The Anonymous Widower

The Solo Die Young

This is some interesting research as reported on the BBC.

Apparently, solo artists seem to die younger than those in groups.

December 20, 2012 Posted by | News | , , | Leave a comment

Were The Pigs Telling Porkies?

In the case of Plebgate, it certainly seems that some are being economical with the truth, just as the police were after Hillsborough.

We will probably never learn the truth about this.  I just suspect that both parties might have been tired after a hard day and something said out of turn by one side just escalated.

I’m lucky in that I’ve never had a confrontation with the police and have only been threatened with arrest once.  That was incidentally, when I was about eighteen and I was hitching home with a bag with my clothes in it. I was having bad luck with lifts and was walking through Elstree about two in the morning. A beat officer wanted to check my bag and initially I said no. Only when I was threatened with arrest did he get a look at the dirty washing, I was taking home to my mother.

December 19, 2012 Posted by | News | , , | Leave a comment

US Gun Statistics

This article on US gun statistics is fascinating.

You can draw your own conclusions, but I will say this.  Everybody who dies in a shooting, whether deliberate or by accident, is a tragedy for more than just that person.

I know what grief feels like and it’s not pleasant!

December 19, 2012 Posted by | News | , , | Leave a comment

How Can Governments Be So Stupid?

This story of how the French government has forced Gerard Depardieu to become a tax exile has been repeated through the years in many countries and it always ends up with less money being collected, the brightest and the best leaving and job losses.  Usually too, you find out later that those politicians behind it, have made provisions to hide their income.

Every country needs to find ways of keeping all of their best people at home.  But of course only by using totally fair and humane methods.

So how can they do this?

Obviously low personal taxes do help.  And I don’t just mean income taxes, but capital gains ones as well. After all, many people who create one fortune, have a record of going on to create another, which means further employment and tax revenues from all places. But then there are people who don’t believe that if you lower taxes you raise more money! You may not, but if you frame the rules right and cut down on tax avoidance, you should get an increase.

Quality of life is also important. I live in London and I have a very good quality of life. I live fairly cheaply and get all my healthcare free.  I even get all of my local public transport free. Obviously, others have other priorities, but as in France, most people can find a good lifestyle to suit their pocket.

So I think, that governments should probably concentrate on getting the basics of life right for its inhabitants. That means a good basic services, like education, police, fire and refuse collection and a health service that works for all.

Governments must also create opportunities for all levels.  At the bottom, they put all sorts of administrative barriers in the way of the unemployed in getting well-paid work. If say I wanted to employ an eighteen-year-old to help me sort out this house, the barriers would be immense.  So consequently, when I do, it’ll probably be a friend’s son and cash-in-hand. At the top level, governments always give out contracts to their friends. How many computer contracts have been let to companies, who’ve failed before?

Napoleon once said that Britain is a nation of shopkeepers.  He was wrong in that, we’re probably a nation of entrepreneurs. We all seem to want to be our own boss. And what’s wrong with that? Nothing in the eye of most of us, but to some politicians it’s anathema.

I don’t believe the French are any different, as probably are the much-maligned Pakistanis and Somalis.

So governments should just create an environment that makes us all want to stay here and create employment, which hopefully pays enough taxes to keep the process continuing.

France has done everyone a favour, by conducting an experiment that belongs to the past.  It failed then and it will fail now.

 

December 19, 2012 Posted by | News | , , | Leave a comment

Reach For A Lawyer

One thing that has always puzzled me about mass killings in the United States, is that no-one has used a lawyer to sue someone, who was loosely connected to the crime.  The people, who made the guns and the bullets for a start. And what about his mother’s estate or his father, who moved out? They could also sue the school for not having a US Marine in every class room. The list could be endless to a creative lawyer.

After all McDonalds were successfully sued by someone who spilt a cup of hot coffee. I once did that to myself, so should I claim against the airline for serving me in error, when I have a gammy hand? As I spilt it all over that hand, perhaps the damage to the nerves caused my stroke. On the other hand, I would have lost the case, as I said sorry to the stewardess.

December 17, 2012 Posted by | Health, News | , , , | 2 Comments

The Troubled Adam Lanza

It would appear from reports like this, that Adam Lamza was a very troubled kid.

It all goes to prove my feeling that as guns are so dangerous, they should always be under lock from two separate responsible people. I know this was originally proposed by the NFU to stop suicide amongst farmers, but it would help to stop the number of people killed in a country, where people habitually owned guns. 

It would never be implemented in the United States, as the idiots of the NRA and many others, would consider it a major assault on freedom.

December 17, 2012 Posted by | News | , , , | Leave a comment

Do Women Make The Best Spies?

Apparently they do according to various stories in the papers yesterday, where the CIA and Mossad is concerned. But there’s also evidence from MI5 in this article in the Guardian from 2004.

December 16, 2012 Posted by | News | , | Leave a comment

A Problem With Not Recognising Gay Marriage

When some countries recognise gay marriage and others don’t you are going to get a few problems.

This story from the United States, illustrates one small but sometimes expensive problem well.

Edith Windsor was legally married to her gay partner in Canada, five years ago. Her partner has since died and because she now lives in New York, she will have to pay $600,000 in what in the UK would be death duties. If her partner had been a man, she wouldn’t have to pay the tax.

So now the case has ended up at the United States Supreme Court.

I’m not a lawyer and I’ve no idea what would happen in the UK.

But surely in this age, we should clear everything up to make it all clear to everybody.

December 16, 2012 Posted by | News, World | , , | Leave a comment

America, The Sick Man Of The World

Two of the stories I posted yesterday, showed the state the US is in.  The first was the story of prisons in the US, and Alabama in particular. I started it with the words.

This story from the United States is terrible.

I felt it couldn’t get worse.  But it course of did with the massacre of children in Connecticut.

The story of Gary McKinnon was really about America bullying a poor unfortunate, rather than fixing their leaky computer systems and treating him in the way he would have been in most other countries of the world.

We have also had the excursions into Afghanistan and Iraq, to wreak vengeance for the attacks on New York and Washington on September 11th, 2009. Sadly we were drawn into these ill-thought out adventures.

It’s funny too, how the three main companies being castigated for their tax position are all American.

I could also add in the stunts of bankers based in New York, which started the collapse of the worldwide banking system, the death penalty and the failed prison and justice system and a healthcare system that is the joke of the civilised world.

I shall not be going to the United States ever again and I will not buy products from American companies, where there is an alternative.

December 15, 2012 Posted by | Finance & Investment, News, Transport/Travel, World | , , , | 1 Comment

Protect Children, Not Guns

In view of the awful shootings in Connecticut, which have resulted in the deaths of 27, read this article called Protect Children, Not Guns.

This is the introductory paragraph.

In 2008, 2,947 children and teens died from guns in the United States and 2,793 died in 2009 for a total of 5,740—one child or teen every three hours, eight every day, 55 every week for two years. Six times as many children and teens—34,387—suffered nonfatal gun injuries as gun deaths in 2008 and 2009. This is equal to one child or teen every 31 minutes, 47 every day, and 331 children and teens every week.

They are chilling figures and all the Americans do is get more guns.

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