Simon Jenkins's Blog, page 135

July 24, 2012

London 2012 Olympics: what price fleeting joy? For Britons, it's £9bn | Simon Jenkins

The Olympic effect on 'wellbeing' will be hard to calculate. Its damage to the public finances, I fear, rather less so

Is the earth starting to move for you? Years of Olympic foreplay this week reach their climax. The British government has stripped, daubed and ravished its capital city. Nowhere outside the communist bloc has power coupled sport so clumsily as in London 2012. National ecstasy has been declared a duty to the state. The slightest protest is unpatriotic.

We could all doubtless do...

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Published on July 24, 2012 12:15

July 19, 2012

This language of war won't help Syria escape its agony | Simon Jenkins

In reacting to foreign conflicts, the west has to find a way of engaging that has meaning but stops short of bloodshed

A year ago the Syrian regime was "on the brink of collapse". Following the Houla massacre in May, President Assad was "on his way out". Now his opponents have reached the streets of Damascus and Aleppo, and it is "the beginning of the end for Assad". To Britain he is "unacceptable", to America brutal and bloodthirsty, to the United Nations the architect of...

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Published on July 19, 2012 13:00

July 17, 2012

The craving for massive live events is ruining our cities | Simon Jenkins

In the digital age, there's big money to be made in large gatherings. But the Olympics will show the flaws of circus economics

The stakes are too low. The Olympic Games were originally held so that young men could prepare for war. Now young men are recalled from war to prepare for the Olympic Games. It is the politics of the nation state gone mad. The commercialism, the heavy-handed security, the ostentatious plutocracy and phoney patriotism of the modern Olympics are out of all proportion to...

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Published on July 17, 2012 12:34

July 12, 2012

Mervyn King has turned our leaders into zombie puppets | Simon Jenkins

Demand has not risen. Neither has production. Yet we have been duped into thinking that QE will kickstart the economy

It must be the biggest confidence trick of all time. It is a cheat, a scam, a fiddle, a bankers' ramp, a revenge of big money against an ungrateful world. It is called quantitative easing, and nobody has a clue what it means. According to the Bank of England, the past four years have seen £325bn pumped into the British economy to kickstart growth, with another £50bn now on the...

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Published on July 12, 2012 12:30

July 10, 2012

For the digital revolution, this is the Robespierre moment | Simon Jenkins

Total disclosure means the onset of a new terror, a retreat to a kind of sofa government beyond freedom of information

I am about to lose my journalist's ticket, my union card, my media cred. I think Tony Blair is right. He was, as he says, "a naive, foolish, irresponsible nincompoop" to have passed the 2000 freedom of information act in the form he did. In blowing apart the 30-year rule on government secrecy, he threw out the baby with the bathwater.

Blair made almost all public documents...

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Published on July 10, 2012 12:30

July 5, 2012

Parliament, not Leveson, is the best place for this inquiry | Simon Jenkins

We're told Leveson-style tribunals can do no wrong. But lawyers' obsession with cross-examination can hinder the search for truth

A fierce argument broke out in the Commons yesterday over inquiries. As the floodwaters of banking disaster recede, who should pick over the wreckage on the shore? For the prime minister this is a job for parliament. For the opposition leader, a job for judges. Ed Miliband said that if David Cameron does not hold a "judge-led inquiry" into banks, as he did into the...

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Published on July 05, 2012 13:00

July 3, 2012

The Shard has slashed the face of London for ever | Simon Jenkins

Timbuktu's shrines can be rebuilt but this tower, and the glass forest that's set to follow, will ruin the skyline of the capital

We are shocked by the news from Timbuktu. The Islamists are at it again, smashing the medieval shrines and mosques of the desert city, as they did the buddhas of Afghanistan. They claim these jewels of African heritage offend sharia law. Unesco calls the destruction "a tragedy for all humanity", and a prosecutor at the international criminal court calls it a wa...

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Published on July 03, 2012 12:30

June 28, 2012

Banking keeps getting away with it, just as the unions did | Simon Jenkins

Heads will probably roll for the Libor scandal, but this crisis won't end until the profession's link with politicians is severed

Too big to fail … now too big to jail? There seems no end to the immunity – moral, political, fiscal and possibly legal – claimed by the present masters of the universe, the bankers. In a side-splitting, coffee-spluttering radio interview today, Sir Martin Taylor, the former chief executive of Barclays, mused that his old board might consider the best person to "tur...

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Published on June 28, 2012 12:30

June 26, 2012

Despite the Queen's handshake with Martin McGuinness there is little reconciliation | Simon Jenkins

It is good that the Queen's visit has crossed a divide. But power sharing in Northern Ireland remains inherently unstable

'Queen shakes hands with IRA' would once have caused a sensation. Today it is a happy milestone on the rocky path of Irish reconciliation. Within a year, the monarch has made the first ever visit to the Republic of Ireland and is today greeting a republican leader in Belfast. That greeting is across a political divide but also a religious one, the divide that created Irish...

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Published on June 26, 2012 13:10

June 25, 2012

Aerial views of a very different Britain | Simon Jenkins

These black and white photos of the UK from the 1920s on are recognisable but show how much the country has changed

We love to look down from above. It gives us, literally, a superior view of the world, a day in the life of Jupiter. Aerial photography was used as a battlefield aid in the great war, and afterwards two pilots decided to carry the practice over into peacetime, to record Britain from the air. That record is now available online, and makes sobering viewing.

Was Britain really so sma...

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Published on June 25, 2012 09:31

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