Saturday, April 12, 2008

New blog

The long break in postings is because I had misplaced the various codes that allowed me to get into it. Reminds me of when the Vicar said that at my age I should be thinking of the hereafter. I said "Vicar I do. Every time I go into a room I think what the devil am I here after."

Anyway I had to set up a new blog which is at www.grumpyoldliberal.blogspot.com

Then, of course, I found the details of how to get into this one!

Anyway I'm only going to use the new one from now on.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Law & Order

Labour has created more than 3000 new criminal offences so it is not surprising that our prison population is the highest ever at over 80000. The re-offending rate amongst the young (18 -25yrs old) is in excess of 75% so we are spending some £35000 per year per prisoner of taxpayer money for abject failure. As usual David Cameron faces both ways on the one hand waxing eloquent in his conference speech about Amir Khan's initiative to keep youngsters out of crime and on the other saying he (Cameron) would build more prisons.

Meanwhile the Kids Company charity, which also wants to keep kids away from crime, has about 11000 children turning to it each year and the Metropolitan Police are so impressed with it that it wants it to do more. However it needs £5million before March 2008 or it goes under. It thus needs to keep 1.3% of the kids that turn to it out of prison to be cost effective. This, and the hundreds of other groups doing similar work, is where we need to put the money. Then we won't need more prisons.

Moreover we will not be needing to let out, to ease overcrowding, people who really are a threat to our well being and safety.

Debts & Fat Cats Again

We read that the outgoing CEO of Northern Rock may be in line for a salary pay out of c.£800000 & a pension pot of two million £. The last UK Bank run before Northern Rock was the City of Glasgow Bank in 1878. Its' directors went to Gaol for between 8 & 18 months. A more deserving reward for Northern Rock methinks. It would be an outrage if any Northern Rock Director received a penny for loss of office. They were handsomely paid (grossly overpaid!) for a flawed business model that eventually caught them out.

The Liberal Democrat Vince Cable warned of this some three years ago. Naturally no one took any notice. The Government has so far put billions of taxpayer money into propping up Northern Rock. Meanwhile, a year on, the poor people who saved with Farepak still wait for some of their money back. The lesson to learn is that if you are going to be a disaster be a big one.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Targets

What does 90 patients in Kent dying of Clostridium Difficile have in common with the Surrey Constabulary coming top of the performance league and with a £130million budget increase to the National Drug Treatment Agency resulting in a mere 70 extra patients 'going clean? Answer - idiotic targets. Pressure to cut waiting times & costs caused Maidstone & Tunbridge Wells Trust to fail to properly see to cleanliness; Surrey chief constable discovered that his officers were boosting numbers by focusing on soft targets & ignoring tough cases; the Treatment Agency was spending money getting treatment numbers up rather than actually getting results. It would be a surprise if these were the only cases where addiction to 'targets' was not having a perverse result.

'Not everything that counts can be counted & not everything than can be counted counts' Albert Einstein.

Liberal Democrats accept that targets have their place but not when they are misconceived and used as the principal, sometimes only, measure of achievement.

Footnote: one of the policy motions passed at the LibDem Conference in September was to scrap all centrally imposed Targets on Local Government.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

Funding the Army

Underfunding of the UK military is the hot topic. Of course if we were not fighting George Bush's wars the problem might well not arise but that dodges the issue a bit. We might want our ground troops to fight OUR wars and they need, and deserve, the best equipment AND the very best aftercare. Not having their hospitals closed and pathetic compensation & relatives being thrown out of their dreadful military houses when the soldier gets killed.

The way to pay for this ,at least in part, is to NOT spend £80bn on weapons like Trident replacements which will only be of any use if we were to go to war with the United States.

Debts & Fat Cats

Morgan Stanley is the latest bank to discover a huge loss [$3.7bn; £ 1.8bn] as a result of the subprime mortgage debacle. Meanwhile petrol in the UK breaks through £1 per litre and the country is beginning to discover the perils of debt. The world's stock markets are yo yoing about all over the place. Vince Cable of the Liberal Democrats was the only mainstream politician to warn about this some three years ago. Naturally nobody paid attention.

The banks are sitting on piles of 'financial instruments' [so much scrap paper!] that they thought was actually worth something and now they don't know if they are or not. These 'instruments' were dreamed up by people who were paid obscene amounts of money for their so called 'ability' and who paid minimal taxes whilst considering it OK to try and avoid paying their office cleaners the minimum wage. If we imposed proper levels of taxation on these people and they carried out their threat to go abroad then I for one would be pleased.

However they wouldn't go. No less a person than Michael Heseltine pointed out that there are massive benefits to the very rich from living in Britain and paying fair taxes that they could well afford would not make them leave.

Civil Liberties - de Menezes

The few words that really matter about the killing of Mr de Menezes are that SEVEN dum dum bullets were pumped into him by a specially trained firearms officer of the Metropolitan Police.

Such an officer knows very well that ONE such bullet in the head is enough to kill. To use SEVEN is the action of a person who is out of control. Explanations, communications errors, reports, prosecutions & all the rest of
the torrent of words about this case merely serve to obscure this simple fact and provide a reason for not dealing properly with the officer concerned. Sir Ian Blair should resign because of his failure to recognise the simplicity of this situation. Loyalty to ones staff is admirable but sometimes, as here, is misplaced.