The Anonymous Widower

Mark Serwotka Talks Sense

He doesn’t very often, but his views in this report are absolutely correct. Lord North must be turning in his grave.

September 13, 2010 Posted by | News | , , | Leave a comment

My Last Visit to Waterloo

Waterloo Station is not a place that I’ve visited much. Admittedly in the first few years after I started as a freelance programmer, I did use it quite a bit for short journeys to places like Epsom, Cobham and Guildford, but once we moved to Suffolk, I rarely needed to use the station. C and I did go to Paris on Eurostar, but even then we parked in the car park undearneath and sneaked in.

My last visit was in 2001, when I took a thousand Al Stewart CD’s from Bury St. Edmunds to his manager, who’d taken the train up from somewhere like Basingstoke.  I was to collect  a Banker’s Draft in return after our meeting at around twelve.

I had visited a client in Borough High Street and afterwards I was to see another in London’s Chinatown, just north of Leicester Square.  I had actually driven, as there was no Congestion Charge and parking was no problem in any of the areas I was to visit, if you stayed less than an hour on a meter.

I was a little early for my meeting at Waterloo, so I parked the car on an empty meter and decided to fill the time by making a few phone calls. For some reason, the radio in the car had been switched off and as the phone was not hands-free, I couldn’t put it on anyway and use the phone. I needed to phone C about something, but try as I might, I couldn’t remember her mobile number.  Even now, after the stroke, I can still remember, every phone number, I’ve ever used regularly. I tried other numbers and even they were blank.  I just thought I was having some sort of brain problem, but as all my other functions were correct, I felt it was just a function of getting old.

On time, I arrived at the station and swapped the CD’s dor the draft.  Al’s manager had to get back, so quickly and surprisingly for me in a silent car, I set off across the river for my next meeting.  I parked in the underground car park in Chinatown and walked to the office to have my meeting.

Only then, when I entered the office and saw everyone clustered in earnest fashion around the television sets did I realise that the attacks on the Twin Towers in New York had happened.

You can argue what you like about this, but once I knew of the ghastly attacks, all of the numbers returned to by mind. Rupert Sheldrake and others have argued that a knowledge field exists.  Perhaps, it does!

Saturday, when I ook the train to Portsmouth and like that fateful day in 2001, it was September 11th.  Nothing happened in the station, but I did read Robert Fisk’s excellent article in The Independent about our woeful, vile and vengeful reaction to the attack. When someone or something hurts you, you have to fight back in a constructive manner, so that it doesn’t happen again.  Loose your rag and be vindictive and you loose your one weapon, your sense of thought, reason and intelligence.  As an example,my biggest protection against another stroke, is to change things, so that I reduce the risks and also to question everything I do, to make sure it is right.

Blair and Bush failed to do that! This was profoundly stupid, as they had the sympathy of the whole world after the attacks. But what did they do, they attacked Saddam Husein, who a few years before had been their friend.

And what did a crazy American pastor want to do on Saturday? Burn the Koran! As I’ve said many times, you don’t burn books, you read them! And when you’ve read them as many times as you can, you pass them on to someone who might enjoy them or learn something! Failing that, you may recycle them to make more things to read!

September 12, 2010 Posted by | Transport/Travel, World | , , , , | 1 Comment

The Scandal of Gift Aid

The thinktank, ResPublica estimates that charities are losing £750million in donations because of the antiquated Gift Aid system, run by HMRC.  Read about it in The Guardian.

Surely, it is better for charities to spend the money on what they do, rather than spend it on back-office administration.

September 6, 2010 Posted by | News | , , | Leave a comment

Blair on Fox Hunting

This is in the Guardian’s report on Tony Blair’s new book.

He regrets the hunting sort-of ban, incidentally. He hadn’t understood how important it was to many people. Careless Tony; he should have known. But banning hunting is a class issue of great totemic importance for parts of the Labour tribe and he went along with it. Typical Tony in his early years: inexperienced, ill-read and eager to please.

In other words he didn’t let the truth get in the wayof his gut feelings.  How many other decisions he took would have been different, if he’d properly researched the subject and also listened to those with alternative views?

September 1, 2010 Posted by | News, World | , , , | Leave a comment

Sarah Brown is an Optional Extra at £12,800

I do find it very tasteless when former useless Prime Ministers tote their services as speakers on the after-dinner circuit.  Books are one thing, as you have the choice about buying them and they may contain some interesting nuggets, but who’d pay Prudence about £64,000 for a speech.  Perhaps, an arse-licker of the first level might, but I prefer to kick arses rather than lick them.

What however got me about this story, was that Sarah Brown is an optional extra at £12,800 and she will present a prize for that! Most of the women, I know would consider this a supreme insult. C would be laughing like a drain at the ludicrous nature of it all!

August 22, 2010 Posted by | News, World | , , | 3 Comments

The Shambles of the Regional Fire Control Centres

NuLabor wanted to bring in a set of nine reginal control centres for the fire services across the country to replace 46 control rooms.  That was the theory, but read this article in The Daily Telegraph, which details the shambles. The buildings are ready, but the software is not, so they are just standing idle and costing about £1.5 million a month.

I was alerted to this by an article on the BBC local news about the unused centre at Waterbeach. The new government is now saying that councils can opt out of the new centres.  In a way, that is compounding the problem.

Surely, one of the main reasons for having a network of identical centres, is that this woulds mean that if say an operator had to move say to another part of the country, they could then be reemployed if necessary at another centre without retraining. I once met a doctor, whose wife was an ambulance controller.  When he had moved to Cambridge, she had taken a year to be retrained because all the systems were different. That is rediculous, as we need standard systems for fire, police and ambulance all over the UK. I have heard reliable reports of Chief Constables, who want the best system money can buy, as long as no other force has it. 

It should be one size that fits all!  As an aside here, when we designed Artemis, there was essentially one system, that could manage projects ofd all sizes.  You just specified it with bigger discs and more terminals for larger projects. But then we knew how to design systems properly so they worked. When I see the words government and computer system, because of my bad eyesight, I always read it as a gravy train to disaster.

So these fire control centres should be got up and running as soon as possible and if they are late then the contractors should be liable for the losses.  I suspect though, that that is impossible, as the idiot who specified the system and wrote the contract forgot to put in a penalty clause.  He or she should be fired! But they won’t be!

August 2, 2010 Posted by | Computing, News | , , , , | 2 Comments

That’s a Fine Mess You’ve Got Us In!

I knew the NuLabor project would all end in tears with us footing the bill and the report on the front page of today’s Times, says it all.  Why don’t all these failed politicians crawl away into some hole somewhere and not bother us. But once they have tasted power, I suppose they want to keep it!

July 17, 2010 Posted by | News | , | Leave a comment

Lord Heseltine

Lord Heseltine is on Radio 5 at the moment. What a sensible man! I did like his comment about Labour being good in opposition, but hopeless in government. How true? He also said they will be pumping scare stories about the Budget like mad and the media will dance to their tune.

Is Lord Heseltine the best Prime Minister we never had? Possibly, but his views may well come to the fore.  He’s just been taling so sensibly about how we reinvigorate our great cities like Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle and others.

He’s just giving very sensible views on Iraq and Afghanistan.

June 27, 2010 Posted by | World | , , | Leave a comment

The First Welsh-Born Prime Minister Since Lloyd George

Julia Gillard has just become Australian Prime Minister, as Kevin Rudd has stood down.  She was born in Barry in South Wales, so becomes the first Welsh-born Prime Minister since Lloyd George.

When will we have a foreign-born Prime Minister?  We already have! He was Bonar Law, who was born in the crown colony of New Brunswick, which is now part of Canada.

June 24, 2010 Posted by | News | , , | 3 Comments

It’s Just an Exit Poll

The exit poll is saying that there will be 307 Conservative MPs, 255 Labour, 59 Lib-Dems and 29 Others.

I don’t believe it as the Lib-Dem seems far too low.  And the exit poll was conducted on just 130 polling stations.

So what do I think the figures will be.  Tories a bit down on the 307, Labour and Lib-Dems to swap a few seats and perhaps a few more others.

But then who knows.

June 12, 2010 Posted by | News | | Leave a comment