Showing posts with label Brexit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brexit. Show all posts

Saturday, June 25, 2016

newspapers and Opting out of the hard shitnewspapers


We�ve had a couple of days to think. This piece by Fraser Nelson interested me, both for the article itself and also for some of the below-the-line responses. 
Apparently, before resigning, David Cameron had asked his aides: �Why should I have to do the hard shit for someone else, just to hand it to them on a plate?�
Fraser�s answer, and I suspect he speaks for many people, went something like: �you are the prime minister, and many people are counting on you to do so.� 

Looking back over events, it seems that Cameron handled the whole affair quite badly, showing little evidence of foresight. He could have done with one of those flow-charts that help people make decisions. You know, diagrams that offer yes/no routes to an eventual crock of gold. 
It now looks as if he hadn�t even properly considered the possible outcomes of the referendum - quite simple; yes or no. Not just yes.
Theory of change

It looks also as though he hadn�t properly considered the outcome of his promise to support Brexit if he failed to secure significant reforms for the UK, and then refusing to admit the inadequacy of the crumbs he was fobbed off with, then pretending that the referendum was about leaving or remaining in a �reformed EU�.  
Not forgetting a few other things he hadn�t properly thought through, such as prematurely announcing that he didn�t intend to stand as PM next time round. 
Then, there�s Turkey.
Oh yes, and announcing that as well as not �seeing why he should do the hard shit�, he announced that he wouldn�t do anything at all till October, thus provoking threats from various shunned EU officials about the bad shit in store if we didn�t bloody well get a move on with article 50.

The one thing that underpins this dire situation is this business about immigration. It seems to me that the BBC has played a huge part in toxifying this topic. There are two parts to the public�s worries about immigration, one mentionable, the other unmentionable. 

Mentionable - barely - is the numbers argument. We�re a small island with limits. We can�t fit everyone in. We can�t accommodate them all. We�re bursting at the seams. 
Also in this category is the question of economic inequality, a conundrum that works two ways. The expats whose pensions stretch further in, say, Spain, and the Brits who abandon all principles and amass fortunes working in Arab states. 

But the very real effect on the UK by migrant workers whose willingness to work harder for less, causing job losses for locals and driving down wages, has at last made this particular aspect of immigration, and the attendant fears thereof, mentionable.

Then there is the unmentionable. Something that only people like Paul Weston or Tommy Robinson dare to articulate. Outwardly it�s called �cultural�. It�s the way that some neighbourhoods have become alienating and frightening to the original residents and to outsiders. 

Most of all the fear is of Islam and the Islamification that�s spreading through Europe. It is already causing deep division here. But we cannot mention it without being ostracized by the fools and the blind, who think tolerance, as well as wealth, should be redistributed - to the deserving and the undeserving, indiscriminately. 

I have to generalise about the BBC. I know there are some exceptions, but broadly speaking the BBC has always taken Palestinian propaganda at face value and swallowed it whole. Lock, stock and barrel. People running the BBC have little or no knowledge of history, and no doubt most of them still believe, along with Ken Livingstone, the fictitious propaganda that more than 700,000 innocent Palestinians were driven out of their homes at gunpoint by Jewish terrorists in 1948 to create Israel.  Let�s face it, if you believed that, you might see things the way they do, coupled with the inexplicably romanticised version of Islam that the BBC continually portrays.

That is the only explanation for, e.g.,  the BBC Trust�s inability to understand why Tim Willcox�s �clumsy� / �badly worded� remark to an Israeli-born witness after the Paris terrorist attack was inappropriate and offensive. They seemed to think he had made a valid point, and, after all, had apologised for unwisely blurting out �Jews� when he meant �Israelis�. 
Their faith in the righteousness of the Palestinian cause prevented them from understanding that the Paris attacks were part of something much more fundamental than �revenge� for what they erroneously believe to be a �Jewish-only� Israel, a country illegally and unjustifiably obtruded on stolen �Muslim land�. The fundamental reality that believers of such ahistorical fiction could never grasp is of course that the Paris attacks were fuelled by the same old same old. Antisemitism. 

The BBC could easily show the public just a fraction of the hatred that is openly promulgated throughout the Arab world. Not difficult. It�s on the internet, on Arabic TV, in Arabic education. But they never, ever do. 
That is why there�s still a taboo over criticising Islam. It�s branded racist. It makes you a bad person, a hater. The world turned upside down.

I don�t know if this is wishful thinking, but I�m beginning to think that underlying those fears about immigration is a deeper fear of creeping Islamisation. There is reason to worry. Evidence is gradually seeping through. But as of now, we have to euphemise it or be branded bigots. 

Earlier today Jeremy Corbyn eventually came out to make a speech, but it was so boring that both the BBC and Sky cut to Nicola Sturgeon and then to some EU bigwigs pronouncing on how they were going to punish us for rejecting them.


Corbyn has announced an enquiry into immigration, and why so many Labour voters opted to Leave. That�s in addition to the enquiry about antisemitism, which has expanded to embrace Islamophobia, racism and bigotry. He ignored the more interesting topic, that of those dastardly mutinous plans to depose him.

It�s like, break open the popcorn, and be entertained by everyone opting out of the hard shit.

Wednesday, June 22, 2016

newspapers and The Great Debatenewspapers

What did you think of the Great Debate? What did you think of the BBC�s contribution?

First you sit through the debate itself. Then you are fed various reactions (not only by the BBC by the way, but by the press, Sky, and so on) and you start to wonder if you had actually watched the same programme.

One small thing summed up the impact of the Great Debate. Afterwards, Reeta Chakrabarti interviewed four of the people who had been chosen to put questions to the panel, two from each �side�. 
Not one of the four had changed their minds in any way whatsoever. Of course asking their question in such a public arena must have been nerve-racking, so perhaps they were too distracted to listen to the answers. 

Or it could be that nothing much short of cataclysm will change the human mind when it�s firmly set on matters it cannot fully grasp. Mine included. Well, if that is true, then the great debate could only affect the undecideds.

�.....unite against the hate that killed her� says Harriet Harman on TV as I type. See? That sort of thing.  Are �Remain� actually claiming Jo Cox as their martyr?  No - how distasteful of me.



Many pundits are declaring that Ruth Davidson emerged as the clear winner. But why? Probably because they weren�t quite as sick of the sight of her as they were of the others. I couldn�t help noticing that they passed on Frances O�Grady. Very wise.

As far as I could make out, Ruth Davidson had two tactics. One was to insist on extracting undeliverable, speculative promises about immigration from the Leave side, and the other was to intermittently accuse them of lying. I can�t see how anyone thought her performance was a triumph.

I must be the only person in the world (apart from my family) who found the Leave side�s mission to insert the phrase �take back control� as many times as possible deeply insulting to our intelligence. But  on the other hand, if the general public are genuinely as dumb as they are portrayed by the media, only repetition of basic slogans could penetrate our rhinoceros-hide-like stupidity.

Another thing the media has decided for us, thank you very much, is that the Remain side wins on the economy and the Leave side wins on immigration. Somehow that seems to have been established as fact. 
The great debate, however indicated that this could actually be another media myth. 
I found the Leave arguments on the economy just as robust as the Remain�s, and I did think the Remain side raised a few doubts about post-Brexit�s ability to reduce the number of immigrants. 

Sovereignty is the most interesting aspect of this conundrum. I am persuaded by the argument that (oh no! I have to say it) we could �take back control�, but doubts creep in, even to that prospect, when I think of the calibre of the �we� that would actually be in control. The warring Conservatives? The retrogressive Corbyn Party?
I know we can kick them out if we don�t like the direction they�re taking us in, but the juggernaut takes so damned long to change course that it all seems so cumbersome, and by the time we realise we�re heading for the rocks the damage has been done. And it�s irreversible. If you�ll excuse the nautical analogy. (Since the image of being driven over cliffs in a speeding car has been appropriated by both sides)
While we�re on the topic, I rather like the image of being shackled to a corpse. It�s very evocative. 

As for the other speakers - I thought Sadiq Khan was pretty terrible. For one thing his enunciation is poor. He gabbles. But that soundbite that the media is so fond of : �Project hate� is beyond unseemly. I just found it inappropriate and divisive.

I think we�ve seen a bit too much of Boris in buffoon mode recently. He spoke on Sky this morning in a much more considered tone, and I wish we�d seen more of that and less of the other. Gisela and Andrea were warm and personable, but we�d seen too much of the same from them already. Maybe they should have given Daniel Hannan a go.



Out of interest, here�s an excerpt from something from Gatestone that popped into my inbox.
�Even after hundreds were murdered in terrorist attacks over the past months in Paris, Brussels, California and Florida, the leadership of the U.S. and Europe persist in their politically correct denial of the threats from radical Islam. 
Worse, led by the European Union, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Microsoft have been trying to impose a muzzling "code of conduct" to censor and remove from the internet any comments they consider "illegal hate speech." This, in the words of Soeren Kern, "could include virtually anything deemed politically incorrect by European authorities, including criticism of mass migration, Islam or even the European Union itself." 
We have recently felt the effects of it; we were censored by Facebook twice in one month, once just for pointing this policy out. If you have not yet been the victim of an assault on your freedom of speech, prepare to be one soon. Facebook suspended the account of Ingrid Carlqvist after she posted our video about Sweden having the second-highest rate of rape in the world. The video has been watched by more than 200,000 people. Then, Facebook blocked our article by Douglas Murray for objecting to Facebook's censorship.�
I haven�t got a Facebook account, but I have access to one, and my family agree that all their Facebook timelines have been littered with semi-aggressive posts promoting Jeremy Corbyn and Bernie Sanders,  and denigrating the �right�. Very intimidating if you happen to take a different view.

People have been making snide remarks about Israel and the Eurovision Song Contest. I must say I don�t know what the necessary qualifications are. Also I don�t care. But if anyone�s interested in Israel�s relationship with Europe, do have a look at this.  Click please.
It�s both a prospective model for Brexit and a little ad for Israel that I think Jo Cox�s followers  ought to be made aware of.

Israel is in Europe too. 

The United Kingdom has recently been totally absorbed with the Jun 23rd referendum on whether the UK should Remain or Exit the European Union.  The arguments in favor of the Remain camp appear to hinge on its claim that the UK�s economy would collapse if it terminated its EU membership.  UK citizens should not panic, however, but instead take a closer look at the �Israeli model�. 
The modern State of Israel has been an �adopted� member of many European entities for some time - mainly due to the unwillingness of surrounding Arab countries in Asia and Africa to accept the Jewish State into �their� continents.  Israel is not a member of the EU, but the current relationship has many mutual benefits.  Using news articles since the beginning of this year, here are some examples of how the relationship benefits both Israel and Europe.� 

Israel � it�s practically holding Europe together!

Saturday, June 4, 2016

newspapers and The "Leave" shownewspapers


I haven�t watched much TV lately, but something I did watch last night was the �Leave� show, starring Michael Gove and Faisal Islam on Sky. Also present, Kay Burley and �the public�. 

Faisal Islam seems to have turned into Mehdi Hasan. That irritating, non-stop hectoring style is just up Mehdi�s street. I�m really surprised that no-one has mentioned it.

Ah! I�m wrong. Janet Daley has:
In spite of � or maybe because of � being relentlessly barracked and harassed by Faisal Islam, Mr Gove won the room. He repeatedly got spontaneous applause from the audience. In fact, he seemed to gain in confidence as he went on, looking amused rather than defensive even when Islam absurdly likened him to Mr Trump.

I didn�t see the �Remain� show, starring David Cameron (and I haven�t caught-up with it yet) so I don�t know if Faisal Islam was just as exasperating and intrusive with Dave as he was with Mike, but relentless pursuit of a yes/no answer to an ill-conceived �killer� question is pure Mehdi, and a bit Mishal too. 

Have you (or have you not) stopped beating your wife?  Have you? Have you? Have you?

How many economists have come out on your side? How many? Name one. 
Can you guarantee that no-one will lose their job as a result of leaving the EU?  Can you? Can you guarantee that the weather will improve on June 24th? Can you?

No, Faisal made matters much less clear with his obtrusive interventions. A skilled, less terrier-like interviewer would have calmly let the questions and answers flow, one after the other. We would have learned more.

From the reaction of the MSM, I really did wonder whether I�d watched the right programme. Maybe they�d been watching the real one and I�d somehow stumbled upon the dress rehearsal. 

The chap in the audience who compared  Gove�s �Leave� advocacy to a World War 1 general waving the flag and saying "over the top, men!� did have a point, but prediction is not a science, and that particular argument is predicated upon the certainty and stability of a turbulent and unstable EU, which of course there  ain�t.