Monday, 7 March 2011

A Consequence of Westminster's Higher Education Policy



Maastricht is a typical Dutch town being well versed in English, German and French as well as Dutch.  I've only visited once and that was a day trip to hear a concert in the old Music Hall and not the splendid glass apparition which houses today's performances.

Throughout Europe universities offer more than 2,400 courses in English and Maastricht university is benefitting from providing its share.  UK students are choosing the Dutch town because the annual fees are only about £1,450 while those in England are due to rise to an annual maximum of £9,000.

Another bonus is that Maastricht university's entry requirements are low in order to allow everyone a chance.  The dropout rate is initially high then quickly drops.  They are currently processing more than 200 applications from the UK, six months before the deadline for the next academic year, and expect many more.

Professor Taun Dekker, vice-dean of University College:

"We love David Cameron," he joked, "His policies are doing a great thing for European integration!"

He and fellow vice-dean Dr Mark Stout, are passionate about their university and with 94% employment rates for students within six months of graduation, the results support their ethos.

"Our mission is to bridge that gap and let UK students and their families know that there is an alternative here. Maastricht is comparable to most Russell Group universities. It's not Oxford but on a level with Edinburgh or St Andrew's".


I'm not too sure Edinburgh or St Andrews would agree and Dr Stout seems unaware that Scottish universities will not be charging fees to those who live in Scotland.

However, Valencia and Milan universities are also seeing a rise in UK interest.  It's encouraging to see young people choosing to study abroad even though it is mainly for financial reasons. Experiencing other cultures in this way is far more intriguing than gap year trips.

This trickle towards Europe will increase and affect the English universities which are not part of the Cambridge/Oxford group; a result of the UK government's badly planned higher education policy.

source

Detrimental Diplomacy



This is a telephone conversation between the British ambassador, Richard Northern MBE, in Tripoli and the senior Benghazi rebel politician Mustafa Abdel-Jalil about the presence of around 8 SAS troops who were captured near Benghazi and were freed late yesterday.  They were taken to Malta aboard the HMS Cumberland which faces decommissioning but is playing a key role in the evacuations from Benghazi.

The ambassador tells Abdel-Jalil they were there as an advance party to 'liaise with the National Council' and to ensure there was a hotel where the main group could stay when they arrived.  When told by Abdel-Jalil that they made a big mistake arriving by helicopter in an open area, the ambassador says, most unconvincingly, he had 'no idea how they were coming'.

Did he really think his absurd twitterings would be believed? It was a botched job. Does he understand the damage which could be caused by this poorly planned operation?  It's very probable Gaddafi will now use this incident against the rebel politicians on the premise that they are associating with British forces.

Britain's behaviour with regard to the Libyan unrest is far below the standard the people of this country have come to expect.  David Cameron talks about air strikes when we have no planes. A very serviceable aircraft carrier, the Arc Royal, is being broken up for scrap. Fifty senior military personnel, politicians and academics have written to the PM - although many of them were part of the problem - urging a rethink of the government's SDSR, while the MoD announced on Saturday that 200 troops from the Black Watch (3rd Battalion of the Royal Regiment of Scotland), are on standby for Libyan aid deployment.

Some reports indicate a massive build up of US naval forces, the UK and others, off the coast of Libya so intervention in the internal affairs of the country is already underway and the longer the civil war continues the greater the odds that the West will escalate its intervention, especially if it looks like Gaddafi can succeed in crushing the opposition.

None of this bodes well for Britain.  We have a military which is being torn apart yet our PM, like his predecessor, refuses to acknowledge we can no longer deploy as an independent military.  Whilst I acknowledge we must cut our cloth according to our means, our security is our most important public service and must be funded accordingly.

A quote from Global Researcher with which I concur:


And a sign where this all heading can be gleaned from the following:
"[T]he United States has demanded the UN Security Council (UNSC) to remove the provisions of charging mercenaries with war crimes in the killing of Libyan civilians."
Just in case no doubt some of its own mercenaries get caught. It's a replay of the US position over the use of mercenaries in Iraq where one of the first acts of overlord Bremer was to pass a 'law' to make it impossible to prosecute 'private contractors' for their actions.


Iraq, Afghanistan and now Libya: all conflicts which have or will make these islands less secure than ever.  The US have already started their interference.  No doubt we shall follow.

Sunday, 6 March 2011

A Scottish First



In 1689, during the Jacobite Rebellion, the Battle of Killiecrankie, Perthshire, was fought on the northern edge of the village.  The Highland charge of the Jacobites took the government forces, under General Hugh MacKay, by surprise and they were completely overwhelmed in only 10 minutes.

Donald MacBean, one of William 111 of England's supporters, having lost the battle, is said to have cleared the pass from one riverbank to the other at The Soldier's Leap (pictured).  Even though the battle was disastrous for the government forces, in reality it was the end of the insurrection, because the commanding genius of the rebellion, John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount Dundee, was killed in the battle.  The following month the Jacobites were soundly beaten at the Battle of Dunkeld.

MacBean's memoirs:


The sun going down caused the Highlandmen to advance on us like madmen, without shoe or stocking, covering themselves from our fire with their targes; at last they cast away their musquets, drew their broadswards, and advanced furiously upon us, and were in the middle of us before we could fire three shots apiece, broke us, and obliged us to retreat.
Some fled to the water, and some another way (we were for the most part new men). I fled to the baggage and took a horse in order to ride the water; there follows me a Highlandman with sword and targe, in order to take the horse and kill myself. You'd laught to see how he and I scampered about. I kept always the horse betwixt him and me: at length he drew his pistol, and I fled; he fired after me.
I went above the Pass, where I met with another water very deep; it was about 18 foot over betwixt two rocks. I resolved to jump it, so I laid down my gun and bat and jumped, and lost one of my shoes in the jump. Many of our men were lost in that water.


Many say that MacBean couldn't possibly have leapt 18 feet across the river, but I've visited this area several times over the years and if I had a claymore-wielding, adrenaline-fueled Jacobite chasing me over such barren ground, I'd give it a go too.

The National Trust for Scotland now own a large section of the riverbank and have joined forces with Highland Fling, an adventure tourism company, has finally been given the go-ahead to build a permanent bungee-jumping platform under the Garry Bridge (pictured below) - Scotland's first bungee-jumping attraction. The 120 foot drop into the River Garry's eerily beautiful gorge will cost £80 a head.



Murray Trail, the New Zealander who owns the business, expects the first official jump to take place on Friday 13 May and it is open to those thrill-seekers over the age of 14.

I wonder what Donald MacBean would think about anyone who chooses to dangle from the end of a reinforced piece of elastic without the screaming of a raging Jacobite at their heels.  It could be he'd think they were just as daring as himself.

Reader's Choice



A real treat from Joe Public this week entitled Canon Rock.

Pachabel's Canon, played by the Academy of Ancient Music, has been part of my own music collection for some years now.  I did have an LP at one time but it vanished during a house move.

This arrangement, by South Korean Lim Jeong-hyun, is stunning.  He is self-taught and has no wish to be a professional musician.  The lad certainly deserves to be called talented.

Saturday, 5 March 2011

Take Your Pick



UK National Debt Grows Arms And Legs

Ride of Respect 2011

Johnny Ball.  Why he thinks AGW is a false premise

Sorry Alexander; he won't serve you

Is Sex pleasure or work?

Al Gore's Revenge

What have the SNP ever done for us?

How Long Before Christians are Actively Persecuted in England?

Look who came to dinner

Ineptitude Personified



It's not often I attack the personalities of politicians but Baroness Ashton is an exception along with the Honest Haircut: two people who, in the positions they hold, are completely out of their depth.

However this post is about Lady Ashton, Vice-President of the European Union, who is shown (above) attempting to inspire others to reach the dizzy heights of EU High Representative for Foreign and Security Policy.  Recently she was criticised for not ensuring the post of special EU envoy to the Middle east was filled after Marc Otte, who held the post since 2003, was not replaced when his term ended this week.  Her excuse was that she is considering whether or not the post is necessary and it wlll probably be several months before she makes her decision.

Shocking as this may seem to those who follow EU matters, she has a strategy which is to take the Middle East dossier into her own hands. Considering it's reported that she is close to the 'special envoy of the diplomatic Quartet in the Middle East' that's no surprise.  Tony Blair knew what to touch and what to avoid.

The Lady's latest spendthrift project will cost £8.5 million on polishing the image of her diplomatic service.  The money will be spent to:

"llustrate to the general public the increasing importance of the role of the EU as a global actor in peace building and crisis management".


Also a tidy sum will be allocated to supporting networking activities which means VIP visits, receptions and lengthy lunches and dinners.  Her spokesman said:

"This money is spent providing basic information on what the EEAS does. It is not for propaganda or to influence anybody. It is work which cannot be done in-house, for resource reasons. This is about providing information on a new EU service in 27 member states and across the globe. Looked at objectively, it provides good value for money." 

This woman's professional behaviour spawns such fury within me; so much so that I realise I have a loathing for someone I have never met. Prior to her arrival on the EU stage, had anyone said it was possible to loath a stranger I would have been the first to contradict them, but Catherine Ashton has proven me wrong.  She contributes nothing to the political world other than redefine the words greed and incompetence, yet she is still in office.  Surely there is someone in the whole of her European External Action Service willing to knock her off her pedestal.

source

Friday, 4 March 2011

Are We Becoming Less Literate?



Do you understand the meaning of 'drowsiness' or 'avoid'?  I'm sure you do but it appears research commissioned by the British National Formulary, which is used by doctors, nurses and pharmacists for information on drugs, suggests people are unsure what some instructions mean.

It found 'avoid alcoholic drink' could be open to misinterpretation and now recommends labels read 'do not drink alcohol while taking this medicine'.

Also the BNF found the word drowsiness is 'not always readily understood' and should now be improved to say 'this medicine makes you sleepy'.

The research was carried out by  professor Theo Raynor and his colleagues at the University of Leeds.


"However, the leaflet may get lost, which means that the label on the medicine plays a very important part in guiding people's behaviour.
"It is vital therefore that wordings on labels are simple and straightforward."


I've yet to have a word with my own chemist and by displaying my clairvoyant skills, which most of us can possess courtesy of Google, I predict our supposed lack of understanding of the basic English language is due to this and not due to the UK  having become an illiterate population.

FMQs 3 March 2011



Tris has a detailed summary of this week's FMQs.  Unfortunately BBC Democracy Live is not allowing a download but the half hour can be seen on HolyroodTV.

Thursday, 3 March 2011

Please Wait...

Dictator Uninstall



Some of you may know OldRightie is on a well deserved (questionable?) break this week and he has managed to negotiate - on extortionate terms I was confidentially informed - a stand-in.  His temporary replacement, who is on a blogging gap year, infuses the blogosphere with his personal style of satire once again.

Who is this individual?  Why Gotty of course. I seldom allow the use of bad language, but in this case I consider it 'artistic licence', which these days, disguised as euphemisms, seems more the art of politicians than artists.

It would be even more amusing if the message wasn't so near the bone though.

The North To The Rescue - Again


Prof Steve Horwitz



The continuing unrest in the Middle East has produced much talk about oil and oil prices with the announcement of vast profits by domestic suppliers. Nobody would think the UK produces oil because North Sea oil is never been mentioned and it's time it was given a little credit.

The city of Aberdeen has been a major player in the oil and gas industry since large offshore deposits were discovered in the early 70s.  North Sea oil has been the foundation of Britain's economy ever since, yet it is seldom mentioned by politicians these days, unless it is in a negative context of comparisons with renewable energy sources.

In recent years we have been led to believe the oil reserves will be depleted in 5/10/20 years - make your choice -  and I have long argued against these claims.  The BBC and most of the MSM regurgitate the government's stance therefore it is little wonder it was only the Aberdeen P and J which has reported a 'Renewed drive for oil and gas promises boom'.

Increased capital investment amid buoyancy in the market could lead up to 15,000 people being employed by the industry this year.

Scotland accounts for about 45% of all oil and gas jobs in the UK and the Aberdeen area is home to the bulk of positions north of the border.

OGUK chief executive, Malcolm Webb, hailed the findings of the group's latest activity survey as a sign of renewed interest in Britain's oil and gas assets.

“There is huge potential,” said Mr Webb. “We have the capability and resources to drive economic growth for decades to come.”

Mr Webb isn't talking in years but decades. OGUK also added:


OGUK said there were significant challenges ahead for the industry, including fast-rising operating and decommissioning costs as well as “areas of uncertainty” on taxation.
But it added the bright prospects revealed by its survey showed that the importance of the UK oil and gas sector in economic recovery “must not be overlooked”.


It has been overlooked for years even though it's been oil which is seeing us through the worst depression since the 1930s.  It is time the MSM, including the BBC, acknowledged the contribution North Sea oil has made to the UK's economy.  With the ongoing unrest in the Middle East, our oil is more valuable to us than ever.

The green lobby won't like it of course; they would prefer we pay extra taxes for windmills to give an occasional shudder and to use the hidden 'green' taxes imposed upon us to reimburse those who can afford to install expensive solar systems on their property.  If I was thirty years younger I would build my own house using geothermal energy as my heating source and hydro for my power.  GE is not appropriate to every area though and surveying is expensive but it would be worth investigating.

As I've no chance of being 30 years younger I'm content to stick with using the oil found on my own doorstep.  The days of believing oil is running out are long gone.

Thanks to the Filthy Engineer for the video.

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

The Origin of Oil



Leroy Fletcher Prouty.  As a banker who has a degree in banking and just not an accountant from big business he ought to know what he's talking about.

Something Doesn't Add Up



Eunice and Owen Johns are members of the Christian Pentecostal Church.  Between August 1992 and January 1995 they were approved as short-term, respite, foster carers by Derby City Council.  They last fostered a child in September 1993 when they did so for one month.[4]  In London's High Court on Monday it was their application, made in January 2007, which they wished clarified. Shortly before the case was to be heard the Equality and Human Rights Commission decided they wanted to take part.

I've no intention of going into the ecclesiastical issues of the case because they have been well covered here (do read the paragraph regarding 'secular' judges), but there are a few points which concern me.

Mr and Mrs Johns attend church services twice every Sunday.  Part of Derby Social Services defence was that when asked about church activities Mrs Johns stated she felt she could not give up going to church.[9]  Nowadays I know few attend church services on Sundays - or any other days - but this ruling would appear to bar any church going person from fostering.

In paragraph [6] it's stated 'They are also recorded as telling Mrs Shaw [social worker] that they would not feel able to take a child to a mosque'. If they weren't Jewish they wouldn't be able to take a Jewish child to a synagogue, so the church service issue doesn't bear scrutiny.

The Johns' specifically wish to foster children up to the age of 10, so why are matters of sexuality relevant to such young children?  Or is it being suggested they should be?  With sex education now being a legal requirement in schools to children from the age of 5, it would seem the latter is the case and I foresee all future foster carers plus those applying to adopt, having to attend compulsory sex education training.

It was my belief that equality laws were supposed to uphold the rights to religious belief yet the High Court ruled that laws protecting people from discrimination because of their sexual orientation 'should take precedence' over the right not to be discriminated against on religious grounds.  Why has it been left to judges to decide whose rights trump those of others when this should have been decided by the Westminster Parliament?  Some say this is yet another sloppily drafted measure which will have far-reaching consequences for freedom of conscience in this country and I can't disagree.

Only last week Michael Gove announced reforms to the adoption regime which will remove barriers that plague the system.  Currently there are 64,000 children in care in England and adoption rates are falling.  Good foster carers are very valuable to our society - it's not a job I would consider.  Years ago short-term foster carers and respite carers were greatly cherished because they were the people who would give love and tender care to a frightened child and often at very short notice.

It must be noted that Derby CC stated (although there was no evidence filed) that it 'has approved foster carers who are very committed Christians who hold to orthodox beliefs - whatever that means - and devout Muslim carers who are similarly committed to their religion, but who in both instances are able to value diversity notwithstanding their strongly held religious beliefs...' [22]

It is my understanding that the Jewish and Muslim faith do not accept homosexuality, so how do Derby CC manage to recruit Muslim foster carers?  Are Muslim foster carers asked to care only for Muslim children?  If so that's surely discrimination.

As far as I'm aware sexuality is not defined by religion any more than the colour of our eyes or hair so why must the two be intertwined unless by individual choice?

The Court judgement appears to criticise the legal submissions, particularly that submitted by Mr and Mrs Johns' lawyer Paul Diamond.  Even so, something doesn't add up.  Is it because the more liberal we are said to have become, the more illiberal we have become?

Tuesday, 1 March 2011

Poor(er) Taxpayers




The Royal Society of Edinburgh has just published a Report "Facing up to Climate Change: breaking the barriers to a low-carbon Scotland".



It presupposes that (man-made) Climate Change is a fact, despite there being thousands of scientists world wide who disagree.


Amongst the Primary Recommendations of the Report:-
1. The UK Government should urgently improve the infrastructure and management of the electricity grid in Scotland to optimise the development of renewable energy and to permit the export of surplus renewable energy.
2. The Scottish and UK Governments need to retrofit existing regulation to achieve a balance with the need to reduce carbon emissions.


Firstly, why should 'UK' (in effect non-Scottish) taxpayers subsidise Scotland's infrastructure to support the export of renewable energy? The desired objective is after all, to enable Scotland to then export and sell their 'surplus' renewable energy to England and Wales.


Secondly, although the committee is awash with Professors and Doctors, I wonder how many of them or their readers understand what they mean by "......retrofit existing regulation....."? An oxymoron, surely?


Does SR have any readers who can explain to me (a) what they think it means; and (b) what they think the RoySocEd think they mean?


A guest posting by Joe Public.

Military Matters



More tragedy in Afghanistan for our armed forces.  A soldier from the Royal Army Veterinary Corps was killed today when he was hit by enemy gunfire.  Since the war in Afghanistan commenced in 2001 358 of our troops have been killed.

Today it was also announced up to 11,000 military personnel are to lose their jobs in the next month.  The 102,000-strong Army will lose 7,000, the navy's total of 35,000 will be cut by 5,000 and the RAF's 38,000 by the same number.

The reduction in posts is partly being made by not replacing people who were leaving anyway.  The RAF has announced two Tornado squadrons will go - 14 Squadron based at Lossiemouth and X111 Squadron from Marham in Norfolk.

The coalition has also axed Harrier jets and will have no aircraft carrier for a decade (or aircraft to use it) yet David Cameron is sanctioning these cuts at this time of international unrest.

Gaddafi's eldest son called Cameron a joke in an interview on Sky television.  His obvious lack of military understanding has me believing much the same.

An Open Letter To No 10





Open Letter to 10 Downing Street

27/09/2006

Banks Heist 20 billion Over Six Years.

Much has been made by the media on the scam merchants who, by fraudulently obtaining personal bank account details, strip the accounts. A criminal ploy that preys on the naiveté of people, who are on the whole, desperate for the lucky break that will get them out of the daily grind of consumer penury. Whether the motivation of its victims in disclosing the information is through naiveté, need or greed, the practice is regarded as theft and, should the perpetrators ever be caught, no doubt they would be prosecuted with vigour.

However there has since, October 1999 been a far greater scam imposed on the millions of account holders in the UK. These are the £25 - £35 default charges removed by the banks and credit card companies from their clients’ accounts. According to ‘Which’ £4.7 billion was the revenue enjoyed by the banks with this scam in 2005 alone so perhaps the £20 billion headlined could be regarded as conservative.

But now that the scam has been outed, though hardly in a manner that would seem to match the scale of the theft. No screaming headlines in the fearless press or prime time news coverage. No ministerial promises of action. Why? Is it because the mickle’s that maks the muckle has been taken from us the haemorrhaging consumers?  Can you imagine the headlines if the £20 billion had been stolen from the banks?

Which beggars other questions, which are perhaps even more relevant namely: why have the banks been allowed to perpetrate this theft on its customers? Much is said of the so-called Nanny State, but surely we should be able to rely on our government to see that the statutes and laws it enacts are adhered to. Or does the State Nanny only the mega corporations?

Recently (2006) the Office of Fair Trading has published a report on the charges incurred by defaults on credit cards. In a nutshell they have concluded the £25 - £30 charges were too high and that any charge over £12 would require proof of validity in relation to costs? Well it has only taken them six and half years and £12 is a lot better than £30. However their recommendation is not based on a reasoned argument, it is in fact more, of a reasoned excuse. We should not have had to wait six years, and £12 is still far too high a price for a computer-generated letter that isn’t touched by human hand until it gets to the postman. The letter is in fact only worth the paper it’s printed on and the postage. So it would seem the corporate Nanny isn’t too keen on disciplining its favourite wards.

You can, as an individual or small business, take your bank to court. A daunting thought for most, especially small businesses, even if the law is on your side, so cover yourself by setting up a new account with a rival bank. You see it is exactly this fear of the Goliaths that the Goliaths are relying on to retain most of their ill-gotten gains and they are impressively clever. If you do take them to court, and please do, they will eventually, tell you your claim has no merit but it’s for such a piddling sum it would costs them more to defend it, so they will settle the claim in full and by doing so prevent the court from finding against the banks illegal penalty charges. This is an integral part of their strategy. Fear or apathy will prevent most people from claiming. So even if the banks do have to pay back £5 or even £50 million they’re still billions ahead of the game. Who said crime doesn’t pay?

There is in reality very little between banks that would make one any fairer that the others. And, to a great extent they and the government have devised, encouraged and promoted the conditions where the individual can no longer choose not to have a bank account. In fact the similarity and excesses inherent in all of their charges could be construed as a clear indication they are operating as a cartel.

So why haven’t our media headlined this as the crime of any century? Why hasn’t our government been proactive in forcing the banks to repay all the money they have illegally gained? Deep down we all know why, we’re the irrelevant gullible consumed; they are the consumers. Or, could it be the political parties are in too much hock to the banks to rock their boat?


Post script:

You will have noted the date of this letter 27/09/06.

Since then the FSO have taken the banks to the High Court and won a decision that found these bank charges were excessive. In 2010 the banks appealed to the Supreme Court – consider the conditions the banks were in at this time? – the Supreme Court reversed the earlier decision in favour of the banks.

Since 2008, the banks, for many small/medium businesses and personal customers on overdrafts have doubled their interest rates at a time when they are getting their money from the Bank of England at half a percent.

Following the crash of 2008, we have had an expensive education on the idiotic practices of the banks and financial institutions generally. But as yet nothing has been done to convert this education into practice; neither by governments, regulators or the banks themselves. While it might be too much to hope for the banks to cry Mea Culpa – they after all, have through the ignorance or connivance of governments created a monopoly on money by its conversion from wage packet to electronic transfer and the ‘convenience’ of the plastic card that gives us access to the digits in our account – it surely beholden on government to stop such idiocy from ever being repeated?

It’s all very ‘convenient’ for the banks - in practice generally more convenient and profitable for them than it is for the customer. The question is, given the difficulties in tracking the expenditures of everyday living – is the convenience worth the price they extract for them having the monopolised ‘convenience’ to profit from and penalise those who have least, while they apply neither what they preach or practice to themselves?

How many austerities must we struggle against in order for the banks to recoup their self inflicted losses and re-trench there fraudulent practices?

What this ‘business as usual’ attitude does expose is, democracy in this country is a sham. Just as much of a sham as communism was in Stalinist Russia; or an avuncular autocracy was in Gadaffi’s Libya. Each and every one of these shams were all based on one foundation; foundations laid in the concrete coffins of fear.

They were all too big to fall; but they did. Go back to demanding a wage packet and folding money and so will the banks.

John Souter
28/02/11

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