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Showing posts with label Go Read. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Go Read. Show all posts

06 April 2008

The Weekly Blog Posts - Sunday, April 6 2008

Monday

  • Tom Paine at The Last Ditch reports on the use of the internet to cage the flow of information in China, and the rather boring lack of a "Forbidden!" message. We must ensure that that sort of thing does not happen here by keeping our governments under scrutiny.
  • Asp has a reason to thank Watchdog, a mechanic, and a hefty mallet. Sounds almost like the start of a corny joke...
  • Jon Craig at Boulton & Co knows that Nick Clegg has slept with fewer than 30 women. But doesn't want to know any more than that.
Tuesday
Wednesday
  • Archbishop Cranmer thinks that the new reverse-side coin designs of a fragment Royal Coat of Arms are symbolic of the dis-United Kingdom that we have become. He is absolutely correct - both that the coin designs are ugly and that New Labour has broken the UK.
  • A. Tory writes an explanatory letter to a bunch of NUTters.
  • JMB at Nobody Important has found the downside of going on vacation: slow internet. Horror of horrors! I just can't be waiting for the internet any more. And to think that once dial-up was fast!
Thursday
  • Tony Sharp is pained by the lack of democracy in the Conservative party's MEP selection process. It certainly is wrong. The party should be as democratic internally as possible. The leadership are only the stewards of the party, not its owners. That is us, the members.
  • Liz at Finding life hard? has evidence that spring is finally here. Pity the weather seems to be switching between glorious sunshine and snow!
  • Ben Brogan has news that Labour is revolting. Well we knew that, but this is a more specific revolt against the Chancellor's raise in beer prices. Nice to see that not all Labour MPs are complete idiots.
Friday
  • Ellee Seymour thinks that Ken Livingstone kept quiet about having three secret children not to protect them, but to protect his own political image. Which of course is the truth.
  • The Morningstar at Cyncial Chatter From The Underworld has played a game of 'spot the cretin', aka Home Secretary Jacqui Smith. And he's seen right through her idiocy.
  • Fraser Nelson at the Spectator's Coffee House sees Brown try to be cool and, as expected, fail miserably.
  • Archbishop Cranmer reports that now that he is no longer Prime Minister, Tony Blair now "does God", with his own eminent-sounding "Faith Foundation".
Saturday
  • Iain Dale has a video that he thinks could do the same for Boris as the Obama Girl did for Barack Obama. Somehow, I doubt it. It's still quite amusing, though.
  • James Kirkup at the Telegraph's Three Line Whip sees Brown out of his comfort zone in the WAGs favourite The Grove in Watford.
  • Curly has picked up the blog-roundup bug as well.
Sunday
  • Nigel Evans at CentreRight says that with democracy, the EU says do as we say, not as we do. Not exactly a surprise, considering their huge democratic deficit.
  • Matt Sinclair asks whether what a politician does in their private life matters. The answer is both yes and no. It does and it doesn't. We need to know to some extent in order to judge their character, but we really don't need to know all that much.

And congratulations Steve Green at Daily Referendum has a new baby son!


Video of the Week

Flying Penguins from the BBC:


[This was, of course, an April Fool. Very good CGI, though.]

23 March 2008

The Weekly Blog Posts - Sunday, March 23 2008

Monday

  • Matt Wardman thinks that the Yanks have discovered irony. Well, it's about time!
  • Jon Craig at Sky's Boulton & Co points out that it's the polls that are doing boom and bust [except for the Lib Dems, who just aren't moving]. Unlike the economy, which is just bust.
  • Matt Sinclair writes about "quasi-revenue-neutral tax reform". Yes, that means about as much to me as to you. But the rest of the post is pretty much jargon-free, and definitely worth reading.
Tuesday
  • Madsen Pirie at the ASI destroys the myth that the "poor and weak" need the State more than the "strong". And too right. The State system benefits few but itself.
  • Richard North at EU Referendum is still waiting for the robust leadership from the Conservatives that he wants to see. It takes time to generate such leadership, but I'll come in time.
  • John Redwood thinks that Parliament has finally detached from reality. Many of us in the real world think that it lost touch a long time ago.
Wednesday
  • Christopher Hope blogging at the Telegraph wonders if Gordo has gone "buy one, get one free" with his Cabinet. We all wish they'd just bog off.
  • Norfolk Blogger ask who cares more about a match result: the footballers or the fans? Fans care avidly about how their team does [probably too much]. Some footballers don't seem to care at all, despite - or maybe because of? - their massive pay cheques.
  • Daniel Finkelstein at the Times' Comment Central wonders whether trauma therapy works. It certainly does seem a strange way to get over such trauma by reliving it all over again.
Thursday
  • Nadine Dorries is going back to her constituency and preparing for government. Calm down, dear. No matter how good the polls are at the moment, there's a long way - and time - to go yet.
  • Asp thinks that those who are complaining about the BBC purchasing the rights to Formula 1 coverage are whingers. And he's right. I don't watch other sports, but I do watch F1. I'd rather pay my licence fee for that rather than the just as obscenely overpaid premiership footballers.
  • Mr Eugenides has two opposing quoted from the same politician, Jack Straw, on prison sentences. They really are just making it up as they go along!
Friday
  • Wat Tyler at Burning Our Money thinks that we're not in the money any longer. Money, money, money... there's just not enough to borrow.
  • Guthrum at Looking For A Voice is upset that Belgium finally has a government after surviving quite adequately for nine months without one. Unfortunately, government is necessary, though much less than the Nanny State we currently have.
  • Iain Dale ponders the question of whether size matters - and concludes that it doesn't. Which is nice.
Saturday
  • Devil's Kitchen just wants Jackie Baillie MSP to answer the fucking question! A sentiment we all feel towards most politicians.
  • Archbishop Cranmer looks into yet another political intervention by Cardinal Keith O'Brien - this time over the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill. The Church should stay the hell out of politics.
  • Mike Smithson at Political Betting looks back at the week that saw punters put their money on Boris. Go Boris!
  • Philip Salter at the ASI, also on the London Mayoral race, has a look at the policies of fourth-placed candidate Sian Berry of the Green Party. Scary stuff.
Sunday
  • Little Man In A Toque is pleased to see that the flag-flying rules are to change, opening up the possibility of the Cross of St George being flown over Parliament on 23rd April. Which is good. We should celebrate the identities of all constituent parts of the United Kingdom. And I myself will be marching in a St Gorge's Day parade on Sunday 20th April.
  • Tom Paine at The Last Ditch defends so-called internet "addicts", pointing out that all successful people are likely to be considered "obsessive" under this definition. Free choices aren't illnesses.
Video of the Week

Matt Wardman shows what the Easter Bunny does the other 364 days of the year...



And the Britblog Roundup #162 is here.

17 March 2008

The Weekly Blog Posts - Sunday, March 16 2008

Yes, it's a day late. All down to a lack of connectivity, unfortunately (ie. my internet broke). But better late than never!

Monday

  • Ellee Seymour asks whether we should have a Minister for Pensioners. Probably, for equalities sake. Though I'm not sure quite what they'd do with their time.
  • John Bright at OurKingdom has a post on a new institution created by the EU Treaty to practice European democracy - an online "citizens’ initiative and petitions" site. Nothing like this, especially with the expected 1 million people and several-state caveats. Just like the Downing Street petition site, it will never amount to anything in reality.
  • A. Tory writes a letter to Trevor Phillips asking him why he is so intent on causing the slow and painful death of real equality. Well, anything in favour of quotas is fine by him!
Tuesday
  • Dave Cole ponders a civil service blogger's code. It's an idea, I suppose.
  • Devil's Kitchen repeats something than can never be said too many times: Communist regimes have killed more people than any other type. And points out that our democracies are moving ever-so-slowly in that direction.
  • Fabian Tassano at mediocracy writes about the difference between freedom and moral desirability. A difference that few, such as Gordon Brown, understand.
Wednesday
  • No Budget posts here, because I'm sure you're bored of them by now. If not, go here.
  • Chris Dillow at Stumbling and Mumbling ponders times-travel and interest rates... in the same post. Not two subjects that you would usually see together...
  • Grendel asks how you manage to blog. Me, I just make it up as I go along. Have you noticed?
Thursday
  • Graachi at Westminster Wisdom ponders the issues of globalisation and the welfare state. And politics.
  • Alan Cochrane at the Telegraph's Three Line Whip asks whether it is it all over for Alezx Salmond. We can but hope.
  • Eamonn Butler at the ASI has worked out when tax freedom day is this year. 2 June. So the average Briton spends more than five months working for the Chancellor rather than themselves. Lovely.
Friday
  • Ben Brogan sees the sun shine for Dave and the Conservatives in Gateshead.
  • Fraser Nelson at the Spectator's Coffee House on family-friendly policies.

Saturday
  • Mr Eugenides has a choice selection of LOLblairs - the new phenomenon to hit the internet!
  • ConservativeHome has news of the best opinion poll for the Conservatives in twenty years. That's pretty much my entire life.

Sunday
  • Shane Greer sees sense prevail over the banning of video game 'Manhunt 2'. It is quite obvious that violent video games don't lead to violence in our streets - and in many cases they can help reduce it.
  • Iain Dale wonders if there is an achievable tax cut. yes, but I doubt that raising the income tax allowance to £10,000 for all people will be one of them.

Video of the Week

A new feature for The Weekly Blog Posts.

Cameron's put down of Ed Balls in the Commons during his reply to the Budget, via Guido Fawkes.

09 March 2008

The Weekly Blog Posts - Sunday, March 9 2008

Monday

  • Steve Green at the Daily Referendum compares EU referendums, apples, and oranges. Yet no mention of pears, bananas, or pineapples.
  • Justin McKeating at Chicken Yoghurt laments the willingness of ministers to appear in the media oppose the opposition, yet unwillingness to appear to defend their own. They're just copying Gordon Brown's tactics at PMQs, aren't they?
  • Ben Brogan points out how politics flips 180°. It truly is a fascinating process to follow.
Tuesday
  • Mr Eugenides has the graph of the day. £60 billion for that result?! Not exactly value for money.
  • Madsen Pirie at the ASI with #52 in the Common Errors series - that schooling should be about enhancing and celebrating diversity, not creating equality. And that's why the comprehensive system is, and will always remain, a failure.
Wednesday
  • Theo Spark has a pictorial reference of Brown's attitude towards the British people. All too accurate it is, too.
  • Norfolk Blogger has finally realised that the Lib Dems are liars, and is considering his membership over the issue of trust.
Thursday
  • Pickled Politics has parodies of the Met police's new ad campaign. Some of them are very very funny.
  • Asp has found the one thing more excruciating than 'dad dancing' - and that's 'President dancing'. Let's just all be thankful that we're not related to him.
Friday
  • Guido has a very acquiescent press release from the Lib Dems. Unfortunately, it just has to be a mistake. A very very stupid one to make, though.
  • Sean Rayment at the Telegraph's Three Line Whip compares the armed forces who have recently been told not to wear their uniform off duty unfavourably to the Scouts, whom he refers disparagingly to as "Boy Scouts" [a name that was stopped being used long ago, and which is now completely incorrect, considering the large number of females in the movement]. In this reference, he implies that Scouts are - or should be - ashamed of wearing their uniform outside of the meetings. For this idiocy, he should be ashamed.
Saturday
  • Gracchi at Westminster Wisdom writes about taxation in the Early Middle Ages. And very interesting, though complicated, it is too.
  • Dizzy writes a post that I was going to. Why do we name the accused perpetrators of rape but not the supposed victim, before a trial has even taken place? Either both or neither should be protected, as it makes ruining a man's life with lies far too easy.
Sunday
  • Cranmer demolishes Nick Clegg's calamatous, Cameron-imitating [certainly in style and partially in substance] speech at the Lib Dem's spring conference. Clegg is fialing as Lib Dem leader, after only a few months in office.
  • Iain Dale asks whether our MPS believe in the supremacy of parliament or not. The answer is, inevitably, not.
  • Devil's Kitchen has a sketchy idea for a Libertarian party poster. It's a pretty good one, too. Though a little too much mouth.

02 March 2008

The Weekly Blog Posts - Sunday, March 2 2008

Monday

  • A. Tory writes a letter to William Hague, telling him to show Nick Clegg that he is way out of his depth over the EU. A bit of an obvious point, but one worth repeating!
  • Civil Serf writes about the little 'P' of office politics and the big 'B' of the upcoming Budget. It is scary to have this insight into the weird and wonderful insane world of the internal machinery of government.
Tuesday
  • James Graham at the Quaequam Blog! asks whether Clegg and Davey will stick or twist over their EU referendum position. Unlike James, however, I think that it is pretty clear that certainly at least on this issue, the Lib Dems are not in strong position at all - but rather the complete opposite because their current position makes no logical sense.
  • Norfolk Blogger has found his idea of hell: disco and children. I think there are worst things, that that does have to be pretty high on my list, too.
Wednesday
  • Ruthie Zaftig has an interesting moral dilemma.
  • Ellee Seymour asks whether you "txt and drv". You would have to be moron to think that although talking on a mobile phone whilst driving has been made illegal, texting hasn't. Texting is a far more distracting activity than talking, and besides, it is still using a mobile phone without a hands-free kit. Ergo, illegal.
  • Mike Ion supports lowering the voting age to 16, even though lowering the voting age to 16 will make no change bar decreasing the percentage turnout level. Mike's support makes no sense, considering his support for raising the age of smoking and raising the compulsory schooling age to 18. Either 16 year-olds are mature enough to make their own decision, such as whether to stay in school or smoke, or they are not. Make your mind up, Mike!
Thursday
  • Dizzy explains how governemnt works. And it's all too accurate.
  • Chris Dillow at Stumbling and Mumbling writes about risk, unemployment and inflation. An interesting post that is well worth reading, but I came away feeling slightly short-changed by the explanations given.
Friday
  • Iain Dale reports that the 2005 intake of Conservative MPs are beginning to assert themselves, fully supported by the leadership, over the issue the "recall" of MPs, sending a message to the "old guard" that their time is up. A good thing.
  • Mr Eugenides explains that freeloading is freeloading, whether or not you are part of any stupid group that wants to abolish money or not - and whether or not you can speak French. A post very similar to the one I would have written had I not been so lazy the last few days.
Saturday
  • Devil's Kitchen isn't surprised by the news that government ministers are pro closing Post Offices except those in their own constituencies. I'm not either.
  • Eamonn Butler at the ASI writes on the war on plastic bags. He is absolutely right that this war is just gesture poltiics. Plastic bags just aren't as bad as is always suggested - being massively recycled themselves.
Sunday
  • Anthony Wells at UK Polling Report says that all the Iwantareferendum campaign's private poll shows us is "not much more than that 133,251 people in 10 marginal seats would like a referendum, have voted to express that opinion and have likely been told their current MP is ignoring them". Even if this is 88% of the respondents.
  • ConservativeHome reports that David Cameron is aspiring to have a third of ministers being women by the end of his first term as Prime Minister. This is unnecessary - equality should mean that the best people for the job get the job, whatever their social status be.
Also read the Britblog Round-up #159!

In other news: lack of posting this week caused by sheer laziness and aided by lack of inspiration. Hopefully to be rectified soon.

24 February 2008

The Weekly Blog Posts - Sunday, February 24 2008

Monday

  • Philip Johnston at the Telegraph's Three Line Whip writes about the "dark side of internet...[because it] allows for indoctrination and radicalisation of vulnerable and impressionable young men in their bedrooms by faceless zealots." Yet, really, how different is this to any other form of mass communication? The internet is just a bit more accessible is all.
  • Matt Wardman asks which ad agency you would trust to write your own blog slogan. Personally, I just prefer to make up my own.
  • Watt Tyler at Burning Our Money demonstrates that Yvette Cooper is talking Balls when she says that nationalising Northern Rock has been "costless". There's no such thing as a free lunch - or nationalisation.
Tuesday
  • Peter Cuthbertson at ConservativeHome's CentreRight says that Cuba's hospitals are as dirty as it's dictatorship. And that is very, very dirty. Even worse than an NHS hospital, even...
  • Fraser Nelson at the Spectator's Coffee House remarks that the Lib Dems have returned to their traditional fence-sitting position. On the EU "Treaty" this time. As if we really expected anything like a principled stand from a Lib Dem, even Opik?!
  • CityUnslicker at Capitalists@Work fisks the Left's defence of Darling's nationalisation of Northern Rock. Truly, they are excreable.
Wednesday
  • Asp chews over what it means to be English and challenges anyone to justify how an English council can celebrate Chinese New Year and yet not mark St. George's Day at all. Can it be justified? I don't think so.
  • Norfolk Blogger is praising a Tory MP. Surely some mistake?
  • Gracchi at Westminster Wisdom writes about how student lifestyles are too career-focused nowadays. I don't recall it being massively career-centric, but then again there's a lot of those four years that I don't quite recall...
Thursday
  • Mike Smithson at Political Betting asks whether it's time to start betting on President Tony. Hopefully not.
  • Paul Linford ponders the question of whether MPs who get voted out should ever go back. I suppose it all depends on the individual and what they can bring to Parliament. So yes and no.
  • Mr Eugenides heralds the idea of blogging lessons in school. As he points out, learning can indeed be fun!
Friday
  • Daniel Finkelstein at the Times' Comment Central proposes a British answer to beating Barack Obama. To be honest, to me it would seem idiotic of America to waste this opportunity to elect a President like Obama. He has what America needs.
  • Guido Fawkes writes about the backfiring of the Tory's Auschwitz "gimmick" jibe. Whoever included that in the press release needs to real bollocking.
Saturday
  • Iain Dale thinks about who should be on the DNA database. Frankly, only those who have been convicted of a charge should definitely be kept on the database. But anyone who has been charged and taken to court over an offence such as murder or rape should probably be kept on as well.
  • Madsen Pirie at the ASI keeps the "Common Errors" series going with a post debunking the myth that "the market cannot protect the environment". So much for it taking government control to protect the environment. [One thing I'd like to be able to see is this entire series in one list.]
Sunday
  • Benedict Brogan compares the predicament of Commons Speaker Michael Martin to the "Blair saga". There are certain similarities...
  • Tim Worstall tells us why to never bother going north of the Watford Gap. He has a point...

17 February 2008

The Weekly Blog Posts - Sunday, February 17 2008


Monday

  • Norfolk Blogger says that New Labour has brought in Sick Britain. And he ain't half right, and with the links to prove it.
  • Iain Dale asks if we can have a department to examine waste in governemnt spending, after discovering that the US has an Office of Thrift Supervision. Although its job is actually just an equivalent to our FSA. But still, the name could be used with a more appropriate task, couldn't it?

Tuesday
  • James Forsyth at the Spectator Coffee House says that Labour really don't the people of Britain to have a vote on the EU "Treaty", so much so that they are threatening to remove the whip from Labour MPs who support the "I want a referendum" campaign. The obvious reason why they don't want a referendum is because they'll lose - and they know it.
  • David Beetham writes at OurKingdom that "a rights-based democracy is the best one we [can] have". Which is surely wrong. It should be, if anything, the other way around - a responsibility-based constitution.
Wednesday
  • John Redwood is sad that parliament allows itself to be suspended so easily, considering the fights it has been through to stay ion session in the past. It truly is sad how easily it is letting it's sovereignty be taken piece by piece by presidential governments.
  • Tony Sharp at the Waendal Journal points out that Labour vision of democracy is more and more centralised state power. Who'da thunk it?

Thursday
  • Ruthie Zaftig asks the media not to publish the name of the latest American teenager to go on a shooting spree, because it's giving them fame. And she's right. Let's stop this glorification of these people. But of course they won't.
  • Anthony Barnett at OurKingdom is absolutely right when he says that the title of Jack Straw's speech on the idea of a written constitution [which I wrote about in my We The People column] for Britain defies satire: "Modernising the Magna Carta". You couldn't make it up.

Friday

  • Madsen Pirie at the ASI continues the excellent "Common Errors" series with no. 35 - destroying the mistaken belief that inherit wealth is unfair. And he doesn't even mention the simple explanation that "life in unfair".
  • Cassilis has a post on what flags really mean. They really are every cleverly done.
  • The Last Boy Scout shows a video which gives a whole new meaning to the idea of phone sex...

Saturday
  • Sam Coates writing at the Times' Red Box asks whether political journalists should vote. He hasn't since he joined the Times in 2000, but do others? My opinion is: who cares? So long as they don't let it affect how they behave in their job, why does it matter at all?
  • Dr Crippen is looking for the most beautiful blogger. So why aren't I included?
  • Asp has found a headline that states the obvious...

Sunday
  • Sally in Norfolk is upgrading to XP from Vista. Isn't it supposed to be other way round?
  • Devil's Kitchen has some choice words to say about MPs who have constituencies less than a hour away from Westminster claiming £20,000 of our money every year for second homes. How can they get away with this?!
If you have any blogs that you think I should monitor, or any posts in particualr that should be included in next week's edition, please email me!

15 February 2008

A Written Constitution: We The People

My We The People column, now up at the Wardman Wire:

Jack Straw is hinting that the government wants to draw up a written Constitution for the UK, with a process that could take up to 20 years. But why does Straw want to do this? Because
most people might struggle go put their finger on what [their] rights are or in which texts they are located. The next stage in the UK's constitutional development is to look at whether we need better to articulate those rights which are scattered across a whole host of different places and indeed the responsibilities that go with being British... [And to] bring us in line with most progressive democracies around the world.
But why on earth does this mean that we should have a written Constitution?!

What Is A Constitution?

A constitution is basically the rules by which the democratic system of the nation state is run. Th is can either by an "unwritten", though in reality this more means "uncodified", constitution which relies on accepted conventions in order to run or a formalised, written Constitution.

Britain has an uncodified constitution, not an unwritten one. Pretty much every bit of it exists written down, in documents such as the Magna Carta, the 1689 Bill of Rights, and the Parliament Acts. The British constitution also exists in every single piece of legislation ever passed by Parliament, since there is no division between primary and secondary legislation. It also exists in common law, treaties with foreign powers, and analaysis and commentary made by experts [such as Bagehot]. But it also exists in conventions, which guide the way in which the system works - one convention being the role of Prime Minister.

America is the prime example of the written Constitution. It has a piece of paper which lists the rights and responsibilities of Americans, and is very hard indeed to modify. These kind of Constitutions are typically created after war or revolution, in order to satisfy the populace that their rights are defended.


Go here to read the rest.

10 February 2008

The Weekly Blog Posts - Sunday, February 10 2008


Monday

  • The ASI points out, in number 25 of their "common errors" series, that proportional representation isn't in fact more democratic. With which, of course, I agree.
  • Devil's Kitchen asks why doctors who refuse to wash themselves are still allowed to practice. Of course they shouldn't. Basic health and safety requirements of such a job must overcome any and all religious ideas.
  • Another post at Educational Conscription on why the idea of more coercion in education is wrong.
Tuesday
  • Norfolk Blogger has a way in which we can all take part in the US election. Online only, of course.
  • Chris Dillow writes about how educational conscription really doesn't pay. An obvious fact to those of us who write at Educational Conscription.
  • Bob Piper tells Caroline Flint that her idea to make those who don't get a job homeless is "nonsense". As it is, of course. Though Bob and I have different reasons for holding this view.
Wednesday
  • Matt Wardman asks the Independent yet again why they have broken all of the hyperlinks to articles in their new design, and asks for others to ask too. So, Indy, why did you?
  • Our Kingdom celebrates 90 years of feminism, even though equality apparently hasn't been reached. To be honest, I think that modern day "feminists" are the biggest barrier to equality being reached.
Thursday
  • Mr Eugenides is celebrating Wendy Alexander being cleared of wrongdoing over her illegal £950 donation. She may be "lovely", but can she hang on for much longer, even after being cleared?
  • Paul Linford asks whether you will stay up to watch Question Time. I missed it last week, but since it is in Watford this week, I may be lucky enough to be in the audience!
  • Trixy reports Gordon Brown's astounding statement that "no manifesto pledge can be considered to be binding in any way." Which just left me staring slack-jawed at the screen, unbelieving.
Friday
  • John Redwood writes that the governemnt is undermining both national and local democracy. This needs to be fixed.
  • Matthew Sinclair reports on Daily Mail polling. Come on, Matt, this is a poll of Mail readers. They hardly have rational or well-thought-out opinions!
Saturday
  • Dizzy Thinks that the Sun has excelled itself with its headline over the Rowan Williams/Sharia law issue. "Bash the Bishop". Any extra comment is superfluous.
  • Graachi says that Rowan Williams shouldn't resign. To be honest, I don't think that who leads the Church of England really makes bugger-all difference. The present incumbent may be but who's to say that the next would be any better?
Sunday
  • Andrew Allison starts the countdown to the demise of Gordon Brown. We can but hope!
  • Andrew Woodman at Tory Radio is getting bored of all the talk about MPs expenses. It may be boring, but is a very important issue! It's our money some of them are effectively stealing! Why should anyone get away with that, whether they are benefit cheats or MPs?

If you have any posts that you think should be included in next week's edition, please email me!

08 February 2008

MPs and Democracy: We The People

The Wardman Wire has seen some very good articles over the past week on the subject of MPs and the money they claim, both as salary and expenses. It's not my intention to weigh in on that debate, but use the opportunity to examine the role of MPs in our democracy.

Why do we have MPs? What is their point?

Britain - and all of the democratic world - uses the
representative form of democracy. We elect representatives, in our case Members of Parliament (MPs), to represent us on the national level. They are supposed to be our "voices" and to work out the best things to do and laws to pass for us.

However, they are not delegates, like
Edmund Burke pointed out. They are not elected to repeat the findings of polls and the like verbatim. They are elected to use their brains. We expect them to look deeper into the issues and examine them closely and make decisions from the basis of that. We have them to do that because we the people don't have the time or inclination to do so. And certainly not for every little thing. They are charged with the responsibility of acting in the interests of the people and given the power to do this - between elections, when the power is returned to the people for a short period while they decide on the next set of representatives.

But why not just vote of things ourselves?

Democracy isn't, of course, necessarily reliant in principle of the use of representatives.
Direct democracy, sometimes referred to as "pure democracy" is the idea that we the people should vote directly on everything. This simply does not exist in the real world on a national level [Switzerland is the closest, but still a long way off], however, due to the simple practical difficulties impossibilities of making it work.

It is possible to work when there are tiny electorates, such as
Rousseau's idea of a town meeting under a tree to discuss policies, but when an electorate increases beyond a number able to meet together easily, this becomes impractical. Until technology advances enough to make e-voting a real possibility, direct democracy is nothing more than a pipe-dream.

Read the rest at the Wardman Wire.

03 February 2008

The Weekly Blog Posts - Sunday, February 3 2008

Monday

  • Norfolk Blogger points out that it's very easy to mock the McQualification, but why should we? He is right there is too much snobbery about formal qualifications from educational establishments. Why shouldn't the skills of McDonalds staff be formally recognised?
  • Devil's Kitchen looks at suggestions of how to make Britain better. Some are, of course, utter shit and others very good suggestions.
  • Tony Sharp laments the neutering of Parliament through the tiny amount of debate allowed on the EU Constitution "Lisbon Treaty". And he's right. Such a large and important subject requires much more discussion.
Tuesday
  • Tom Paine says Happy Birthday to... Tom Paine. The real one, that is. Happy Birthday Tom!
  • Alex Singleton of the Telegraph Politics Blogs tells us all to be aware that the State is reading our emails. Why? Because they can. Encrypt, encrypt, encrypt!
  • Ellee Seymour asks when food became so complicated? Probably when it started to come pre-prepared, and when people stopped actually making it themselves. If you make it yourself, you know exactly what's in it. If you don't, who knows?
Wednesday
  • Mr Eugenides decides to regurgitate a Conservative party press release. Because, unlike ID cards, it's a good IDea.
  • Iain Dale want's to be inspired by Barack Obama. Obama would be my choice, had I a vote in America. Both against Hillary Clinton or whoever [probably McCain] that the Republicans put up.
Thursday
  • Daniel Finkelstein points out to Diane Abbott that it's not only left-wingers who are allowed to - let alone can - have insights. Which is obvious. Well, to anyone except a left-winger who are so convinced that the sun does shine out of their own arses that they spend most of their time with their heads up them looking for it.
  • Garbo wants HR professionals to select who works for our MPs. Which is fine, until you realise that most HR people are actually crap...
Friday
  • Lewis Baston writes a response at the Wardman Wire to my column last week on Proportional Representation. Of course, I'm right.
  • Writing at the ASI, Tim Worstall points out that people are rational - if they are in familiar situations where they understand all the options and consequences of selecting them. Which seems a rational explanation to me.
Saturday
  • Ben Brogan rejoices that Carla Bruni will be paying a visit to the UK presumably, since Sarkozy her now husband is visiting next month. It will make a nice change from seeing leader's wives like Cherie Blair and Sarah Brown.
  • Tim Worstall says that he must have pissed off a Wikipedia editor, considering what his Wikipedia entry has been edited to say. By a retard, presumably.
  • Mike Ion says that there should be "equal treatment for agency workers". As a temp myself, I wrote about it when the EU proposed this idiocy. It was a stupid idea then, and remains a stupid idea now. And always will be a stupid idea.
Sunday
  • EU Referendum on the claim that the EU is "easily the most popular and successful empire in history". Which is of course utter bollocks, as it is indeed neither.
  • Guido Fawkes has a round-up of the sleaze stories that currently abound in the press. It's really quite a large number!

27 January 2008

The Weekly Blog Posts - Sunday, January 27 2008

Since everyone else seems to be doing it, I thought I'd start a weekly roundup of good blog posts that I have found during the week, since daily ones are way too much work and I don't have the time to do it anyway. It will be posted every Sunday, with a couple of posts for each day which I found either interesting or felt were very good.


Monday:

  • Mike Ion asks whether we should make voting compulsory. Of course we shouldn't. Not voting is a choice as well - and besides, making people vote is hardly compatible with the idea of democracy!
  • Iain Dale asks why three Scots - and no English people - are invited to discuss English votes and whether the English are discriminated against within the Union. It erally does fall into the category of truth being stranger than fiction...
Tuesday:
  • Anthony Barnett at OurKingdom has an incredibly patronising attack on Shane Greer's opposition to fixed term parliaments. That's not the way to win friends and influence people, but just to polarise the debate.
  • Norfolk Blogger calls Labour Minister Ivan Thomas a "stupid prat" for attempting to throw mud at Nick Clegg. The fact that he is a stupid parat is contestable, but whether he was wrong about Clegg's proposals is less clear-cut.

Wednesday:
  • Freemania gives us an account of the day in the life of the stock market. Very amusing and certainly illuminating!
  • Paul Linford says that Conservatives are systematically trying to portray Gordon Brown as "strange", and must not be allowed to get away with it. But, Paul, aren't all politicians strange anyway? Is it the fact or the speaking about it that you object to?

Thursday:
  • Mr Eugenides is disgusted by the very idea of paying people to lose weight, and points out the precise pattern by which government pretend to be "doing something" about it. Of course it won't work, no matter how much money they throw at it!
  • A. Tory writes a letter to his readers, asking them to look at photos of Gordon Brown. No, this isn't a new form of torture, but evidence that Gordon Brown is actually spinning his own appearance - or getting very self-conscious about his grey hairs.
Friday:
Saturday:
  • Tim Worstall points out yet another mistake to the Grauniad subs. But we should really be used to them making such mistakes by now! Maybe someone should take up the task of going through the paper each day with a red pen and then posting it back to them?
  • Prodicus asks the hacks of the dead-tree press to keep up with times. Well, some people will never emerge from the Dark Ages, let alone understand modern technology!

Sunday:
  • Chris Dillow has a few ideas for a liberal left manifesto. Some of it is good, some of it isn't.
  • The Adam Smith Institute absolutely destroys common error number 18, that "positive discrimination is needed to make good to minorities the effects of past exploitation or discrimination."
  • Graachi wonders why a UN university no longer seems to want to remain a fantasy. Probably just because they can.

25 January 2008

We The People: Proportional Representation

Another instalment of my We The People column over at Wardman Wire. I'm delaying what had been intended to be the first posts for this column yet again because this story caught my eye, and I felt in the mood to write about it. So here it is:

The Story

The Proportional Representation voting system has been rejected by ministers because it wouldn't boost turnout:
"A review of PR voting in Scottish, Welsh, Northern Irish and European elections said voters were confused.
The report said PR had resulted in more parties being represented in the devolved administrations but also had a tendency to produce coalition governments.
If PR was introduced in Westminster elections, constituencies could be represented by more than one MP, said the review.
But there is no guarantee PR would increase turnout in a general election or make Parliament more diverse, the report says.
It also warns that it could cause complications between the House of Commons and the House of Lords." (BBC)
What Is PR?

Very basically, PR is a voting system by which seats in the legislature is supposed to be very closely matched to votes. In a pure PR system, a party who gets 35% of the votes also gets 35% of the seats. Of this, this isn’t always possible in real life, where there are often minimum vote percentage requirements for a seat - examples of this is the 4% minimum in Sweden and the 1.5% limit in Israel - hence votes don’t always equal seats.

The idea behind PR is to equally distribute seats according to votes, to make the legislature a ‘true reflection’ of the voter’s intentions. But what it also does is almost certainly mean that there isn’t a majority.

A Bad Thing For The UK

PR would be a bad thing for the UK. It simply would not work within our political system. To replace the plurality [first-past-the-post] system we use with proportional representation would be a disaster. We need to have a party with a majority in parliament for our government to work. We have a parliamentary system, and thus the government is inextricably linked to parliament. It is from parliament that it gains it’s legitimacy and power.

The 'Westminster model' political system requires effective government. If there is no majority held by one party in parliament, the government cannot govern. The very oppositional nature of our political system that goes with it ensures that. Coalitions do not work - Britain has never had a coalition government outside of wartime, even when the opportunity has arisen...
Read the rest here.

15 January 2008

05 January 2008

Blogging From The Trenches

Soldiers who served during the First World War frequently wrote letters home, and it is through these documents that we can understand the true situation which they were in. The letters of one soldier, Private Harry Lamin, are being published as a blog, exactly 90 years after they were written, and are published entirely faithfully to the original, including spelling and grammar, and are also put in context by some historical explanations.

All in all, a very interesting blog and a very good idea to do, reproducing a snapshot of the past online. Read it here.

22 December 2007

Dear Santa, Love Gordon

What would Gordon Brown's letter to Santa read like? DuSanne has a sneak peek...

Dear Santa,

My name is Gordon and everyone tells me that I am a good boy, apart from nasty people who are fibbing, and not doing proper fibs like what I do.

I don't want much this Xmas because I got a good present already this year, but my friends are cross with me 'cos I broke it. I was trying to look after it, honest, even my best friend (Ballsey, not the pretend one) says so.

I would like something called a 'spine' though. Everyone says the head boy at school before me had one, but he wouldn't let me borrow it. Lots of people got cross because he had one, even his mates, but it made him look cool. Can I have one too, pleasssssssse! ...
Go read the rest.

21 December 2007

We The People: A Wardman Wire Preview

I thought that I would write a bit more about my new bi-weekly column starting in the new year: We The People. Even though I haven’t had the opportunity to actually start writing it yet! ...

The basis of We The People will be democracy - in theory and in practice. I am going to try and look at different democratic and governmental systems and analyse them together and in comparison with each other and in relation to the next section of this post...
Go read the rest.

18 December 2007

The best quote you'll read all day - even though it's barely started:
Gordon Brown "has all the presentational skills of David Brent and the decision making skills of a lemming."
- Andrew Woodman, writing at Tory Radio
Quite possibly the most damning sentence that has every been written.

The entire piece [a look back at 2007 and what might have been], however, is very much worth reading.

02 December 2007

Blogpower Round-up #4

The fourth Blogpower Round-up - the Advent edition - is now up at Nobody Important. As JMB suggests "before you head over to see if your post is mentioned, grab yourself a cup of coffee or tea, or a gin and tonic if you'd rather, and put up your feet. Fifty posts are included, each accompanied by a nattering editorial comment. So it is rather long."

Today I [JMB] am presenting a round-up of posts of Blogpower members which have been submitted as being what others considered worthy of special mention and many of them are reflective, anticipatory and even joyful...
These posts highlight the fact that this is an exceptionally vibrant group of bloggers, to which I am proud to belong and pertinent facts about Blogpower can be found at Defending the Blog.
It is indeed a superb round-up, and you can read it here.

01 December 2007

TD @ Wardman Wire
Hot Issue of the Week: Labour's Donation Scandal

This week’s hot issue has been Labour’s problems with donations received through third parties, which has dominated the headlines quite substantially. The problem is that David Abrahams has donated more than £600,000 to the party under other people’s names. This is illegal, and Gordon Brown has acknowledged, and announced that the money will be returned. This has already cost Peter Watt, the Labour general secretary, his job, and may cost Jon Mendelsohn, Brown’s chief fundraiser and general election director, his job as well.

But the problems go deeper [...]

This has been yet another bad week for Labour and Gordon Brown. This is yet another nail in the coffin of Gordon Brown’s leadership, and allows the difficult-to-shift labels of “sleaze” and “scandal” to be attached to the entire party. Especially following on so soon after cash-for-honours, it certainly doesn’t help the general view of political parties and donations to them.
Read the rest here.

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