Thursday, July 08, 2021

THURSDAY BACKTRACK: Music and news from 60 years ago - week ending 8 July 1961

Del Shannon and the Everly Brothers still lead the chart; at 3 is Ricky Nelson's 'Hello Mary Lou'


Some memorable events (via Wikipedia):

Photo: Terence Donovan, 1990
1 July: Diana Spencer, future Princess of Wales, is born at Sandringham, Norfolk.

2 July: as refugees continue to flee the German Democratic Republic, East-West tensions mount. Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev tells UK Ambassador Sir Frank Roberts six atom bombs could 'put Great Britain out of action' - and nine, for France. Weeks later, at a Warsaw Pact conference, Khrushchev declares, 'We rate Great Britain higher [than six], and we have several dozen atom bombs ready which we will use to carry out a strike against Great Britain and really put it out of action !'
First atomic bomb tests: USA 1945Soviet Union 1949UK 1952France 1960 (China coming in 1964)
First hydrogen bomb tests: USA 1952Soviet Union 1955UK 1957, (China 1967France 1968)

Immensely destructive: the H-bomb test 'Castle Bravo', at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands, 
was 2.5 times more powerful than expected and its fallout harmed many Marshallese.

https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/russias-k-19-submarine-called-%E2%80%98hiroshima%E2%80%99-141187 
4 July: Russian nuclear submarine K-19, hastily developed to catch up with the USA, suffers a burst pipe in the cooling system, for which there was no backup. 'Captain Zateyev believed that if the reactor exploded, it could cause the United States and NATO to believe the Soviet Union was attempting a nuclear strike, potentially causing a preemptive retaliation and World War III.' 22 sailors volunteer to go in and fix it; all are dead within two years.

Photo: Daily Mirror
8 July: While swimming naked in the outdoor pool of Cliveden House, Berkshire, Christine Keeler meets British Cabinet minister John Profumo at a house party. She is aged 19 and has previously been a victim of sexual abuse from her stepfather; now she is being introduced to influential people by osteopath and socialite Stephen Ward. At the height of the Cold War, Profumo is Minister for War and begins an affair with her, but he is not the only one: 'When MI5 found out [she] was also sleeping with Ivanov, a naval attaché at the Soviet Embassy in London it was a clear conflict of interests.' Profumo eventually denies the improper relationship in Parliament, is later caught out and resigns.

UK chart hits, week ending 8 July 1961

Htp: Clint's labour-of love compilation https://www.sixtiescity.net/charts/61chart.htm

1

Temptation

The Everly Brothers

Warner Brothers

2

Runaway

Del Shannon

London

3

Hello Mary Lou / Travellin' Man

Ricky Nelson

London

4

Pasadena

The Temperance Seven

Parlophone

5

A Girl Like You

Cliff Richard and The Shadows

Columbia

6

Surrender

Elvis Presley

RCA

7

Halfway To Paradise

Billy Fury

Decca

8

But I Do

Clarence 'Frogman' Henry

Pye

9

Well I Ask You

Eden Kane

Decca

10

Pop Goes The Weasel / Bee*Bom

Anthony Newley

Decca

11

Runnin' Scared

Roy Orbison

London

12

The Frightened City

The Shadows

Columbia

13

Ring Of Fire

Duane Eddy

London

14

Breakin' In A Brand New Heart

Connie Francis

MGM

15

Weekend

Eddie Cochran

London

16

Time

Craig Douglas

Top Rank

17

I Told Every Little Star

Linda Scott

Columbia

18

Have A Drink On Me

Lonnie Donegan

Pye

19

You'll Never Know

Shirley Bassey

Columbia

20

Marcheta

Karl Denver

Decca


Saturday, July 03, 2021

WEEKENDER: If someone had told me... by Wiggia


The title to this short piece is one of those phrases we use in hindsight as a get-out clause.
Actually if eighteen months ago much that was being touted and pushed as future agendas and narratives, I would have put in the conspiracy theory bin.

The speed with which things have changed and continue to has not only got me starting to believe in the basis of many of these theories but beneath the surface more than just hints are emerging that show there is indeed a movement for change in the western world and it is not for the indigenous peoples' benefit.

As I have said before the Covid virus whether deliberate or not in the way it has been handled worldwide has proven to be a wonderful opportunity to advance other things that if enacted upon are going to make big changes to the way people live and not that far into the future either, if it all happens the great reset comes to pass.

Once again the climate fanatics have a half open door to push against. Eighteen months ago it would have seemed inconceivable what many are now pushing for, and governments have quickly taken the cue to advance much of the same.

The screw on our lifestyles is being turned it appears every day, as items like eating meat that most of us saw as the mad ramblings of the eco nutters is coming up on the rails; focus groups acting on ‘our’ behalf use the healthy eating habit meme to persuade us to save the planet by reducing our meat consumption, while at the same time government committees state that the price of meat will go up to ensure consumption drops.

The same thing is happening with anything transport related. EVs may be the preferred future, but there is no way at present we can power them should the numbers ever get near the government targets, so restrictions will be enforced; firstly the ‘cheap’ to run EVs will become subject to restrictions, many forms have been muted already, pay per mile to make up for the lost fuel revenue, charging to be increased in price to level with fossil fuels, restrictions on usage, i.e. pay more to use during peak times, the banning of all private vehicles from city centres (already happening) and coercion to use public transport.

If I hear 'build back better' again there is a chance something will be lobbed at the TV screen. Everyone everywhere is using the phrase at every opportunity. What does it actually mean? You can repeat something as long and as often as you like but if no one actually explains what it means there is little point, yet on and on they go repeating the mantra. It is easy to think this is something dreamt up and coordinated in some sleazy smoke filled room in Davos; maybe it was and the conspiracy theorists are correct. Or is it simply those at the top in governments world wide are not that bright and have simply latched onto a phrase they all think will work for them in delivering right-on statements. If the latter it shows a total lack of individual thinking ingenuity and shines a light into those who would govern as not being that bright at all.

It is not easy to believe this is someone purporting to run the country; it has to rank as one of the most inane statements in the English language uttered by anyone in recent times and there have been many.


There has been a flood of buzz words in the last eighteen months, most pointless, many misleading and some just stupid, plain English forsaken for a phrase with a very limited life: furlough, tiered, traffic light, self distancing, lock down, bubble, new normal... it goes on and on; long Covid, vaccine (when it isn’t a vaccine), herd immunity (that’s a bovine phrase), Covidiot, flattening the curve etc. etc. etc., all of these have been hijacked or invented to suit an agenda, all replace standard English words that actually explain things in a much more descriptive accurate and simple way. As I have said eighteen months ago anyone using these phrases out of context would have been laughed at.

The NHS eighteen months ago had many flaws and a GP side not fit for purpose. Who could have foreseen the total close down of all services but for treating the virus, most of the NHS staff making Tik Tok videos to relieve boredom and ending with an NHS that is now a basket case, with the potential for thousands more to die from neglect by that organisation than have done from the virus. Eighteen months ago you would have laughed at the suggestion and the stupidity of shutting all else down.

Who could have foreseen the borrowing of money at the highest rate ever in peacetime? £303 billion in one year was spent above income attained leaving us with a debt so large we are totally finished if interest rates go up even 1%; savings will be wiped out by inflation and still they spend and talk of further restrictions on wealth creation in many areas.

Meanwhile the quality of politicians continues to plummet, from a pre Covid poor to post? Covid dire, our Health Secretary manages to make a complete arse of himself by managing to get himself recorded on the office CCTV, that in itself is quite an achievement as the camera was so bloody obvious, but still….

The Labour party goes for the grievance vote by putting up Jo Cox’s sister as a candidate, despite not being a Labour member until a month before being chosen and bending all their own rules on selection, and now the Muslim vote they curry favour for has discovered the fact she is a lesbian; they surely didn’t believe that once found out it would not make a difference with the ROP supporters - naive or stupid? At the same time all political parties involved in the by election show total cowardice in failing to mention the teacher threatened with his life and living in hiding because it might lose them some votes.

And Angela Rayner (crayons) now deputy party leader and former shadow education minister has just put out this statement about Hancock….

 "Matt Hancock was in fragrant breach of his own rules"
"A senior minister has a duty to uphold standards, when faced with the opportunity to have an affair he should have reclined"

Amazingly some Labour MPs are pushing her as a replacement for Starmer!

Meanwhile the PM just lies about everything.


Eighteen months ago it was ‘two weeks to flatten the curve’; now, after a large part of the population has had two jabs to save ‘our’ NHS we are told we will need two more in the same year. Just how good is the efficacy of the jabs we have been given, if we now need two more to protect freedoms that have not returned?

Eighteen months ago you could go on holiday anywhere in the world. Now, even if you do escape you will probably be stranded and have to return at great expense and go into quarantine. For the elite nothing has changed in eighteen months, but then they only make the rules, there is no expectation they will ever have to abide by them.

'Staycation', another awful word coined first by another waste of space, one David ‘I am not a quitter’ Cameron, is giving a boost to the local holiday market, well to those who can afford £2500 a week for a one bedroomed cottage in Cornwall; no point in trying to get a room in a hotel, they are either booked solid till 2023 or full of dinghy people as army barracks are not good enough for them despite being good enough for the army.
 
I read a report by someone who took his wife to A&E for a suspected broken arm in an East London hospital. Upon arrival there was a queue and virtually everyone in it was foreign, many different languages were being spoken; it would appear that the influx of illegal migrants to inner city areas and who have a health problem of any sort rock up to A&E as they can’t register with a GP, thereby clogging up a service we pay for and they don’t and never have. This isn’t new, just worse: I remember when my mother was dying in St Mary’s in London, parking round the back of the hospital meant I had to come in via the A&E; it was striking, the place was packed and I could not see a single white face in the place - a mixed area for sure, but not one. You cannot help but wonder how many were not actually entitled to health care. When I mentioned the fact to a nurse looking after my mum she said the place was a de facto destination point for so many from abroad who want to game the system and there is little they can do. Nothing has changed: with over a million at least of illegal migrants in this country, some reckon at least twice that, the cost must be horrendous for the tax payer, yet the virtue signallers think this is all OK and shows we care as a nation. We do care, as long as they are genuine and have come through the right channels and not the English one.

But our own should come first. They pay for it, and all those virtue signallers in the NHS who are so loose with the services we make possible, or did.

Again the influx of dinghy people has highlighted something that was partially buried or kept under wraps eighteen months ago.

Eighteen months ago if you decided to sell your house and move it was not easy as not that many were putting their properties on the market as the conditions post Brexit made the market a bit unsure of direction. Come the virus and the country bankrupting itself the housing market goes through the roof and the government gives it or the builders a helping hand; who seriously would have bet on that, the economics of the madhouse? It keeps the Daily Mail happy though: “man charged with murdering wife and children, seen here in an earlier photo in front of his luxury £750k house in... a popular area for aspiring rappers.”

Add to that demand for building materials has risen at an unprecedented rate during that period. Timber alone has doubled for many types and much is simply unavailable, so house prices have rocketed and now if you decide not to move but upgrade your old house it will take a lot more money and a lot longer to get the job done. Congratulations to our new chancellor for exacerbating the problem.

Since eighteen months ago, the press have become the mouthpiece of the government: any dissenting or challenging statements are ignored completely or those uttering such mischievous items of fact are now de-platformed, cancelled or declared nutters. Marches are only reported if of the correct type - BLM and XR are on the approved list - anything else even if hundreds of thousands attend are totally ignored, all in the name of having a united front in tackling the virus (despite all this togetherness they have still made an utter cods of large areas of the fight against the disease.) The BBC of course have no trouble taking this stance as they have been doing this as the new normal for years now.

It is also difficult to believe we would have a border in the middle of the Irish sea separating us from another part of the United Kingdom. Eighteen months ago if that had been suggested as a solution to a problem we would have laughed at it, but that along with all the other nonsense is an indication of how we have progressed or not, and the nots win.

Finally an advert in the Times today, the 1st of July by the Co-op:

“Your goodbye wishes matter

"Plan your funeral with us and choose now how you want to be remembered. We’ll make it personal, every step of the way.

"Buy a CO OP plan before the 30th of June and get up to £50 back to spend at the CO OP.”

Not taking any chances, are they?

Friday, July 02, 2021

A share-owning democracy, or socialism?

If I understand the drift of Margaret Thatcher’s vision for the United Kingdom, it was one where the ordinary person might eventually own the house they lived in, instead of paying rent forever; and own shares so that they could have some of the benefits of capitalism, instead of seeing themselves as serfs working for ever-wealthier bosses.

If the project works, it destroys the socialist ‘take all and provide for all’ model; but if it fails, how many might opt for shabby security over potentially ruinous freedom? The jury is still out, but I dread the verdict.

The stock market has become a rollercoaster in recent years. Here is a graph of selected days – the high of the tech boom of the ‘90s, the low points of 2003 and 2009, and where we are now. To give some idea of ‘real terms’ I also supply the figures adjusted by the official RPI index https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/inflationandpriceindices/timeseries/cdko/mm23 (June’s market close is deflated by May’s RPI, the latest available):


As you see, the magic 7,000 figure around which the market is now circling – above the historic high point of 6,930.2 on 20 December 1999 – is actually worth about half what it was then. Yes, you might do better by picking particular stocks or funds, but yesterday’s star could be today’s dog, as for example we see in the legal-vulture-besieged Neil Woodford https://www.ft.com/content/2f077ae2-f19e-11e9-bfa4-b25f11f42901 . At least with Prince Ras Monolulu’s racing tips https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/horse-racing/54695641 you got a result the same day.

Most people aren’t gamblers, at least not with their life savings, which is why they used to like with-profits funds, getting an annual statement from the insurance company to say how much their holding had grown since the year before. However such funds found it difficult to cope with the volatility of the last decades, sometimes having to impose ‘market value adjustments’ to stop investors running away en masse in a bad year.

The uncertainty is compounded by what’s happened in the bond market. The unimaginable levels of debt in our system have forced the government to drop interest rates to near zero; when a personal pension plan holder wants to retire with an annuity, it has to be secured with bond investments on which the annual yield is now pitiful, so that one needs a far larger fund to get the same income. The alternative is to leave one’s pension investment in equities, with their associated risk.

This dilemma was not anticipated in the good old days, when (for example) Equitable Life https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Equitable_Life_Assurance_Society sold pensions with a Guaranteed Annuity Rate at retirement age of up to 12 per cent. When EL were caught out by the rates collapse at pay-out time they tried to reduce the investors’ fund value to compensate, but the court ruled that out; hinc illae lacrimae https://www.latin-is-simple.com/en/vocabulary/phrase/749/ .

The investment boom of the 1980s lit expectations that were fanned by regulators. It’s understandable in a way – there were cases of maturing mortgage endowment plans that yielded six times their target value – but only if you think good times go on for ever. At one point the illustrated yearly growth on pension funds was in the bracket 8.5 – 13 per cent. However by the beginning of the 90s even the best funds run for our insurance company weren’t showing anything like that higher figure.

As with so many issues, instead of looking for cat-stroking villains we need to understand that the roots of our problems are systemic. Britain threw away the wealth of generations in two world wars with a great depression in between – there was no Roaring Twenties here. Post World War Two America – seizing the chance to finish off the British Empire - turned off the financial tap to us even as it poured money into western Europe to rebuild it and prevent an outbreak of communism. The terms on which we joined the EU withered many of our industries for over forty years. Meanwhile the Third World gained our technological know-how and exploited it with desperate urgency as only the poor can – one company I used to advise specialised in exporting large machine tools from our closing factories. Is it a surprise that money-making seems to centre around housebuilding these days, rather than industry? It is as though Stone Age men could eschew hunting in favour of selling each other caves.

Well, now we’re out of the EU, though it seems that like jilted lovers they still try to make as much trouble as possible; but there’s no going back to the status quo ante; it’s a different world now. Although it’s nice to hear a PM who makes optimistic noises, we’re already seeing that ‘free trade’ is not an unmixed blessing; we have exchanged the mini-globalism of Europe for the maxi-globalism that has done so much for the multinationals but whose benefits have not really trickled down to the rest of us. If we really are de-industrialising and also turning expensively and erratically green in various ways, how are we going to support our over-large population, especially when we are still expanding it with further influxes of people?

We are long overdue a consideration of how to cut our coat according to the cloth we still have; otherwise people will start to contemplate a different system.

Thursday, July 01, 2021

THURSDAY BACKTRACK: Music and news from 60 years ago - week ending 1 July 1961

Elvis and Del Shannon still occupy the top two places; at third, for the second week, comes 'Temptation':


Some memorable events (via Wikipedia):

25 June: American neo-Nazi George Lincoln Rockwell, discharged from the US Navy two years earlier for his political views, attends a Washington, D.C. rally of Elijah Mohammed's Nation of Islam.The strange connection is based on both parties' belief in racial segregation, and vehement antisemitism. Malcolm X (who six months before had been sent in secret to broker a truce with the Ku Klux Klan in Atlanta) gives a speech there;  Rockwell himself speaks at another NOI rally in Chicago in February 1962 (in 1967 he is murdered by John Patler, a former member of Rockwell's party who had been expelled a few months earlier for trying to introduce Marxist ideas.) In 1964, Malcolm X leaves the NOI, disillusioned with its leader, and is assassinated the next year by NOI member Talmadge Hayer.

27 June: Arthur Michael Ramsey is enthroned as 100th Archbishop of Canterbury.


28 June: following the April failure of the Central Intelligence Agency-sponsored 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Cuba, President Kennedy issues a trio of directives to transfer the responsibility for the planning of peacetime paramilitary operations to the Joint Chiefs of Staff. 'The directives... were so secret that copies were not released to either the CIA or to the U.S. Department of State' (pic source.)

1 July: Fantasy Island opens: a theme park on Grand Island near Buffalo, New York

UK chart hits, week ending 1 July 1961

Htp: Clint's labour-of love compilation https://www.sixtiescity.net/charts/61chart.htm

1

Runaway

Del Shannon

London

2

Surrender

Elvis Presley

RCA

3

Temptation

The Everly Brothers

Warner Brothers

4

Pasadena

The Temperance Seven

Parlophone

5

A Girl Like You

Cliff Richard and The Shadows

Columbia

6

Hello Mary Lou / Travellin' Man

Ricky Nelson

London

7

Halfway To Paradise

Billy Fury

Decca

8

But I Do

Clarence 'Frogman' Henry

Pye

9

The Frightened City

The Shadows

Columbia

10

You'll Never Know

Shirley Bassey

Columbia

11

Pop Goes The Weasel / Bee*Bom

Anthony Newley

Decca

12

Runnin' Scared

Roy Orbison

London

13

Well I Ask You

Eden Kane

Decca

14

I Told Every Little Star

Linda Scott

Columbia

15

Little Devil

Neil Sedaka

RCA

16

Have A Drink On Me

Lonnie Donegan

Pye

17

More Than I Can Say

Bobby Vee

London

18

Marcheta

Karl Denver

Decca

19

Ring Of Fire

Duane Eddy

London

20

Weekend

Eddie Cochran

London