Malcolm Blair-Robinson's Blog, page 215

July 19, 2014

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For a few days only download for free ‘The Judas Cross’. A flashback psycho thriller exploring dark secrets and ancient legends in a nineteen-twenties English village. Authentic characterisation of the period will entertain and grip you to the end.


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Published on July 19, 2014 07:05

Air Crash Blame: Are Kiev’s Hands Clean?

While shock and sympathy for the victims and their families of the terrible destruction of MH17 is worldwide and universal, the discovery of what actually happened is in danger of being lost in a confrontation of conflicting accusations.


Yesterday morning I posted my own analysis of the most likely chain of events in the tragedy, which was subsequently borne out by similar conclusions from Downing Street and the White House, to the effect that a separatist missile had been fired, mistaking the airliner for a Ukrainian transport. The performance of the pro Russian militia restricting access and carrying off evidence reinforces this conclusion. While I relied on news feeds, social media and eye witness interviews, Washington and London would be working from sophisticated communication and satellite intelligence gathering. Even so, doubts remain, because of difficulties which are bound to arise from disinformation, false intelligence and opposing forces with identical weapons systems.


That this terrible event is a diplomatic and public relations disaster for Moscow and the separatists cannot be denied.It is made worse by initial uncertainty on the Russian side about how to react and reports of drunken militia hindering inspectors. Nevertheless Russia has not disguised its shock and sympathy and large numbers of local people from miners to emergency teams have worked hard to gather bodies and body parts spread over miles of countryside; a horrific task stoically performed, of which the memory will never fade.


Yet there is not universal confidence that all is as it seems. Distrust of the Kiev government is widespread. From the very beginning it has been trying to prod NATO into some kind of military response to settle quarrels largely of its own making. Even if NATO was persuaded at some point, the public in the West would not be, and it is therefore not an option. It is important to say in clear and powerful tones to the Kiev government that Ukraine was an independent country under no threat from anybody, which since it broke from the disintegrating Soviet Union has made a complete mess of its governance and failed utterly in its primary responsibility to unite its people. Nobody else is willing to be dragged into their quagmire although financial and diplomatic help will be given to enable a fresh start.


If it turns out that Kiev was involved in any way in the events which ended in the deaths of nearly three hundred innocent travellers, they should know they will be abandoned  to whatever fate destiny has in store and Western support will be entirely withdrawn. Russia has now mounted an alternative narrative for the shooting down, which demands answers to a number of valid questions about Kiev forces in the region and the routing of the plane in such a dangerous airspace.


It is absolutely critical for its continuing credibility that Kiev answers these convincingly. Bluster and counter accusations will not work. Either it has clean hands or it has something to hide.

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Published on July 19, 2014 05:22

July 18, 2014

The Judas Cross

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Published on July 18, 2014 10:58

Ukraine Air Tragedy: We know What. But Who?

One cannot imagine the anguish felt by the families who have lost loved ones in the downing of the Malaysian airliner. This time it is known what happened to the Malaysian plane; it did not vanish, it fell from the sky and the graphic images of the carnage of bodies and wreckage are everywhere on the media. There is disbelief that a civilian airliner has been shot down, (there is little doubt of that) not least because most people would not have thought that any airline would take the risk of flying over a war zone. Many had already diverted flights, but not all. The ill starred Malaysian carrier was one of those to judge the risk as acceptable. It has paid a heavy price, but that is as nothing to the price paid by its passengers. The international condemnation of the outrage is at maximum level, as are the accusations and counter claims as to who fired the rocket. Unlike past disasters of this kind, the advent of modern social media and the internet makes it possible to get the apparent facts together quite quickly through intercepts. The health warning comes that the same system provides an ideal medium for disinformation as well as truth. The most plausible explanation is that separatists launched the missile to shoot down what they believed to be a Russian built cargo plane operated by the Kiev government. There are intercepts which confirm this. If these are genuine, several questions arise. 1 Where did the separatists obtain the missile system able to hit the aircraft at such a height? Was it captured from the unstable Ukrainian army or was it covertly supplied by Russia or by separatist agents in Russia? 2 What part are Russian intelligence and special forces playing in support of the separatists and did this contribute to the disaster? 3 Why had Kiev not closed to civilian flights what it claims to be its airspace, if it (a) had lost control of a missile system or (b) believed the Russians had supplied one to what it calls terrorists? 4 Is the international aviation authority practice of issuing ‘advice’ to civil airlines concerning war zones fit for purpose or should this be changed to publicised directives? If this is not the general drift of what happened, there are only two other possibilities. One is a bomb on board (already discounted by most) and the other that it was a Ukrainian rocket battery which shot the plane down, believing it to be a Russian cargo plane bringing weapons to the insurgents. The problem is both sides are using the same Soviet era equipment and transport. In the literal and possibly even the legal sense, President Putin is right when he says that the responsibility for the disaster lies with the country in whose airspace this occurred. But he knows, as do we all, that it is not quite as simple as that. What is clear is the the style of confrontation with Russia, so favoured by the EU, NATO, the US and UK makes matters worse not better. Ukraine faces an insurgency which cannot be put down by force and which is leading to significant loss of life not only of those involved, but in a game changer calamity involving innocent travellers, huge numbers of whom were women and children. We all know what has happened in Ukraine since the Kiev riots began. Just suppose at that point the West had said to Russia ”this is your sphere of influence but our area of interest. Let us work together to resolve the difficulties in a peaceful and constructive way to the benefit of all sides.” We cannot say for sure where we would be now, but we can say for certain we would not be in mourning for three hundred innocents blown out of the sky. There are, in this moment of world history, lessons which are proving unnecessarily hard to learn.

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Published on July 18, 2014 04:03

July 17, 2014

The UK and Human Rights

Now that Dominic Grieve and Ken Clarke have left the government, the Tory Party had set out on its reformist agenda for Europe without resistance from the heart of its own grip on power. They are buoyed up by the knowledge that the public is irritated by the pontifications of the European Court of Human Rights and are happy with the notion of Britain pulling out and setting up its own Bill Of Rights. The argument behind this is that the UK Parliament should make all laws and that this parliament is sovereign.


In a  democracy this is not quite true. The people are sovereign and exercise their sovereignty through parliament which they elect. Britain is one of only three democracies in the world without a formal written constitution. What such an instrument does is to limit the power of the legislature and government to enact laws or regulations which erode the agreed framework and limitations within which government must function. Because Britain has no such formal instrument of state, it relies on custom and practice and various statutes, any of which can be changed by any parliamentary majority at any time. Essentially the establishment can make up the constitution as it goes along.


Should government fall into malevolent or misguided hands, this could be calamitous for individual freedom, were it not for the Human Rights Act, which underpins not only nationally, but internationally, the rights and freedoms of every person in the land. If this is swept away, and even more so if Britain leaves Europe (and if Scotland leaves the UK), it seems to this blog that the need for a formal written constitution for whatever remains of the UK is an essential requirement not only for the inalienable protection of the rights and freedoms of British Citizens, but also to lay down a clear framework and set of limitations within which government must function.


The difference is that governments can change laws if they have a majority in parliament, without having an actual majority in the country. In a proper democracy the constitution can only be changed by a majority of the people.


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Published on July 17, 2014 07:44

July 15, 2014

House Price Inflation: Up Again

This Blog has had more to say about the dangers of this cancer within our economy than  almost  any other subject. There is not a lot to add. Now running at an average of over 10% across the country, this is unsustainable and will lead to a very hard landing unless action is taken now. So far there have been tinkerings but no firm clear signal that enough is enough. The best would have been to create a Mortgage Rate running alongside Bank Rate, which could be moved up without affecting interest rates in the wider economy.


The present situation is not only fiscally suicidal, but it also sucks money out of all the key areas of economic regeneration in order to fund a binge in the financial sector. Too many modern politicians have a finger in that pie. The outcome is cuts on the one hand and excessive government borrowing on the other. The total interest bill as a first call on all income of both the government and households in the UK is now £100 billion per year. It is difficult enough to find that money now, which comes before a single nurse is paid or a single plate of food is put on the table.


Just think how hard it will be to pay when the next crash comes.


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Published on July 15, 2014 04:34

Downing Street Blood Bath.

Cabinet reshuffles cause political excitement and in the Westminster village are high drama. Elsewhere they are boring, irrelevant or pointless. Small ones made necessary because of a minor scandal or an early retirement, cause just enough of a ripple to drive the ten o’clock news. Big ones and the one now in progress is as big as they get, raise many questions, especially if they occur in the last few months of a parliament. If the person was useless in this ministry, why can we expect them to shine in that one? If the previous line up was full of duffers, why not act earlier? Is this person really retiring, or walking out because they are pissed off with the direction of travel?


Inevitably a complete government revamp in the run up to a general election has something of a Titanic air. Nowadays particularly, politicians, unlike other celebrities, are interesting only to other politicians. They are mostly unknown to ordinary people, who have no interest in them at all. Changing the Cabinet around has much less effect than it once did. This is because most distrust politicians more than any other class and voting intention is driven by mood rather than personality or policy. Fewer people now use their vote that at any time before. Moreover the mood is now anti-establishment, which makes the next election hard to call.


Waiting in the wings is one figure who is anti-establishment and populist and ready to cause a political explosion. He is Nigel Farage. Behind him lurks Boris, ready to pick up the pieces. It is the spectre of these two which drives events in Downing Street today.


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Published on July 15, 2014 03:06

Women Bishops

The Church of England has made a big advance in finally approving the notion that women can and should become Bishops. This has brought widespread rejoicing among its dwindling followers, who hope that this move into the real world may cause their numbers to expand. Meanwhile concessions have had to be made to the traditionalist  wing, which include novelties such as male oversight and an ombudsman. This blog is unconvinced by arguments put forward to placate this bigoted group of theological zealots. Whatever they call themselves or think they are, I can tell them they are not Christian. Christianity is supposed to be all about love, compassion, tolerance and equality. The idea that men are superior and only males can perform certain rituals on behalf of God is to most preposterous and to many insulting.


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Published on July 15, 2014 01:44

July 14, 2014

Lady Butler-Sloss : The Right Decision

As predicted by this Blog and countless others, Lady Butler-Sloss’s position quickly became untenable and she has stood down from leading the critical inquiry into paedophiles in power. This was the right decision, taken with great dignity. One can only wonder at the thinking in the Home Office that imagined her appointment would work.


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Published on July 14, 2014 10:52

German Triumph: And Great Britain?

Germany has won the World Cup and done so with considerable style and without any controversy. They arrived. They played. They triumphed. The Germans had won before as West Germany, but this was the first time since re-unification.


For those of us who grew up in the terrible violence of WWII, when a very different kind of Germany rampaged across Europe, the transformation in that country is extraordinary and also inspiring. It shows that however bad things get, better things can be found ahead. There are so many places in the world today, some in the news and some forgotten, where this notion must seem fanciful. But in Europe it is now clear at every level that it is the peaceful, confident and efficient Germany which is the power in the lead.


In contrast, the United Kingdom is going through a moment of faltering confidence. In sport nothing has gone according to hope or plan. The World Cup was a fiasco, Murray did not get close to saving his title, our cycling stars fell off their bikes in the Tour de France even while it was in England and the best that can be said of cricket is that the report is rather mixed. Trust in politics has sunk to even greater depths as among the known vices of top people organised paedophelia must now be added, the widely proclaimed economic recovery is built on house prices and debt, Scotland may walk away, and what is left of the UK may then walk away from Europe. The gap between the pay of those at the top and those at the bottom has become ridiculous and waiting times in A&E grow longer.


Yet when the UK recovers its equilibrium and regains its confidence, as it will, it will once again punch above its weight in a world full of punching. It will do this not through the dogged efficiency, high productivity and work ethic of the Germans, founded on common interest, common good and common purpose. It will do it out of the quirky individualism of its people, rich in diversity of view and objective, multi cultural and creative, who believe it is honourable to be a good loser, but when they decide together to win, which is not often, they win big.


Let us hope the Scots will stay to share in this and that the UK stays in the EU. The Germans are especially keen to keep Britain in. Without her Germany makes the EU look top heavy. That could spell trouble.


 Hitler’s First Lady


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Published on July 14, 2014 00:54