The Anonymous Widower

Our New Aircraft Carriers Won’t Have Any Aircraft!

The Sunday Times today says that the two follies of Gordon Brown’s tenure as Prime Minister won’t have any aircraft, as the new F35C, that have been chosen by the Coalition, can’t land on a carrier. There’s more about the F35C’s problems here. To be fair to the Coalition, they had little choice but to go for the C variant, after the B variant, which had a limited vertical take-off  and landing capability, was not performing well in test flying.

Perhaps though we’ll come up with a better solution, given that the British public won’t support another Iraq or Afghanistan.  We’ve also proven that for operations near home, such as Libya, that we don’t need carrier-based aircraft. In addition, we’ve also proven that attack helicopters can work very well off ships like HMS Ocean. Perhaps we need another ship like this one, which was built at a small fraction of the propsed cost of one of the new aircrsft csrriers.

January 15, 2012 Posted by | News | , | Leave a comment

It Isn’t Just the PIP Implants To Blame

The third leader in The Times yesterday was a reasoned one on the scandal of the PIP implants.

It started by saying that those hospitals and clinics that fitted them should rectify the problem. It also said that the NHS and eight cosmetic surgery groups would replace the implants without charge.

The leader then said this.

But even in this mire, one private clinic stands out for the audacity with which it is abdicating its responsibility to its patients. The Harley Medical Group, which was responsible for fitting PIP implants to almost 14,000 of the 40,000 British women who received them, is refusing to replace the now banned implants without further charge. Doing so, it says, would put it out of business.

But what is Harley doing?  Absolutely nothing except protesting it wasn’t their fault, but one of the regulatory authorities.  I should say, that I’ve heard of the Harley Medical Group, as has everybody who uses escalators on the London Underground. I should say, that their adverts haven’t been there for some months.

It would be interesting to see a report on finances of the Harley Medical Group, by a reputable forensic accountant.

As an aside here, according to a doctor on BBC Breakfast, a proper breast implant costs £16,000.  So if Harley fitted implants to 14,000 women, that works out at  £448 million pounds to sort out the problem. The Times has a lesser figure of £40 million, bt also states that Harley only made a small profit last year.

So why should the NHS and ultimately the taxpayer pay for the patient’s vanity? And stupidity for going to Harley?

January 15, 2012 Posted by | Health, News | , , | Leave a comment

So Why Is A Credit Rating Important?

According to this report, there is anger in the EU about the downgrading of the credit rating of France and eight other EU countries.

So is this important for the countries involved?

Look at it on a personal basis!

If you have a good credit rating, you can borrow money a lot cheaper, than if you have a bad one.

It’s just the same really.

The only difference is that the rating agencies seem to have a large number of individual ratings, which are meaningless to the man on the Dalston omnibus, unless he’s a banker going home from the City.

Incidentally, we’re going to borrow £180 billion this year.  if we were downgraded, that might cost us around £2 billion or even more.

So the downgrading of France has really dropped them dans le soupe! And President Sarkozy says we’re in a worse state than France, but then our rating hasn’t been cut and their’s has.

I liked this comment on The Times website under a detailed explanation of the downgrading.

Had it been us losing our AAA I can only imagine the very high level of spite, malice and vituperation which would be hurled our way from France. The French would have been having the time of their life! Yet the British government has not made any formal comment at all and the on-line comments have been remarkably restrained although I have to admit to just a modicum of schadenfreude.

We may not have made any official statement, but I suspect quite a few of the great and good are laughing in their beer tonight.

January 14, 2012 Posted by | Finance & Investment, News | | 2 Comments

Only In The United States Could Speaking French be a Disadvantage

According to this account on the BBC’s web site, Mitt Romney is being denounced for being able to speak French and actually doing it in public.

I think we have a rather different attitude in Europe, as although we argue with the French many of our politicians have used French when talking publicly in France. Although, we do make a joke of it between us. As two old friends would.  Apparently, the French version of Allo Allo deliberately used bad French as a joke, even more than the English version did with Officer Crabtree being a deliberate parody of Edward Heath.

Remember too, the Queen speaks reasonable French, as this article attests.

We now live in a world, where many more people are bilingual, as their parents were immigrants. So the US has a large proportion of Spanish speakers and we have quite a lot of speakers of many other languages.

But go back to 1900 and has anything changed.  Yiddish and German would have been heard in many places in London and New York for a start.

But now, only in America would the ability to speak a foreign language be considered to be a handicap for a politician!

January 14, 2012 Posted by | News | , , , , | Leave a comment

Property Prices In London

I was surprised to read this article in the Evening Standard.

Property prices may be flat elsewhere, but it seems they’re holding up in my part of London. Am I bothered?

January 13, 2012 Posted by | News | , , | Leave a comment

Stratford’s Unwanted University

It has been announced that University College London is exploring the possibility of creating an additional campus at Newham, just to the east of the Olympic Park.

You’d have thought that this would have been welcomed by the people of the area.  But according to a piece on BBC Breakfast this morning, the residents are against the plans. There’s a video here.

We need jobs and I suspect that those who will be moved, will get a new house, so surely this is a good plan.  Or is it just the BBC saying that all development is bad.

I suspect if UCL were to build another campus in China or Malaysia, they’d be welcomed with open arms. And cheque-books too!

January 12, 2012 Posted by | News | , | Leave a comment

Miners Have a Go at the Iron Lady

The BBC has reported that the Iron Lady film has had protests in Chesterfield, which lost their coal mines, when she was Prime Minister.

My view is straightforward.  Coal is a dirty fuel, that causes lots of ill health and is a major cause of global warming. Even with the small number of pits we have now, the death of miners is not unknown.

Mrs. Thatcher may have been the Prime Minister, who actually shut the mines, but in my view it was done about twenty years at least too late.

North Sea oil and gas, gave us the opportunity to abandon coal production and it should have been done in a managed and gradual way. I’d love to know, whether Prime Ministers before Mrs. Thatcher had thought of shutting the mines.  After all, when the railways abandoned steam engines, a lot of coal wasn’t needed any more. So do those who want more mining jobs, want steam trains as well? And domestic coal fires, which created the smog of the sixties? Many days, I had to walk home from school in thick pea soup.

I should also say, that I’ve met quite a few people, from mining families and all were advised to get an education and avoid going down the pits.

How have other countries weaned themselves off coal? I found this article about the rise and fall of the German coal industry. It seems that German industry has managed to survive the loss of its prime energy source.

I suspect they have managed the run down of their industry much better.  I can remember a proposal in The Guardian to use redundant miners to insulate our rather poor housing stock. Nothing happened, as far as I know!

We don’t learn either! Most of our vehicles are powered by fossil fuel, which don’t help the stopping of global warming. So when we bring forward proposals to help like wind, wave and tidal power, new electricity networks and rail lines, the Nimbys come out in force.

We can’t have it both ways, even if the Americans and the Chinese think they can.

I think I’ll prefer to go to hell on my two legs, a bicycle or a New Bus for London, rather than a fossil-fuel powered handcart.

January 12, 2012 Posted by | News | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

RBS Is In A Downward Spiral

This morning RBS has announced another 3,500 job losses on top of 2,000 announced, just a few months ago.

I’ve always felt that RBS should have been allowed to go bust.  I think now, that some of the employees who are still left, wish it had happened, as at least they’d now know where they stand. I suspect too, if they’d been put out of work at the time, they might have been able to have rebuilt their lives and careers since.

Now they are just in an awful state of limbo.

The country might be in a better state too, if the money used to prop up RBS had been used for more important purposes.

But saving RBS was just a bribe to Scotland, by Britain’s worst-ever Prime Minister, Gordon Brown. As he got voted out in 2010, it didn’t even work!

January 12, 2012 Posted by | Business, Finance & Investment, News | , , | Leave a comment

It’s All James Bond’s Fault

According to this article on the BBC’s web site, the general distrust of nuclear power is all down to James Bond. Here’s the first two paragraphs.

The evil villains in James Bond movies are being blamed for casting a long-lasting shadow over the image of nuclear power, says the president of the Royal Society of Chemistry.

Prof David Phillips says that Dr No, with his personal nuclear reactor, helped to create a “remorselessly grim” reputation for atomic energy.

I won’t argue with the President of the Royal Society of CHemistry, but I will add a little story of my own.

In the 1960s, I worked on NMR spectroscopy or to give it its full name nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The technique is summed up as.

Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, most commonly known as NMR spectroscopy, is a research technique that exploits the magnetic properties of certain atomic nuclei to determine physical and chemical properties of atoms or the molecules in which they are contained. It relies on the phenomenon of nuclear magnetic resonance and can provide detailed information about the structure, dynamics, reaction state, and chemical environment of molecules.

One of the guys I worked with at the time, Eddie Clayton, predicted that the technique would be used instead of X-rays in the future. We didn’t think he was right, but now of course nuclear magnetic resonance imaging is commonplace, with most hospitals having a scanner.

However because of peoples’ fears of anything nuclear, the nuclear has been dropped and it is referred to as MRi.

January 12, 2012 Posted by | Health, News | | Leave a comment

What An Awful Bunch of Wanabees

I’m not talking about the latest Big Brother or X-Factor contestants, but the towns that want to be cities to mark the Golden Jubilee, according to this article on the BBC.

The list is as follows.

Bolton, Bournemouth, Chelmsford, Colchester, Coleraine, Corby, Craigavon, Croydon, Doncaster, Dorchester, Dudley, Dumfries, Gateshead, Goole, Luton, Medway, Middlesbrough, Milton Keynes, Perth, Reading, Southend, St Asaph, St Austell, Stockport, Tower Hamlets and Wrexham

I always thought that Milton Keynes was a city already.

In addition, Chelmsford, Medway, Perth, St. Asaph and Wrexham already have cathedrals, so doesn’t make them cities anyway?

January 11, 2012 Posted by | News | , , | Leave a comment