Thursday 31 October 2013

Tabloid-speak on immigration

A national newspaper is calling for Britain to "keep the floodgates closed", which apparently is tabloid-speak for not letting any more people come here from eastern Europe.

It states:  All mainstream political parties now admit that immigration throughout the early years of this century has been too high.  Much too high.

Really?  I have just checked the websites of the Labour Party, the Conservative Party, and the Liberal Democrats, and I have not come across a corresponding statement on any one of them.  Can anyone provide links?

All I can find are platitudes.

As for keeping the floodgates closed, the floodgates have been open for decades.  Anyone who votes Labour or Conservative or Liberal Democrat is voting to keep those floodgates open. If you want to close them, then join a party which offers more than just platitudes.

Tuesday 29 October 2013

Do we really need foreign nurses?

The NHS is thinking of recruiting nurses from Portugal.  This is not the first time that Britain has stolen talent from other countries.

I say stolen with good reason.  Many people in Poland struggle to find a builder, because so many Polish builders have gone to live in western Europe. Teachers and nurses who come to Britain from abroad leave vacancies for teachers and nurses in their home countries which are not always easily filled.

Being a nurse is not a hugely difficult job.  On the one hand you might need to administer an injection, but that is only one part of the job.  Nursing work in a hospital often amounts to such things as changing bed linen, helping patients to wash, handing out meal and then clearing away afterwards, and so on.  Is that so difficult?

Florence Nightingale did not have anything like the qualifications expected of nurses today, but she saved the lives of huge numbers of people.

Meanwhile, many young people in Britain go to college to study for degrees which will be of very little use to them, while many older people languish on the dole queues.  Maybe NHS hospitals should recruit our own unemployed as assistant nurses, and let them carry out basic tasks like making beds.  Then over time they could be trained in how to carry out clinical procedures like injecting.

Surely it makes more sense than recruiting nurses from abroad ... or have I missed something?

Sunday 27 October 2013

A reasoned approach to war


I do not habitually reply to comments, but I feel that a lengthy comment concerning British involvement in illegal wars deserves a detailed reply.  The original comment is in purple text, with my responses in black text.



You should explain exactly why you believe Britain entered the war illegally.
No country should ever go to war except defensively.  Britain was not attacked when Germany invaded Belgium, and so entered the war as an aggressor.


It seems to be nonsense both legally and morally to me.

You are welcome to disagree with me, but your own point of view does not bear scrutiny.

Britain had longstanding mutual defence treaties with both Belgium and France when the German army invaded them, depriving them of their liberty and freedom. Quite rightly the British upheld their end of the treaties and responded to the German threat.

Britain had no business having mutual defence treaties with any other countries.  Has it ever occurred to you that treaties are fundamentally undemocratic?  I repeat that Britain was not attacked when Germany invaded Belgium, and so entered the war as an aggressor.  Trying to use treaties to justify an illegal act of aggression is utterly wrong.

The Germans acted illegally, and with arrogance in invading France, and Britain (and Russia) responded rightfully, luckily for the world.

You start by saying that I should explain why I believe Britain entered the war illegally, and yet you regard the German invasion of Belgium as illegal.  Where is your logic?  Germany was wrong to invade Belgium and France, and Britain was wrong to get involved.



The ensuing war cost the lives of an estimated seventeen or maybe eighteen million people either dead or missing, to which can be added more than twenty million people wounded – and yet you dismiss this carnage with the words “luckily for the world”.

The reason Britain is not at war with Syria is because the British are tired of war which doesn't directly involve or require them.

It is a shame that the British were not tired of war which did not directly involve or require them in the summer of 1914.



Furthermore, recent wars have been interferences in civil wars (Libya, Afghanistan, Iraq), which frankly, you can't win. Even if they were involved in a war in Syria, would it be a war WITH Syria?

Evil politicians in this country and the USA would have us believe that we invaded Iraq and Afghanistan and bombed Libya (all of which is true), but that we were somehow not actually at war with those countries.



It is easily arguable that not helping the oppressed Syrian people is shameful. Personally I say stay out of it, but the cost of that is massacres, chemical weapons use, torture and civil war for decades.

You want Britain to not to go to war against Syria because you personally say stay out of it.  I too want Britain to stay out of it.  The difference is that my opposition to war against Syria is part of a considered and humane approach to the subject of war which is free from hypocrisy.

This post and its comments are also relevant.

Thursday 24 October 2013

The betrayal of the low paid

A national newspaper is calling for tax cuts aimed at the middle classes.  While I am sure that a lot of middle class people would appreciate a tax cut, it is fair to point out that cutting income tax would make very little difference to the genuinely poor.

At the present time, a working person in this country typically enjoys a personal allowance for income tax of £9,440.  That is roughly the income you would derive from working thirty hours each week at the minimum wage.

Anyone earning less than £9,440 each year has nothing to gain from either an increase in the personal allowance or a cut in the basic rate of income tax.  Likewise, anyone earning less than £12,000 per year has very little to gain from either an increase in the personal allowance or a cut in the basic rate of income tax.

Things that would really benefit people on low incomes would include lower council tax bills and increased tax credit payments.

Ask yourselves two questions.  First, what was the total net income including tax credits of a single person with no dependant children working thirty-five hours each week for the minimum wage in the tax year 2010/2011?  (This was the last tax year in which the present government did not set the rules for taxation.)

Second, what will be the total net income including tax credits of a single person with no dependant children working thirty-five hours each week for the minimum wage in the tax year 2013/2014?


Someone working thirty-five hours each week for the minimum wage in the tax year 2010/2011 received tax credits of nearly forty pounds per week, but in the current tax year they receive less than ten pounds each week.

This shortfall is not made up for by income tax cuts, nor could it be.  It could be made up for by cuts to council tax, but this has not happened.

If you have a Conservative or Liberal Democrat MP, then you might like to ask him (or her) to explain why this reduction in tax credits should not be seen as evidence of a government not caring about working people.

Monday 21 October 2013

An Indian nationalist speaks out

The David Lean film A Passage To India contains a scene in which an Indian nationalist asks an English college lecturer on what basis England (meaning the United Kingdom) is justified in governing India.

The Englishman, Fielding, replies "Personally I'm out here because I need a job."

The Indian nationalist quite reasonably points out that "Qualified Indians also need a job."

Fielding then replies "I got in first", which is clearly not true.

If I've got it right, the Indian men in this scene are all Urdu speaking Muslims, and therefore might - and I stress might - be descended from people who migrated into India from central Asia in the sixteenth century.  Therefore Fielding's response could have been along the lines of "Then go back to central Asia, and let a real Indian have your job".

Today there are many Indians living in Britain, along with many more from Pakistan and Bangladesh, both of which were once part of India.  Many of them occupy jobs while many native British people are unemployed.

If I were to question an Indian man working in this country about his moral entitlement to be working here, then I suppose I might get a polite reply in the manner of Fielding - or I might get called a racist.

I am aware that many British people live and work overseas.  Whether or not that is acceptable is not for me to decide.  What I am clear about is that I do not object in principle to any citizen of a foreign country speaking out against British people taking their jobs.

Unlike communists, I do actually value free speech.

Saturday 19 October 2013

The story of King Ed



Once upon a time long long ago in a faraway land there lived a king called Ed.  King Ed cared deeply about the people of his country, but he was upset.  He knew that the people loved to eat apples, but they were so expensive.  They commonly sold in supermarkets for between 30p and 50p each, and in independent greengrocers for between 40p and 60p each.


So King Ed took action.  He issued a decree that no one could sell an apple for more than 20p.  He argued that this would allow all of his people, including the very poorest, to eat apples every day.


This is not what happened though.  Independent greengrocers immediately stopped selling apples because they could not afford to lose money by selling them at only 20p. Meanwhile the supermarkets started selling only the very cheapest apples they could find, and even so they could make no profit selling them at only 20p.  Also, a lot of people did not like the cheapest apples, and so did not buy apples at all.


Then people started growing apples in secret, and a black market soon came into being.  The people who sold these apples had to charge more than 20p for each apple in order to cover their costs, but they knew they were breaking the law by doing so.  As a result, they tended to charge a lot more than 20p for each apple, but many people were willing to pay a lot more for apples because they loved eating apples so much.  In fact apples sold on the black market often sold for as much as a pound each, but of course only the better off people could afford to pay a pound each for apples, and so poor people had to go without.


Eventually King Ed realised that he was wrong to cap the price of apples, and he allowed people to charge whatever they wanted for apples.  All of a sudden, the shops were full of apples once again, and the people were overjoyed.  Not one of them ever had to pay as much as a pound for an apple ever again.


Meanwhile in the real world, maybe Ed Miliband might like to rethink his plans to freeze energy prices, and look into the reasons why energy prices are as high as they are.  Maybe instead he would like to pledge to stop throwing public money at wind turbines.  They are very expensive, and produce very little electricity.

Thursday 17 October 2013

Energy sector fat cats

So once again I find myself writing about fat cats.  Today it is reported that Centrica is run by fat cats. Centrica is in the energy industry.

Many people will be wondering why energy company bosses should have big salaries when millions of people are struggling to pay their gas and electric bills.  I have previously written about fat cats, but the energy sector is perhaps worthy of further comment.

I believe that company directors have a duty - and ought to have a legal duty - to ensure that employees and suppliers are paid in good time, that laws are complied with, that the company remains solvent, and that shareholders receive appropriate dividends.  Ordinarily I would be happy for any company which met all of these requirements to pay its directors large salaries.

The energy sector is different, however.  Energy is something which almost all of us consume, and many of us have little control over how much we use.  In cold weather the heating tends to go on.  In theory the existence of a competitive market should help us all to get the lowest prices, but not everyone is good at working out which supplier is the cheapest.  Matters are not helped by the fact that some suppliers seem to derive sadistic pleasure from not being clear about tariffs.

Surely it would make sense for companies in the energy sector to be required by law not to pay large salaries to their directors unless they cut prices at the same time.  Can anyone think of a reason why not?

Wednesday 16 October 2013

Prison staff don't like to be stabbed

And who can blame them?  Following a rise in the number of knife attacks on prison staff, the government is considering a routine policy of prison staff wearing stab-resistant vests and gloves.  But what about stab-resistant masks?  Or is facial injury not expected?

Of course this is all completely unsurprising, given that it is all part of a trend towards a more violent society.  People who do not want to live in an increasingly more violent society are welcome to join a political party which supports a less violent society, and whose policies make sense.  Can you think of such a party?

Monday 14 October 2013

The cats stay fat

David Cameron has said something about wanting to help small companies get paid on time by larger companies.  I'll believe it when I see it.

There seem to be a lot of company directors in this country who are happy to earn huge salaries, but who are not always keen to ensure that creditors are paid in good time.

Add to this that paying large salaries to its directors brings very few real benefits to a company.  For example, do large salaries guarantee that the company will never be prosecuted?  Do large salaries guarantee that the company will never be the target of litigation?  Do large salaries guarantee that the company will never be insolvent? 

If David Cameron wants to help businesses, then he should bring in a law requiring companies not to pay large salaries to their directors unless creditors are paid on time, and the company remains solvent.

I have previously written about fat cats as follows:

A woman scorned

A small victory in Barnet

The banksters are not Jonathan and Charlotte

HS2 fat cats

Saturday 12 October 2013

The next big freeze

It is being reported that we are in for a tough winter, and also that energy bills are rising.  It is therefore no surprise that we are also being told that many people will have to choose between buying food or feeding their homes this winter.

It is also reported, quite reasonably, that the price of energy is in part the result of so-called green policies being forced upon us by our evil government.  Wind turbines are expensive to build, and yet produce very little electricity.  The government is therefore forcing the energy industry to supply us with what is in part at least very expensive electricity.

This is not new, however.  We have known about this for some time now, and yet there is no public clamour for an end to green energy policies.  Not one of the three main parties is currently seeking to bring down energy prices, except for Labour - but Ed Miliband cannot be taken seriously on this point.


Ed is not interested in the root cause of energy price increases.  He merely wants to intervene to hold them down, even though he must realise that mindless state intervention has a long history of failure.

If you support any one of the three main parties, then you are clearly indifferent to the price of electricity and gas.  If you freeze this winter, then that is your choice and yours alone.

Update: it is now being reported that David Cameron is backing a review into his green energy policy, but he nevertheless appears unrepentant about the misery he has caused.

Thursday 10 October 2013

Daily Mail defames EDL

First of all, I am not and never have been a supporter of the English Defence League.

Nevertheless I am disgusted at the way they are often defamed in the national press.  Consider this report in The Daily Mail about an ongoing criminal prosecution. 

"We had a conversation with regards to the EDL, which I know stands for the English Defence League," Mr Roe said.

This is probably true, and unremarkable.  However the witness continues:

"I believe they incite hatred against different races and creeds, Asians in particular."

This is not a statement of fact but rather of belief.  Now consider this Daily Mail report about a former EDL spokesman.  The man's name is Guramit Singh Kalirai.

Are we really to believe that  Guramit Singh Kalirai was once a spokesman for an organisation which incites "hatred against different races and creeds, Asians in particular"?

The answer is of course no.  The EDL is an organisation which has never concerned itself with anything other than what it calls Islamism or militant Islam.  As an aside, what they call militant Islam is simply Islam.  I have already noted some of the teachings of Islam.

Back on topic though, why does The Daily Mail repeat the defamation of the EDL by a witness?  The law of defamation does not apply to witnesses in court, and so the EDL cannot sue the witness for defaming them.  Also, I am not sure the EDL can sue anyone for defamation, given that the EDL - so far as I am aware - is not a legal person.

(By contrast, a company is a legal person, which can sue and be sued.  A political party is not a legal person, but has officers who can sue or be sued on behalf of the party.)

The Daily Mail is entitled to report the criminal prosecution of a teenager, and also to report relevant statements made by witnesses.  I cannot see however why it should want to repeat defamatory allegations which have no bearing on the case.

But of course the national press is no stranger to misrepresentation of the facts, as I have previously noted.

I never buy national newspapers, and I hope you don't either.

Tuesday 8 October 2013

Inclusive is communist

It is reported that the Scouts movement has decided to admit atheists.  Apparently this has been done in order to make the movement inclusive.  It has already made changes in the past so as to include young people whose religion is not Christianity, and has even made dietary changes - such as veggie sausages at scout camps - so as to include even more.

This obsession with including is a basically a con trick by communists to persuade us to abandon our principles.  Maybe it is time for the Scouts to back away from being inclusive, and actually believe in something other than pandering to the whim of every minority group.

Either stand up for your principles, or watch your principles sink in the morass of communism.  It's that simple a choice.

Monday 7 October 2013

The benefits ban: don't be fooled

The evil Tory Party led by evil David Cameron have been talking of removing welfare payments from the under-25s.  They have however hinted that maybe this might not apply to lone parents.

The idea is that anyone under the age of twenty-five should be either working or studying.  Ideally most of them should be working, but the evil Tories have no idea how to create jobs.  Therefore we can reasonably assume that huge numbers of young people will either become lone parents or else flit from one college course to another.

To suggest that this would cost less than paying JSA to the under-25s is ridiculous.

Then again, on present showing the Tories are not going to form the next government.  They choose to be useless, and therefore they choose to lose public support.

Sunday 6 October 2013

Has Nick Clegg caught rabies?

Four news items strike me as being of interest today.  The first is that the evil Nick Clegg does not want Britain to leave the EU, or even apparently to have a vote upon it.  The second is that new EU rules have created a real risk of rabies entering this country.

Maybe Nick Clegg does not care if you contract rabies, but do you care?

The third news item is that Lord Sugar has been questioned by police about an allegedly racist comment on social media.  While I accept that the comment was not remotely racist, it is nevertheless the case that the communist police did go so far as to speak with him about it.

The fourth news item is that our communist Home Secretary Theresa May has admitted that roughly a quarter of all the many thousands of criminal gangs in this country are run by immigrants.  What really?  Only a quarter?

Apparently this is not a racist statement, however, and Mrs May has not - so far as I am aware - been questioned by the communist police.

Friday 4 October 2013

Cameron versus Jammeh

It appears that I am expected not to like His Excellency Sheikh Professor Doctor President Jammeh of The Gambia.  This is because, among other things, he had nine people shot dead by firing squad last year.  I do not know what crime those people were convicted of, if any, and neither do I know whether or not they had a fair trial.  Further comment would therefore be improper.

I do know however that David Cameron, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, ordered the bombing of Libya in which many people were killed.  Not one of these people was allowed a fair trial - or indeed any trial - prior to being killed.

Am I expected to like David Cameron?

Thursday 3 October 2013

Albania: reasonable questions

Tony Blair is helping Albania join the European Union.  I have some questions.

How many impoverished Albanians will come to Britain once they have EU passports?  (The population of Albania is roughly three million.)

How many of those people will be Muslims?  (More than half the population of Albania are Muslims.)

How many Albanians will take up residence on Park Lane and use the nearest bush as a toilet?

Will any of them try to mug Tony Blair's daughter?

Tuesday 1 October 2013

We can't trust chameleon Dave

There are some real muppets at work in the national press at the moment.  Some journos are actually praising David Cameron for promising us an in/out referendum on Britain's membership of the European Union.  The word gullible appears euphemistic.

First, the PM's promise is conditional upon the Conservatives winning a majority at the next general election, which does not look likely at the moment.  People who follow me on Western Spring will know that I currently expect Ed Miliband to be our next prime minister.

Second, David Cameron is not a man we can trust.  His style of leadership is based upon utter contempt for people in his party who dare to dispute him.  He has previously made insulting remarks about two other political parties - UKIP and the British National Party - and yet has never had the courtesy to debate with representatives of either party.  If he is too busy to do so, then fair enough, but surely he could appoint one of his lieutenants to represent his party in such a debate.

Third, even if David Cameron were to lead a majority government after the next general election, and even if he honoured his pledge on a referendum, there are many tricks he could use to impact on the outcome.  He could renegotiate our terms of membership, winning a few concessions which could easily be lost again later on, and then urge us to vote to remain in the EU on the grounds that there is nothing to worry about.

He could spend millions or even billions of pounds on campaigning for a vote to remain in the EU.  Tony Blair gave both Scotland and Wales a referendum on home rule, and spent our money freely on pushing for a yes vote.  He did this in spite of the fact that a yes vote in Scotland was almost a foregone conclusion.

David Cameron could also rig the rules to ensure that it is highly unlikely that the result of a referendum is acted upon.  A Labour government in the 1970s allowed a referendum on home rule for Scotland which resulted in a modest majority in favour, but the government did not act upon it because of a rule on the number of people taking part in the vote.

He could even have the wording of the referendum rigged to ensure that the outcome would be irrelevent whatever people voted for. For example he could invite people to vote on whether or not Britain should leave the EU at some point in the next twenty years.  A yes vote would then allow him to delay taking Britain out of the EU for up to twenty years.  It is of course highly unlikely that David Cameron would remain as prime minister for another twenty years.

Ed Miliband is not promising a referendum, but on this point at least he is surely being honest.