Archive for April 4th, 2015

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Saturday, April 4th, 2015

Malcolm Blair-Robinson

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The Daily Telegraph: A Peculiar Story

Saturday, April 4th, 2015

The extraordinary report in today’s Telegraph to the effect that Sturgeon wants a Cameron victory is an extraordinary lapse of editorial judgment for two reasons. The first is that the the trail of who said what to whom and when is the stuff of a matinee farce, not a serious broadsheet. The second is that if it were true, which seems unlikely,  it provides a poll boost to Milliband, not Cameron. The fewer seats the Scot Nats win, the more will be held by Labour and the more likely Milliband is to form a coalition.

This blog is impartial, but the Daily Telegraph is not. It is Tory. It has done Cameron no favours.

Growth Up:Borrowing Down

Saturday, April 4th, 2015

An idea to stimulate economic growth without further government Product Detailsborrowing. Written in plain English and very easy to follow, this is the only really fresh approach out there to the intractable problems of the UK economy, and it is just beginning to be noticed in important places. Buy! 

Kindle or Paperback  UK        US                

Aviation Mass Murder

Saturday, April 4th, 2015

The revelations about the co-pilot of the Germanwings plane, which he deliberately crashed, being treated for suicidal tendencies and other symptoms of mental illness raise all manner of questions about how such a victim of these disorders can be placed in control of a passenger aircraft. It is is easy to blame the management of Lufthansa, who are in the end responsible and accept the fact. But without being given the required information and warnings, it is difficult to see how they could have known.  This is going to be an area of scrutiny. It is right that individuals should be protected from the release of personal data, but mental illness in an airline pilot, or some other critical person upon whom the lives of others depend, surely should be the subject of exception.

It is also the case that extreme precautions against hijack appear to have created the very situation in which this deranged young man not only plotted and researched to take his own life, which he could have done easily by taking pills or jumping off a bridge, but for some unfathomable reason to commit mass murder on an historical scale. Whatever is done and however procedures are amended a guiding principle should apply; no precaution should be allowed if it creates a new risk.