February 2005

28 February 2005
War is stupid - it would have been cheaper to have bought the slaves and to have set them free …link
 
New title

Or should that be new old title?  Anyway, I was never going to be without Croziervision for very long - it’s kinda catchy and I like it.  v3.0?  Well there have been one or two previous versions. 

Incidentally, I’ve also set it up so that www.croziervision.com is now the URL for the home page.  No need to update existing links, though - these will still work.

27 February 2005
Welfare state turns children into junkies - Leo McKinstry on ADHD …link
 
More Labour dirty tricks - this time courtesy of a US import. What is wrong with these people? …link
 
Bring back DDT - says Johnathan Pearce …link
 
Blair’s assault on civil liberties - James Hammerton has a partial list (which is quite frightening enough) …link
 
23 February 2005
Internment works

I see internment/house arrest/detention without trial is getting a bum rap.  Can’t say I like it that much either, but I am always mindful of one killer fact:

When you are confronted with a terrorist organisation that is able to hide itself amongst a distinct and separate community, you cannot hope to win without internment. This has been proved time and time again, in campaigns against the IRA in the 1940s and 1950s, in the Malaya Emergency and in Kenya.  It’s not the full story - you need a few other things like good intelligence and robust defence of your borders - but it is an essential part of the story.

When you ditch it (as we did in Ulster after 1972) you lose.

The bizarre thing is that people are kicking up a fuss now.  It’s not as if it’s a new thing.  It had been on the statute books for yonks.  I am pretty sure that it was only repealed shortly before 9/11. I don’t seem to remember finding it particularly repressive.

Why the blogosphere will help the Conservative Party

In a follow up on IDS’s Guardian article Brian suggests that the Blogosphere may well serve to expose the Conservative Party’s divisions and thus to undermine it’s hopes.  I don’t think so.  The reason I think this is because the right-wing Blogosphere in Britain is remarkably united.  There are very few issues upon which it disagrees.  Thus it is not going to be exposing any divisions.

So the Blogosphere’s not going to be a negative.  But will it be a postive?  I think yes.

The Blogosphere’s main job is to keep the MSM honest.  When that starts to happen Conservatives will get a better press.  When they get a better press they will feel less guilty about being Conservatives.  When they fell less guilty they will start to say what they believe.  As they do Conservative policies will become more, well, conservative.  And because they will be getting a better press they will also have a better chance of being elected.

QED.

State responsible for 40% of all aircraft delays - assuming I've read this right …link
 
Helen Szamuely is unwell - best wishes for a quick and full recovery, Helen …link
 
Land of the Free? (Part II)

After a tongue-lashing from Jackie, Tim Worstall comes to my rescue with the news that in the US florists are licenced and in California the state demands $800 just to set up a business - though California may be a special case.

Statism is bad everywhere.

Quote of the Day

The problem with the counterculture was that it was only - and literally - a counterculture. It knew what it was against (the existing culture), but not what it was for. Thirty-five years on the counterculture still doesn’t know. Against the war in Iraq ? Check. Against Saddam’s evil ? Check. What are you going to do short of war ? ”I don’t know, but there must be another way”.

Laban Tall while commenting on that Hunter S Thompson bloke.

22 February 2005
Marshall Plans don’t work - Africa has already received six of them …link
 
529 Quangos - including one that exists to "promote potatoes". Good to know that your taxes are being well spent …link
 
“The Poll Tax’s beauty…” - never thought I'd see that particular combination of words in print …link
 
You can make a living out of blogging - which is going to make life interesting …link
 
Hunter S Thompson is dead - which is news to those of us who knew neither that he was alive nor who he was. Briffa marks the event in his own unique style …link
 
It’s Official - Scots are the UK's biggest whiners …link
 
21 February 2005

Further to the IDS thing, Norm Geras reckons its “user-neutral”.  I, for one, am quite happy to let him believe that.

Tim Worstall has started a BritBlog Roundup - in case you hadn't already heard …link
 
Councillors: they earn every penny

From An Englishman’s Castle

We even had a minor breakthrough in relations between the Labour and Liberal Democrat parties this morning when we joined forces in arguing against the use of a semi-colon in the phrase You Are Your City; Clean and Safe…

Fucking hell.

20 February 2005
TV Alert: Panorama, What has Tony done for the NHS? - this could be v.interesting. 10:15pm Sunday
 
Before you read any further, sit down and take a deep breath

The Guardian has printed something intelligent about blogs and Iain Duncan Smith is the byline.

Feeling better yet?  Guardian?  Iain Duncan Smith?  I know, I know.  Now while we can’t be sure that IDS wrote it we can be sure the Guardian published it.  Instapundit says so, so it must be true.

IDS reckons that blogs are going to change the way politics operates in the UK.  Who knows perhaps it will force politicians to stop taking the credit for the work of their poorly-paid minions.

UPDATE.  Brian thinks that while it may be good for the right it might not be good news for the Conservative Party.  And Guido has this:

The dead-tree-news medium is slow and lazy, the need to cozy up to political sources makes them unwilling to be as ferocious as they should be in a healthy democracy.

19 February 2005
Letter post to be opened up to competition - I'll believe it when I see it …link
 
Recycling is rubbish - old article but worth, er, recyling from time to time. Hat tip Blognor …link
 
If you live by the state you die by the state - Brian finds an example from Luvvieland …link
 
18 February 2005
“They sponge off private enterprise…” - Leith lays into the lettuce-lifting Latvians of Lincolnshire …link
 
“…off-the-record is dead” - Jackie has some thoughts on the Eason Jordan affair …link
 
Columbo Alert

Here’s a real treat for all you Columbo fans (eg me).  On Saturday, at 2:35pm Channel 5 is showing Prescription: Murder, the very first ever Peter Falk Columbo.  So, you thought Peter Falk was the only ever Columbo?  Not quite

This 1968 pilot was only one of many steps in bringing Link and Levinson’s dream to the small screen.  In all it took three pilots and 10 years to see the emergence (in 1971) of one of the most popular detective series ever.

Thinking of upgrading to broadband - as I am? The Technomeister surveys the market …link
 
Quote of the Day

David Farrer on airline compensation regulation:

Whenever I hear the word rights, I reach for my revolver

From Freedom and Whisky

Sod off Swampy! - Dom carefully considers both sides in the story of the Great IPE punch-up …link
 
17 February 2005
Boris backs Ken

I was going to write something on the Livingstone saga but (like rather a lot of people) I tied myself up in knots and, anyway, Boris Johnson does it much better.  While doing a pretty good job of pointing out that Ken didn’t say anything anti-semitic and condemning the subsequent outbreak of apologitis, unfortunately, he ends up getting very confused.  From what I can work out he is claiming that Blair wants Livingstone to apologise for Alistair Campbell’s (alleged) anti-semitism.  Hmm…

The seven basic myths - EU Referendum savages the FCO's propaganda …link
 
Quote of the Day

Helen Szamuely on Rod Liddle on celebs:

Mr Liddle is a little too liberal and generous for my tastes. He thinks that in a democracy celebrities “have as much right to get exercised by things as plumbers, traffic wardens and insurance loss-adjusters”. Don’t know about that.

From EU Referendum

Scientific consensus on climate change - it may be a consensus but it's not science …link
 
16 February 2005
Hockey = gay - say Emerald Bile. Makes you wonder what they think of rugby …link
 
Farrer on Scotland, negativity and the intelligentsia -  …link
 
Land of the Free?

Whilst I think the US and Europe share a common destiny, Jackie thinks that things are doing rather better in the US:

Until recently, I hadn’t been back in the US for about 2.5 years. But when I did return, I was awed and very appreciative of the attitude most Americans have to their rights. Whereas people here largely seem to have an “Oh well, what can do you?” resignation about these things, the Americans I know - of every political stripe - take a very strong “Screw you and the horse you rode in on, Big Brother” line.

Which almost had me going until a good friend told me today that in the US hairdressers have to be licenced.  A licence to crimp, so to speak.  Statism is pretty bad everywhere.

Jackie also asked me whether I would be tempted to emigrate.  I think if I were convinced that Britain was doomed and the US was not I would start to think about it.  For the time being we’re both doomed so the question doesn’t arise.

Fall in trade with EU - as % of GDP …link
 
German women are not being forced into prostitution - in the sense that there is no case of a particular woman being in this particular situation, although it is theoretically possible. Thanks to Tim Hall for pointing this out …link
 
15 February 2005
As threatened - we have a new(ish) design. Hope you like it …link
 
14 February 2005
US v UK healthcare

Excellent article by James Bartholomew in the Spectator comparing healthcare in Britain and the US.  He points out that:

  1. American healthcare is better than British healthcare
  2. America is not a free for all - state intervention is rife (eg ownership, regulation, subsidy, law suits)
  3. American healthcare is not perfect
  4. The imperfections are in large part due to the state intervention
Eastern Europe better off under communism? - er... actually... no …link
 
13 February 2005
Steyn may be back…

...but that doesn’t mean he’s happy:

It’s an open question whether the West will survive this twilight struggle: Europe almost certainly won’t, America might; on the other hand, the psychosis to which much of the culture is in thrall may eventually reach a tipping point into mass civilizational suicide.

For what it’s worth, I think it’s both or none.  When Perry announced that he was leaving the UK for America, several commenters pointed out that the situation there was almost as bad as it is here.  Similar cultures give rise to similar debates and similar outcomes.  But I think we will turn ourselves around.  Bush’s re-election was a turning point.  And for that reason I am optimistic about Europe.

SteynOnline - (it rhymes don't you know?) is back …link
 
Libertarian girl - or Ukrainian mail-order bride? …link
 
Why is the Eiffel Tower now uglier? - because they changed its appearance in order to bring it into copyright …link
 
Things that make you go hmm…

Justin Timberlake...made an appearance on a New York radio station and failed to finish the French toast he was served. The partially eaten toast sold on eBay for more than $3,100.

Via Marginal Revolution.

12 February 2005
On listening to Paul Coulam I have never had the desire to go to a strip club - but Jackie has …link
 
The Hoppe Affair - academic speaks his mind and gets into trouble …link
 
Word of the Day - Fruitloopitude …link
 
Eason Jordan and the rise of the Blogosphere

For those unfamiliar with the Easongate, I am probably not the best person to go to for a summary but here goes:  Jordan was a CNN executive.  In a meeting in Davos, Switzerland he is alleged to have claimed that the US military was assassinating journalists.  There was a tape of his remarks.  He was alleged to have prevented that tape from being broadcast.  The blogosphere kicked up a fuss.  The MSM (mainstream media) did almost nothing.

And now he has resigned.

Splutter.

In Rathergate the MSM did take notice.  But in this case they didn’t.  And still the guy had to go.  How come?  I am flabbergasted.  The only explanation (that I can think of) is that the Blogosphere is so powerful these days that the MSM can no longer even protect one of its own.

But how is that?  It’s not as if blogs are that widely read.  Glenn Reynolds gets some 150,000 hits a day.  That’s about one out of every 2,000 Americans.  And he’s the biggest.  But he’s clearly punching way above his weight.  I can’t imagine the brahmins of the MSM particularly care or, indeed, know of his opinions.  But they are clearly acting on them.  The only thing I can imagine is that, in some way, opinions seep, partly via the internet, partly via word of mouth.

Golly.

Democracy becoming conservative? - certainly blasts a hole in my thinking if it is …link
 
Quote of the Day: the Establishment

Natalie finds new BBC fish to fry:

…the BBC describes its hero Judge Deed as “the judge who is not afraid to question the establishment.” Yawn. Who exactly is afraid to question the establishment these days?

From Biased BBC.  The really ludicrous thing is that the “Establishment” of Sixties legend died out years ago.

11 February 2005
Policing in the past - the Copper reads an account from one of his predecessors. …link
 
America, f*ck yeah! - the Social Affairs Unit reviews Team America: World Police …link
 
Despotism’s furthest shore - NRO review of new book on North Korea …link
 
Trial design

I’ve been having a go at re-jigging the design, the upshot of which you can see here.  The main aim has been to make the look of the site less “hideously white” as Greg Dyke might say.  I think it succeeds but I am open to other opinions.

Observant readers will also have noticed the addition of a small “#” to In Brief bar entries.  This is the permalink.  I’ve added it because it occurs to me that there might be occasions when I and others want to refer to it.

09 February 2005
Quote of the Day

You cannot stop someone from thinking something just because you make the symbols illegal.

From EU Serf

US to blame for Holocaust - according to a Franco-German TV programme (allegedly) …link
 
Can the lyrics of two well-known pop songs tell you all you need to know about state competence? - yes they can …link