Archive for December, 2015

Hess Mystery: Download 99p Paperback £4.99

Wednesday, December 16th, 2015

DOWNLOAD OR PAPERBACK   Product Details

Rudolf Hess, Hitler’s deputy and right hand man, flew to Scotland on a mysterious peace mission in 1941, which has never been convincingly explained, to meet unidentified politicians who wanted to end the war. The truth has been covered up for generations because to reveal it would somehow undermine the honour and constitutional fabric of the United Kingdom. Who was plotting against Churchill? What were the peace terms on offer? What happened to Hess? Was he killed in the War? Was the prisoner in Spandau a double?
There are many questions to which in the modern day one man, Saul Benedict has all the answers, because his parents were players in the drama involving Churchill, Hitler, leading politicians and an important Royal. Saul is an author and declares his intention to write a book to reveal all, but he is shot dead, apparently accidentally by a poacher. But was it an accident? Rick Coleman an investigative journalist determines to find out and in doing so to uncover the mystery.
Taking place in the modern day but with flashback chapters which gradually unfold the hidden secrets, the novel is a fast moving and compelling read based on the family knowledge of the author whose parents had connections to both Hess and Hitler and to British Intelligence.  

                  Amazon UK           Amazon US

Money And The NHS

Wednesday, December 16th, 2015

Almost every time people tune into the media nowadays there is news of some or other part of the NHS in financial difficulties. There are three reasons for this. The first is that the management structure is absurd. Not only are there managers, but there is an array of quangos and data collectors which according to one harassed NHS Trust CEO now exceed fifty in number. The second is that you cannot offer an infinite service on a finite budget. The more patients the NHS sees and the greater the demand on its services, the fewer the resources available to provide them. That is a mathematical nonsense. Third, instead of being joined up, it is ever more fragmented and has almost ceased to function as a national structure.

To remedy these problems quite a lot needs to happen. The weird twilight zone in which doctors are employed, part self, part not, has to change to an exclusive employment like any other servant of the state from mandarin to general to minister. Hospitals must operate three shifts of eight hours with the full complement of medical services to eliminate waiting lists. A tax structure to fund the system has to be developed which expands with demand. At present the UK spends less as a percent of GDP than many other developed countries on healthcare. At one point around 2009 it rose to 8%  but it is now falling.  This has to rise to 10% as medical treatments expand and longevity increases. The current actual cost of running the health service properly is approaching  £150 billion, which is way beyond its allocation.

Finally and most important of all is that the people of Britain have to come out of their state of denial that healthcare can be done on the cheap. It cannot. And to pay for it taxes will have to go up.

Dynamic QE: A Way Out Of Austerity: Download Now 99p

Tuesday, December 15th, 2015

Product Details

QE in various forms is now very much part of the economic conversation, especially in connection with a fresh approach to financial issues by the new leadership of the Labour party. Dynamic Quantitative Easing remains under government, not bank, control and targets specific investment projects without borrowing, interest or repayments. It can reboot the economy, boost manufacturing and exports and enable sustained growth of real national wealth shared by all, rather than just asset inflation which is the downside of ordinary QE. If you want to find out more you can enjoy a lucid explanation of the original idea from the link below.

Download .99p  Paperback £2.99

A Brit Into Space

Tuesday, December 15th, 2015

I recall the excitement felt across the world when Yuri Gagarin became not only the first man in space but also the first to orbit the earth, when the Soviet Union once led the space  race, in 1961. The Soviets managed to get their man aloft  weeks before the Americans, who only achieved an up and down flight, not an orbit. The Soviets had also been the first to get a satellite up, the Sputnik in 1957, causing absolute consternation in the West as the achievement indicated they were well ahead on rocket technology and potentially intercontinental ballistic missiles, putting America in the front line for the first time in its history. The reaction fired the programme that took the Americans to the moon.

At that time Britain was one of the world leaders in aviation and had its own rocket in the design process. One did not then imagine it would take another fifty four years for the first Brit to be blasted into space. Nor that he would be atop a Russian rocket. Or that he would be accompanied on the historic (to the UK) mission to the International Space Station by two others, a Russian and an American. Times do change. More than people realise. Especially politicians.

Browse My Books

Friday, December 11th, 2015

BROWSE MY BOOKS WITH THESE LINKSAn image posted by the author.

Malcolm Blair-Robinson U.S        

Malcolm Blair-Robinson UK

Heathrow: A Gutless Government?

Friday, December 11th, 2015

So it would appear. Cameron promised his party and his electors there would be no third runway at Heathrow. He then set up a commission which recommended that there should be. Now he has funked rejecting their conclusion, or accepting it. Instead we have more time to consider the options. Until after the election for a new London Mayor. Ah yes!

Only one thing is certain. The notion of political integrity is so devalued by the reality that it has now been consigned to junk status.

 

PMQs By The Understudies.

Thursday, December 10th, 2015

Theatre goers are familiar with the disappointment on learning that the star will not appear and instead they will see the understudy. Yet sometimes the performance is more enjoyable. Such was the experience of MPs yesterday. Convention requires the Opposition Leader to absent himself from the House for PMQs when the Prime Minister is away (being given the brush off by Poland) and his place was taken by the Prime Minister in Waiting (aka Chancellor etc). The Opposition Leader’s role was taken by Angela Eagle, Shadow defence secretary, but also shadow of Osborne. Ah!

The result was an impeccably timed and very funny exchange of acerbic observations by both the PM in Waiting and perhaps even the Opposition Leader in Waiting? Many in the Commons yesterday must have hoped that neither would have to wait too long. They all had a lovely time. But there is a problem.

It is this. Parliament spends a good deal of time on its own stuff and laughing at its own jokes and doing too little that voters feel are things important to their everyday lives. Voters are not voting for and funding by their taxes a political variety show. This is why when they stop laughing MPs on all sides are baffled by the ever increasing support in his party (outside parliament) and the country for Jeremy Corbyn. Because he speaks for the ordinary people in plain language, devoid of theatricals and to the point. And he speaks for those who do not bother to vote but who might vote for him and his version of Labour. There are fifteen million of them to be precise. They don’t answer doors to canvassers, nor do they talk to opinion pollsters. But should they decide the moment has come in 2020, it could be quite a moment.

At least Corbyn had a big leg up from Blair. The disgraced former prime minister, to whom only Tories now listen because they are all dressed up in New Labour clothes, wrote an article in the Spectator (exactly) bemoaning the fact that Corbyn had been elected Labour leader. That should help Corbyn a lot.

HESS ENIGMA: Download Now!

Sunday, December 6th, 2015

DOWNLOAD OR PAPERBACK FROM .99P   Product Details

Rudolf Hess, Hitler’s deputy and right hand man, flew to Scotland on a mysterious peace mission in 1941, which has never been convincingly explained, to meet unidentified politicians who wanted to end the war. The truth has been covered up for generations because to reveal it would somehow undermine the honour and constitutional fabric of the United Kingdom. Who was plotting against Churchill? What were the peace terms on offer? What happened to Hess? Was he killed in the War? Was the prisoner in Spandau a double?
There are many questions to which in the modern day one man, Saul Benedict has all the answers, because his parents were players in the drama involving Churchill, Hitler, leading politicians and an important Royal. Saul is an author and declares his intention to write a book to reveal all, but he is shot dead, apparently accidentally by a poacher. But was it an accident? Rick Coleman an investigative journalist determines to find out and in doing so to uncover the mystery.
Taking place in the modern day but with flashback chapters which gradually unfold the hidden secrets, the novel is a fast moving and compelling read based on the family knowledge of the author whose parents had connections to both Hess and Hitler and to British Intelligence.  

                  Amazon UK           Amazon US

Browse My Books

Sunday, December 6th, 2015

BROWSE MY BOOKS WITH THESE LINKSAn image posted by the author.

Malcolm Blair-Robinson U.S        

Malcolm Blair-Robinson UK

Middle East : A Strategy

Sunday, December 6th, 2015

The present defence and political posture of the West over IS is deeply flawed and going nowhere. The following, or something like it, offers a way forward. It stands most of what is happening  on its head. It will take real political courage to put it into effect, not the faux stuff we see flying around at the moment in and on the media and in parliament.

1  IS cannot be defeated by military means applied in its strongholds in Syria and Iraq. It is not actually a direct threat to the West and Russia there. The main threat comes from the embedded adherents already in situ all over the world who can be galvanised into horrific terrorist acts by exhortations, encouragement, in revenge or on a whim. IS itself is the product of war and like a partisan militia living in the forest, thrives upon it. It has no infrastructure to speak of, apart from some oil wells which are easy targets to destroy, but its command centres and headquarters are makeshift and can be remade almost anywhere. Military activity should at this stage concentrate only on containing it.

2 There are, as everybody agrees, two prongs to any solution. One is military the other political. At present only military activity is organised. The political settlement is not even agreed in outline. This is back to front. The political outcome should be agreed by all parties and enforced, if necessary, by military action. Then everybody knows what they are fighting for.

3 It is impossible to resolve the IS crisis without working with Russia as an integrated ally of the US led  international coalition. To achieve this the censorious attitude to Putin and his government has to stop. Childish needling, like having Macedonia (!) join NATO is just stupid.

4 The preservation of a viable Syrian state is critical. If it collapses IS will occupy Damascus within days. Russia has to assist Assad’s forces to drive back its enemies and create a ceasefire which will allow a political solution in Syria and an end to the civil war. The West has  to accept Assad (who has never threatened the West) is as much a fact as Stalin was in WWII. We did not make Stalin’s removal a condition of working with the Soviets to defeat Hitler. Had we done so we would have lost the war.

3 In war you cannot pick and choose enemies like an a la carte supper. Assad is against IS. Russia is against IS. Iran is against IS. The West is against IS. But the rag bag conglomeration of militias the West loves to call the moderate (really?) opposition are actually ambivalent about IS, are disunited among themselves, many with very doubtful roots not far from IS and Al Qaeda. They have to be given a choice; either withdraw from the fight against Assad and turn your fire on IS, in return for a seat and the political settlement negotiations. Or be treated as an enemy. There is no other way to fight a war. The Russians know that, but the West has a problem getting its collective head around it. To do so is one of the tags without which the war will not be won. In WWII we did not try and distinguish between good and bad Nazis. We did not even care if they were Nazis. We just killed all Germans.

4 The time to get tough with the backers and covert supporters of IS is at hand. The Gulf States, including Saudi Arabia, must be told to stop arming and funding IS or face an oil embargo and a freezing of all their financial assets in the West. Turkey, which seems to be playing several games at once must be told it either comes on board 100% or it will be suspended from NATO.

5 It then becomes possible to deal with the big picture which has two central components. The first is the restoration of peace through a viable political settlement in Syria and the second is to agree the boundaries of both a Sunni and a Kurdish homeland, where each can live free untroubled lives according to their traditions and beliefs. This will mean a final kiss goodbye to everything connected to Sykes Picot and a major redraft of the borders and territory of Iraq, Syria and possibly at the margin Turkey. That plan is the priority and has to be worked on 24/7. When it is available in outline a ceasefire everywhere should follow. Ground forces will be needed to hold the new lines initially and stamp out resistance from those so addicted to fighting and fiefdom (like in Libya) that they cannot stop. And those forces must come from the Arab states. Saudi Arabia is the third largest defence spender in the world after America and China, so it must be asked to make the biggest contribution. UN Command would be ideal. Western boots on the ground would cause the whole thing to collapse, so don’t even think about it.

6 As part of this enduring settlement there has to be aid on a scale not seen since the Marshall Plan post WWII, involving billions upon billions to rebuild Syria, Iraq and the two new Kurdish and Sunni states in very short order, so that lights stay on, hospitals function, education gears up, homes are rebuilt, transport infrastructure is restored; the list is terrifying but it will have to be done and everybody in the Gulf States and the West is going to have to go without something to pay for it.

7 All refugees from the various war zones who have fled to Europe should be encouraged to return and help rebuild their countries and offered a generous bounty per family for doing so to help them reboot their lives in the lands of their forbears. Especially those with skills and professional qualifications, whose support will be critical.

8 IS will not be destroyed but it will cease to have any rational following, once the Sunnis  are restored to a homeland. There will be some mopping up, but the rejuvenation of the Middle East will enable all Muslims to focus on the enlightened and civilising traditions of their faith and its immense and positive contribution to the story of mankind. Against that, IS, with its blood thirsty regression into cruelty and abuse of human dignity will have nothing worth having to offer. That is how all insurgencies end.

9 Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and the so styled War on Terror have been the biggest collective failure of policy and strategy for a very long time. The triumph has been the intelligence services who have blocked most of the attempted consequences. We cannot rely on their ability to do that forever and we now must get a grip and get to the core of all this smouldering hatred and violence. To do that we have to give justice to a good many people whose worlds we have wrecked.