Watch Out for Christ Sake You’ll Let the Tories In

We all should read Johann Hari of The Independent; he often makes a lot of sense. His latest article David Cameron is not a progressive, or anything like it elucidates the bankruptcy of mainstream political coverage – hands up anyone who has any idea of Cameron’s policies, no takers? Well here’s a few pointers from Johann, because it seems absolutely no one else can be bothered to dig below the Tory party spin.

Let’s start with the biggest issue of all: global warming. Cameron has performed a recent screeching turn-around. Prior to his election as Tory leader, his only recorded statement about environmentalism was to mock wind farms as “giant bird-blenders” and demand more roads be built. But within a year of the sneer, he had one of these “bird-blenders” built onto his house, and invited the press to see it, proclaiming himself a “true green”.

Yet – wait – what’s this in his article? He goes out of his way to oppose “centre-left approaches such as bureaucracy and regulation” to stem the release of warming gases. These are old-fashioned failures. He means it: the man Cameron has put in charge of drawing up his plans for a “bonfire of regulation” is John Redwood, who says global warming is a “swindle” but if it was happening we should celebrate because we will have more sunny days. “If you want to know if I’m a Tory”, Cameron told the Spectator, “ask John Redwood”.

If you are opposed to government regulation, how can you tackle global warming? Imagine this. You, as Prime Minister, go to the leading corporations and say they need to cut their emissions. And they say – sorry, David, but we have a responsibility to our shareholders to maximise their profits. You have disavowed “regulation” and “bureaucracy”, so you have no power to make them do it, except – perhaps – to bribe them, with your tax-billions and mine. Is that really a better way, when they already rake in tens of billions in profit?

Cameron tells us he wants to copy the green policies of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Angela Merkel – but he doesn’t seem to understand what they are. Schwarzenegger, for example, has passed a law requiring car manufacturers to massively slash the amount of fuel each car uses. By 2020, they will have to achieve 43 miles per US gallon. The car manufacturers are fighting the law in court; Schwarzenegger has told them to quit “whining”. This is precisely the kind of “regulation” with, yes, a “bureaucracy” to police it – that Cameron explicitly disavows, and Redwood promises to dismantle.

Oh, and Cameron tells conservative audiences he still wants to pursue that “massive road-building programme” across Britain.

So much for the green-wash. What about inequality and poverty? Cameron says “only we” can tackle it. He concedes that, in the past, “income redistribution and social programmes run by the state had considerable success in relieving poverty”. Yet now “those methods have run their course”. Why? He doesn’t tell us, but he vows he will abandon this idea of “the central state shifting money around” nonetheless.

But is it true this approach has inexplicably stopped working? Since 1997, the poorest families have been given, on average, £4200 more in top-up benefits per year. I can take you to the Ocean Estate here in East London and introduce you to children who used to sleep on a mattress in the kitchen but now have a bedroom of their own. You could talk to mums who can afford to give their kids birthday parties and take them on holiday for the first time. To them, “the central state shifting money around” hasn’t dealt with “the symptoms” of poverty; it has ended their poverty.

There are now more than half-a-million people in this position – including many of my relatives – and if Cameron wants there to be more, he should call for a ramping up of tax credits.

Yet Cameron hints he will abolish them: one of his spokesmen compares them to the disastrous nationalised industries of the 1970s. What would he do instead? He says he will deal instead with “the causes of poverty”, which he says are “the cycle of family breakdown, worklessness, crime, [and] drug and alcohol abuse”. It’s true these factors aggravate poverty, but the “solutions” he proposes are oddly feeble. Will £40 a week for married couples really turn Shameless families into Terry and June? Will kicking all addicts off their safe, legal prescriptions make them good happy workers – or will it send them back to crime on the streets? Will either of these “solutions” make up for the poorest losing more than £4000 a year?

There is a larger cause of poverty than any on Cameron’s list – but his ideology prevents him from seeing it. Markets are brilliant at many things, like generating wealth. But they cannot, on their own, ensure that people at the bottom of the pile have enough to live on. There is a large chunk of people in Britain whose skills and labour simply aren’t worth very much to the market. A security guard and dinner-lady raising their kids in London aren’t poor because of family breakdown or drug addiction, but because their skills are only worth £5.52 an hour. Even if you could draw up plans that really would reduce addiction and chaotic families, you would still have millions of people like them. Markets do not magically ensure a liveable income for everyone. Only government can, by shuffling money from those at the top to those at the bottom – the policy Cameron says worked for a century but has, for no apparent reason, become worthless in the Noughties.

Same Old Story at Stamford Bridge

This weekend United clinched the premiership for the second year in succession; meanwhile we finished runners up yet again. With just the Champions League final in Moscow it’s highly likely, that we’ll be empty handed.

So what’s our response? Spend ludicrous amounts on overvalued players, at least that’s the view of Alberto da Silva, a journalist for World Soccer magazine regarding the clubs first signing, Jose Bosingwa for £16.2m from Porto, who was also supposedly a target of Manchester United.

“He’s a good player but he’s not worth that much money,” he told BBC Radio 5 Live. “Chelsea’s current right-back Paulo Ferreira is a better player. I don’t know who negotiated the deal, but he did well for Porto.”

He added: “I don’t believe Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson would have been willing to spend that much money on Bosingwa.” Source: BBC.

So, another overvalued, average player, when will we learn? Still I would love to be proved wrong.

Reaping What We Sow

For as long as I can remember the US has been preaching the mantra of free trade, and now finally the world has taken this idea to heart with the emergence of new global economic powers, most notably communist China. In this new economic era, the US is no longer the driving force and Americans don’t like the results. Guy La Roche at A Fistful Of Euros has much more on this and points to an interesting article by Fareed Zakaria at Newsweek.

The End of New Labour

In his posting, The strange death of New Labour England David Osler writes.

Despite three successive majority Labour governments, the base of the party is utterly emaciated. A degree of community entrenchment that took generations to build has been eviscerated.

Many activists are motivated primarily by career considerations. Today’s cadre are full-time councillors, parliamentary researchers and trade union officials, augmented by fresh-faced barristers and disconcertingly eager young PR women with irritating high-pitched giggles and a firm eye on a safe constituency in a former mining area. Looming electoral defeat is not likely to enhance their commitment.

Whilst it’s not just Labour that’s suffered a loss of member’s, I shuffled off as an activist sometime ago, although to be fair a move from town to city was perhaps more responsible – before I moved the party was my social life, however a new city allowed me an easier break, which became permanent. If I was living back in the town I’d be morning the towns loss of it’s last Labour councillor along with my fellow activists. Still back to Dave, he has a point how is Labour going to re-engage with it’s natural support instead of the champagne socialists currently running the party.

One thing though why does Dave have to have “young PR women” – why the sexism, it’s not needed, they’re all irritating regardless of sex.

There’s No Hope For Us

Breakfast show rivals Chris Moyles and Terry Wogan have notched up record listening figures.

Wogan, 69, has 8.1 million listeners, up 370,000 from the previous quarter, but is in danger of losing his crown as the nation’s favourite breakfast DJ to Moyles on Radio 1.

Moyles, 34, has a record 7.72 million listeners, up 410,000 from the previous quarter, according to figures released by industry body Rajar today. Source: The Independent.

What does it say about 7.72 million people that they listen to the racist, sexist, homophobic Moyles. Here’s just a few examples.

When starting at Radio 1 on the 4-7am shift, he played soundtracks of passionate encounters in pornographic films, over which female newsreaders tried to read the weather forecast. Source: Wikipedia.

During his breakfast show, when handing presentation over to a female news presenter he referred to the presenter as a “slut” and then went on to make other comments about her as he attempted to defend his comment. Still only four listeners bothered to complain. Source: Ofcom.

Interviewing Halle Berry along with Hugh Jackman on his breakfast show, he at one point decided to adopt an American accent and, claiming he had a gun, demanded his guests “put your hands up in the air”. The host was clearly only joking but when Jackman called him a “Brooklyn Bond”, he retorted: “I’m a black American guy.” Oscar-winner Berry immediately pitched in with: “Are we having a racist moment here?” Moyles declared he had not intended to be racist. Source: Digital Spy.

Why does this loudmouthed arrogant twat still present one of the BBC’s most popular radio shows? I guess it’s a reflection of our society, sad – isn’t it.