New Labour in its pomp was guided by the likes of Peter Mandelson, now (like so many) a bought-and-paid-for EUrocrat. Here he is with some other Brits, simpering in the presence of billionaire Oleg Deripaska. They are almost clutching themselves with excitement.
They may kiss Deripaska's bottom, but President Putin doesn't:
The video is a treat - watch Deripaska lie about having signed an agreement, be effortlessly called on it and called up front, then like a sulky schoolboy try to take the pen with him, only to be schoolmastered by the President.
Where do we Westerners have politicians who can do that?
Now it may well be that Mr Putin is not a nice man. But remember Churchill's saying, "The Hun is always either at your throat or at your feet." To dominate a pack of wolves you have to be a wolf. Has Putin enriched himself? He would probably not be taken seriously by his lupine underlings if he hadn't. But do you doubt that he works for Russian national interests, as well as his own?
This week's Private Eye - a formerly independent magazine that now appears to have taken editorial "lines" on e.g. Brexit and Jeremy Corbyn - features on its front page paired photographs of US President Obama and Presidential candidate Trump, dubbed "HOPE" and "GROPE" respectively. This tempts us to ask, what became of the hope represented by Obama - and by Bill Clinton?
Yes, the American econo-political machine has its own juggernaut course, just like the British one. Yet remember Kennedy and FDR: there is a period at the start of incumbency, especially when the nation is in crisis, when a new leader could potentially cut free of his handlers and appeal direct to the people to support significant reforms.
In 2009 I (along with millions of others) hoped that President Obama might sort out the crooked financial establishment; instead, it has sorted us out. And as for President Clinton, doubtless Congress and the Senate threw various spanners in his designs, but why exactly did he feel he had to repeal Glass-Steagall as one of his final acts before leaving office? I also hear that he earlier instituted welfare reforms that made life much harder for many vulnerable people; are there not times when the President can refuse to sign?
As with the EU referendum, in America Presidential election campaigns encourage both halves of the nation to hate and despise each other, and then we wonder why the people are not happy. And it's all Punch and Judy. "Grope," indeed. The bien-pensant media tell us what to think, and how to vote, and if we don't do as we're told there's an endless post-vote campaign to tell us we were wrong. But the big problems are not sorted.
I never thought we'd have anything to learn from the Russians.
*** FUTURE POSTS WILL ALSO APPEAR AT 'NOW AND NEXT' : https://rolfnorfolk.substack.com
Keyboard worrier
Saturday, October 15, 2016
Friday, October 14, 2016
Friday Night Is Music Night: Prime Numbers
JD has put together "A miscellaneous collection of 'misfits'; by which I mean musicians who defy categorisation, which is why I love them!"
Slim Gaillard:
Louis Prima:
Willie Dixon:
George Melly:
Marion Harris:
Cab Calloway:
Slim Gaillard:
Louis Prima:
Willie Dixon:
George Melly:
Marion Harris:
Cab Calloway:
Wednesday, October 12, 2016
Brexit - the issue has been decided
The Callaghan government fell on 28 March 1979 because it lost a motion of no confidence by one single vote (310-311), as a result of which the Prime Minister quite correctly advised HMQ to dissolve Parliament. That was a 0.16% margin of votes cast.
Had the same number of MPs (621) voted in the 2016 EU Referendum and the split been 48%/52% the government would have lost (or won) by a margin of 25 votes. Many issues have been determined by smaller margins in the House of Commons - here are a few just since the last General Election*:
Date | Time | Subject | Turnout | Majority | Margin % |
20 Oct 2015 | 18:52 | Opposition Day — Tax Credits | 616 | 22 | 3.57% |
26 Oct 2015 | 21:13 | Finance Bill — New Clause 7 — VAT on Sanitary Protection Products | 596 | 18 | 3.02% |
19 Jan 2016 | 16:16 | Education (Student Support) (Amendment) Regulations 2015 — Prayer to Annul — Replacing Student Grants with Larger Loans for Students from England | 599 | 11 | 1.84% |
19 Jan 2016 | 16:16 | Opposition Day — Student Maintenance Grants | 602 | 14 | 2.33% |
25 Apr 2016 | 21:26 | Immigration Bill — Unaccompanied Refugee Children: Relocation and Support | 572 | 18 | 3.15% |
28 Jun 2016 | 14:30 | Finance Bill — Schedule 19 — Multinational Enterprises — Publication of Country by Country Tax Strategy | 571 | 22 | 3.85% |
"My policy is to hold a renegotiation and then a referendum. That is what we promised in the manifesto and then to abide by what the British public say." PM David Cameron, 19 January 2016. "This is a decision that lasts for life. We make this decision and it is probably going to be the only time in our generation when we make this decision" - PM David Cameron, 23 Feb 2016.
It is time for "those who know better" to decide whether they believe in democracy at all.
__________________
* Data from http://www.publicwhip.org.uk/divisions.php - clearly there is a date error around 19 Jan 2016 but the general point stands.
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* Data from http://www.publicwhip.org.uk/divisions.php - clearly there is a date error around 19 Jan 2016 but the general point stands.
Monday, October 10, 2016
Dreams of Bloomsbury at Charleston House
‘Come out and climb the garden path,
Luriana Lurilee,
The China Rose is all abloom
And buzzing with the yellow bee
We’ll swing you on the cedar-bough,
Luriana Lurilee’
From Charles Isaac Elton’s ‘A Garden Song’
I remember the dizzying
chimes of this poem from when I first read Virginia Woolf’s ‘To the
Lighthouse’, where the stanza sways through the consciousness of a group of
intellectuals dining in the flowing light of the lighthouse. I was 14 years old
and quite unaware that this poem would stream through my mind many years later,
as I ambled the blooming garden paths of Charleston Farmhouse.
Charleston is the house museum of the Bloomsbury group’s country retreat
in East Sussex, and to this day it looks as if its radical tenants are about to
clatter through the door with easels and ink pots. In the dawn of the 1900s,
the gifted sisters Vanessa Bell and Virginia Woolf (neé Stephen) became part of
an eclectic circle of modern painters, writers and free thinkers, who
oscillated around their avant-garde home in Bloomsbury. This new group, named
the ‘Bloomsbury set’ was a radical backlash to the oppressive wake of the
Victorian era. Bell, trained to classical ideals at the Royal Academy, broke
free of restrained British art which largely clung to limpid realism and
narrative symbols. In her paintings she defied symbolism and the Victorian
taste for sombre colours, creating a new visual language of Post-Impressionism
in England. With her sister, modernist genius Virginia Woolf, a new freedom was
unleashed on Edwardian society.
There were many fascinating ‘Bloomsberries’, such as Duncan Grant,
exquisite painter and ‘pacifist anarchist’, Maynard Keynes, crucial economist
and first chairman of the Arts Council, Roger Fry, who brought Picasso and
Matisse to an astounded British public and Clive Bell, Vanessa’s husband and
art critic. All of these visionaries, together with Bell and her children, stayed
at Charleston over the years, making it a hothouse of art, ideas and bohemian
living in the 1900s.
The first glimpse you have of Charleston is its ochre gable, rising with
a stately yet rural simplicity from the South Downs, its violet grey windows of
the attics gleaming like a painter’s eyes to the landscape.
As you enter through
the door trailing with heavy fuchsia, you pass not just through a threshold but
into another world. You are submerged in the greatest appreciation of the
senses, with an aging gilt mirror throwing your reflection into a painted room,
with Vanessa Bell’s whimsical flowers blossoming in chalk paints on the window
reveal, Persian rugs trodden by bohemian feet, flowers dancing jealously
outside the sash window with walls lined by portraits of the Stachey’s and a
fireplace painted in gaudy circles which, if thought about, would seem to jar
yet bring the whole room into a state of avant-garde suspension. As you leave
the room your eye is caught by a Duncan Grant mural of an acrobat falling
languidly through the heights of the circus, his wan limbs raised with a sense
of hedonism against the night…
You are led through, as if by hand, like an exquisite game of blind
man’s buff, imagining Vanessa composing a still life on the lavishly painted
dining room table, a beautiful ceramic form by Quentin Bell throwing dots of
light across the ceiling and falling towards paintings of a cat curled up in
pleasure by Duncan Grant and quirky porcelain plates collected by the
‘Bloomsberries’ on their travels. Then up, up, as if pulled by spirit along the
womb-like corridors to the bedrooms, with the most magnificent light streaming
in from the misty Downs…
But first, Clive Bell’s
library, with worn copies of ‘Intimacy’ and great hardbound collections of
Byron which match the elegant sensuality of the nude drawings that hang above
his painted bed in the next room…. The Bloomsbury group are renowned for their
adventurous affairs and new romantic boundaries, a motif which playfully dances
through the décor. Each everyday object is turned into an objet de plaisir, being either playfully obliterated with paint or
produced by the artists at Omega Workshops. The house is a complete piece of
art, sculpture, and in fact living. I think the most beautiful thing about
Charleston House is not just how its quirky inhabitants mastered their
paintbrushes, but actually how they mastered the art of life; loving, freely and
with great abandon in all things.
I would like to return
to the dreamy blooms of Charleston’s garden paths with the end of Charles Isaac
Elton’s poem, borrowed via of Virginia, who swings back to us on the
cedar-bough…
‘Swing, swing on a cedar-bough!
Till you sleep in a bramble heap
Or under the gloomy churchyard tree,
And then, fly back and swing on a bough,
Luriana Lurilee’
by Catherine Beaumont
Bibliography
‘A Garden Song’, Charles Isaac Elton
‘Among the Bohemians’, Virginia Nicholson
‘The Angel of Charleston’, Stewart MacKay
‘To the Lighthouse’,Virginia Woolf
‘Vanessa Bell’, Frances Spalding
Sunday, October 09, 2016
Good enough for China
From aeon comes an interesting piece on what in China is referred to as chabuduo - close enough.
Chabuduo implies that to put any more time or effort into a piece of work would be the act of a fool. China is the land of the cut corner, of ‘good enough for government work’.
In our apartment in central Beijing, we fight a daily rearguard action against entropy. The mirror on my wardrobe came off its hinges six months ago and is now propped up against the wall, one of many furnishing casualties. Each of our light fittings takes a different bulb, and a quarter of them are permanently broken. In the bedroom, the ceiling-high air-conditioning unit runs its moisture through a hole knocked in the wall, stuffed with an old cloth to avoid leakage, while the balcony door, its sealant rotted, has a towel handy to block the rain when it pours through. On the steps outside our door, I duck my head every day to avoid the thick tangle of hanging wires that brings power and the internet; when the wind is up, connections slow as cables swing.
Chabuduo implies that to put any more time or effort into a piece of work would be the act of a fool. China is the land of the cut corner, of ‘good enough for government work’.
In our apartment in central Beijing, we fight a daily rearguard action against entropy. The mirror on my wardrobe came off its hinges six months ago and is now propped up against the wall, one of many furnishing casualties. Each of our light fittings takes a different bulb, and a quarter of them are permanently broken. In the bedroom, the ceiling-high air-conditioning unit runs its moisture through a hole knocked in the wall, stuffed with an old cloth to avoid leakage, while the balcony door, its sealant rotted, has a towel handy to block the rain when it pours through. On the steps outside our door, I duck my head every day to avoid the thick tangle of hanging wires that brings power and the internet; when the wind is up, connections slow as cables swing.
The apartment is five years old. By Chinese standards, it’s far better than the average.
Read the whole thing - it is a fascinating alternative slant on China as a global industrial powerhouse. It may be an industrial powerhouse, but perhaps there are growing pains too. Severe ones if this piece is any guide.
‘There’s a Tianjin-level explosion every month,’ a staff member at a national-level work-safety programme told me, asking for anonymity. ‘But mostly they happen in places that nobody cares about.’ Careless disasters are buried all the time; when a chemical plant exploded in Tangshan in March 2014, a friend there told me of the management’s relief after the Malaysia Airlines flight 370 went missing the next day, swallowing up all other news and making sure nobody but them noticed, save for 13 widows.
‘There’s a Tianjin-level explosion every month,’ a staff member at a national-level work-safety programme told me, asking for anonymity. ‘But mostly they happen in places that nobody cares about.’ Careless disasters are buried all the time; when a chemical plant exploded in Tangshan in March 2014, a friend there told me of the management’s relief after the Malaysia Airlines flight 370 went missing the next day, swallowing up all other news and making sure nobody but them noticed, save for 13 widows.
Saturday, October 08, 2016
Is software getting worse?
An interesting piece in The Register asks Is Apple's Software Getting Worse Or What?
Comment For over a year, Apple's software has been the subject of more derision than might be expected for a company of its size.
Developer Marco Arment took Apple to task early last year, arguing that OS X (recently rebranded macOS) is full of embarrassing bugs and that the company is trying to do too much on unrealistic deadlines.
Arment subsequently disavowed his post because of the widespread media attention it received. But there was blood in the water and the feeding frenzy has continued at Apple's expense, at least in part because controversy, manufactured or not, drives online traffic.
It continues to this day. On Tuesday, one fiction writer – who asked us to keep him anonymous – voiced his dissatisfaction, eliciting agreement from a few others. "I just need things that work, and that I can rely on working," he lamented. "I say this with the utmost regret, sadness, and no small sense of betrayal: Apple doesn't seem to make those things anymore."
little to do with apple
The fail fast fix fast mentality of software development is insane. (Have worked with software dev teams for 16 years now). Sounds fine if you are working on some new thing. But should not be used on core products. Whether it is apple (not a customer so can't say from personal experience ), Microsoft struggling with their updates, MANY others as well.
The focus has been shifting towards faster delivery of lower quality stuff because they believe they can just fix it later. Though in many cases later never comes because they move onto something else new and shiny.
It is possible of course to release things often but it requires more care than just doing it.
Too often agile is used as an excuse to ship faster and not need quality control.
Windows 10 seems to be turning into the largest scale agile fail in the history of software.
Companies like apple and MS have absolutely no excuses each having 10s of billions of dollars in the bank.
Comment For over a year, Apple's software has been the subject of more derision than might be expected for a company of its size.
Developer Marco Arment took Apple to task early last year, arguing that OS X (recently rebranded macOS) is full of embarrassing bugs and that the company is trying to do too much on unrealistic deadlines.
Arment subsequently disavowed his post because of the widespread media attention it received. But there was blood in the water and the feeding frenzy has continued at Apple's expense, at least in part because controversy, manufactured or not, drives online traffic.
It continues to this day. On Tuesday, one fiction writer – who asked us to keep him anonymous – voiced his dissatisfaction, eliciting agreement from a few others. "I just need things that work, and that I can rely on working," he lamented. "I say this with the utmost regret, sadness, and no small sense of betrayal: Apple doesn't seem to make those things anymore."
The comments suggest it isn't only Apple churning out buggy software in the rush to add bells, whistles and intrusive data-trawling within excessively tight timescales. How many users want the bells and whistles anyway?
"I just need things that work, and that I can rely on working". So do I and on the whole we get it, but have we reached peak software utility for home users? One comment which chimes with me is this.
The fail fast fix fast mentality of software development is insane. (Have worked with software dev teams for 16 years now). Sounds fine if you are working on some new thing. But should not be used on core products. Whether it is apple (not a customer so can't say from personal experience ), Microsoft struggling with their updates, MANY others as well.
The focus has been shifting towards faster delivery of lower quality stuff because they believe they can just fix it later. Though in many cases later never comes because they move onto something else new and shiny.
It is possible of course to release things often but it requires more care than just doing it.
Too often agile is used as an excuse to ship faster and not need quality control.
Windows 10 seems to be turning into the largest scale agile fail in the history of software.
Companies like apple and MS have absolutely no excuses each having 10s of billions of dollars in the bank.
Friday, October 07, 2016
Friday Night Is Music Night: Velvet Violins
JD introduces "a selection of virtuoso violinists, some of whom you may know and some you will not":
NoCrows Crowswing (Steve Wickham)
La Feria de Manizales (Lizzie Ball, violin; Graham Walker, cello; Ivan Guevara, piano)
Dave Swarbrick
Sharon Corr
Jay Ungar
Rachel Bostock
And a post about violinists would not be complete without Grapelli and Menuhin
NoCrows Crowswing (Steve Wickham)
La Feria de Manizales (Lizzie Ball, violin; Graham Walker, cello; Ivan Guevara, piano)
Dave Swarbrick
Sharon Corr
Jay Ungar
Rachel Bostock
And a post about violinists would not be complete without Grapelli and Menuhin
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