integrity and principle resulting in the devastating opposite (#JohnsonTrump).
The ineptitude, fudging and lack of honesty
from the UK government about PPE continues to beggar belief. Cruella Patel was
pushed out into Downing Street on Good Friday to be asked if she would
apologise for the inadequate provision of PPE, for the fact that some NHS staff
had been forced to purchase their own protective equipment, and for the fact
that staff were dying because a bin liner & pair of Marigolds was proving
to be insufficient protection. The best that Ms Patel could say, grudgingly,
was “I’m sorry if people feel that there have been
failings, I will be very, very clear about that.”
Meanwhile Westminster MP’s each have access to
an additional £10k of expenses for the added cost of working from home because,
obviously, they & their assistants won’t have computers or telephones
there, and, somehow, not commuting to Parliament is an additional expense,
which can’t be met by their recent 3.1% pay rise.
Which brings us back to differing responses.
In Bulgaria, MPs, ministers and heads of public agencies have agreed to donate
their entire salaries to public health services for the duration of their
confinement. Game, set & match to Bulgaria.
Oh, and Johnson has risen from his hospital bed, it being Easter Sunday and all.
Labels:
#ledbydonkeys,
Boris Johnson,
Coronavirus,
Covid-19,
Denmark,
MP salaries,
New Zealand,
NHS,
Priti Patel,
resurrection,
UK
11 April 2020
Day 20 of UK lock down: plucky little Britain
The brilliant Fintan O’Toole
absolutely nailed the disingenuous and embarrassing myth of British
exceptionalism in a piece in today’s Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/apr/11/coronavirus-exposed-myth-british-exceptionalism.
A whiff of that particular
myth has been steadily seeping under the door during the current lock down, accompanied
by nostalgic radio music evoking thoughts of how Winston Churchill and Vera
Lynn led the plucky Brits to victory over the foreign menace, with a subtext
that our uniquely indomitable spirit will see us through the current crisis, regardless of
the serial fuck-ups that have marked our response so far.
Johnson is apparently on the
mend but, according to his father, had his own dulce et decorum est pro patria mori moment, by almost “taking one for the
team”.
Britain undoubtedly does have
some admirable national characteristics in its societal DNA, but so does every
other country on the bloody planet, which is hardly surprising given the boundary-crossing ebb and flow of people over the last 10,000 years. To be
constantly banging on about our national greatness is more like an embarrassing
show of adolescent insecurity than an adult response to an indiscriminate global crisis.
10 April 2020
Day 19 of UK lock down: hedging their bets
Recently there have been some heart-chilling reports of how hedge
funds are making massive profits out of this global crisis.
For those of us who normally try not to think too much about
the murky world of big finance, this raises the question of what the hell is a
hedge fund anyway ?
Seemingly, the hedge bit means a barrier, to prevent losses
whether the market is expanding or contracting, so investors will profit either
way.
And one of the most dodgy aspects of these dodgy funds is
the concept of short selling. Investors look for stock whose worth is likely to
drop in the short term, before bouncing back. For instance, budget airlines in
a time of global immobility which, despite the hopes of anyone who gives a
stuff about the environment, are likely to come back with gusto as soon as the
lock downs are lifted, regardless of whether they manage to wheedle some
publicly funded bailout from the governments.
So, essentially, hedge funds are a means by which the
richest 10% of the global population, who already own 85% of global wealth, can
get even richer by betting on the outcome of catastrophes.
9 April 2020
Day 18 of UK lock down: the future we choose
The pandemic has put much of the
world into a kind of limbo of inactivity, as we wait for the virus to run its
course, or to come under our control. This stasis brings an abundance of both
problems and benefits. Problems in terms of the personal, social and economic cost
of lockdown which, as ever, are likely to impact most severely on the poorest
in our global society. Benefits in terms of the immediately positive
environmental consequences, and the timely reminder that governments are well
able to instigate structural & systemic changes when they deem them
necessary.
Tempting though it is to indulge in
a snark-fest about the latest outrage from Westminster or the White House, and
there is certainly no shortage of opportunities, a better use of our time might
be to think about what happens next.
The economic cost of the lock down
is massive, both in lost revenue and in the burden of loans carried forward by
businesses. Whilst governments have been pouring money in to stop the system
from falling apart, the longer term payback could easily cause a worldwide
depression similar to that of the 1930s. Big corporations and hedge fund
managers will already be working on their survival strategies. In such a
context the transition to a system which is revolves around respect for the
global biome, instead of around exponentially increasing consumption of
resources and short term profiteering, just got harder. Harder, but not
impossible, if we stay focused.
In their excellent book, The
Future We Choose; Surviving The Climate Crisis, Christiana Figueres &
Tom Rivett-Carnac put forward the concept of stubborn optimism. If ever there
was a time for stubborn optimism, it’s now.
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