Sunday, December 25, 2016

Merry Christmas from the New Statesman


We Wish You a Merry Christmas with Lyrics Christmas Carol & Song Kids Love to Sing

Theresa May probably thought she was playing clever politics when she put Boris Johnson, a potential rival, into the Foreign Office. First, he would be abroad much of the time and therefore out of the limelight and unable to plot against her. Second, the Foreign Office requires diplomacy and, whatever Johnsons merits, that isnt among them. May set him up for isolation, obscurity and failure.

It hasnt worked. Johnson is too accident-prone for a department that runs tangible public services make him Home Secretary and half the nations prisoners would have escaped within a week but, short of war breaking out, the Foreign Office holds few risks for an ambitious politician. Johnsons gaffes threatening the Italians that we wont buy their Prosecco, blaming the Saudis for wars in the Middle East arent gaffes at all. They are calculated attempts toget himself noticed, win public approval for putting foreigners in their place and challenge May to fire him and make him a martyr. So far, his gaffes are working.

Buying Sky

Dont expect the government to try to stopRupert Murdochs 11.2bn bid, predicted in this column in October, to buy the 60 per cent of Sky that he doesnt already own. Asimilar bid was withdrawn in 2011 after a public outcry over phone-hacking. Sky was then called BSkyB and the bidder, now 21st Century Fox, was News Corp. But Murdoch was and is behind them all and not much else has changed: if anything, hacking turned out to be even more widespread in his papers than was then thought.

May met him in September. An understanding was almost certainly reached. Dont believe denials. It was persistently denied that Murdoch had met Margaret Thatcher to discuss his bid for the Times and Sunday Times in 1981, which Thatchers government refused to refer to the regulatory authorities. Three decades later, Thatchers private files showed that the meeting indeed took place.

What goes around

It is hard not to laugh at Americans indignation over Russias alleged meddling in the US elections. For at least a century, the US has done everything possible to influence the outcomes of other countries elections.

Just after the Second World War, the CIA lavished money on Italys Christian Democrats and invented s*x scandals to discredit left-wing leaders. In Iran in 1953, the CIA launched a successful coup to overthrow the democratically elected Muhammed Mossadeq. In Chile in 1964, it spent $4m on covert action projects to stop the socialist Salvador Allende winning an election. After Allende won the presidency at his fourth attempt in 1970, the CIA organised a coup to oust him. As US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton herself opposed the reinstatement of the elected president of Honduras after amilitary coup in 2009.

Americans should be thankful that they are unlikely to suffer a coup because, as the Latin American joke has it, theres no US embassy in Washington.

The climate deniers are winning

At a reunion of former Observer hacks (I worked there from 1968 to 1975), I talk to Geoffrey Lean, formerly of the Daily Telegraph and Independent on Sunday as well as the Observer, and widely described as the doyen of environment correspondents. How fares the planet, I ask. Not well, he says. The year 2016 is poised to be the hottest on record, beating 2014 and 2015, the previous record-holders. Wasnt October unusually cool? Only by recent standards, Geoffrey explains. It was hotter than any October before 1998 and this November beat all previous Novembers for warmth.

Readers of most British newspapers can be forgiven if they are only dimly aware of this alarming intelligence. By my calculations, ten global-warming sceptics including the Sunday Telegraphs Christopher Booker, the Mail on Sundays Peter Hitchens and the Timess Matt Ridley have regular columns in the main sections of national newspapers. I ask Geoffrey how many columnists in national newspaper comment sections accept the overwhelming scientific consensus and write about the subject as often as the sceptic ten do. There used to be four of us, replies Geoffrey, whose contract with the Telegraph ended last year. But three of us have been sacked in the past 18 months. The Guardians George Monbiot now stands as the lone warmist.

Amazingly, climate-change deniers still portray themselves as a beleaguered minority, struggling to get a hearing.

Blot on the high street

Loughton, Essex, where I live quietly and unfashionably, is a town of handsome Tudorbethan architecture. Not my description but that of the Daily Mail, which devotes a double-page spread to Loughtons high street, featuring the loss of once-loved independent retailers and the rise of unlovable replacements such as estate agents and coffee shops. I am in sympathy with the Mails general drift, but I cannot quite share the sniffy tone about the spread of beauty clinics, nail bars and Pilates studios. Almost every day, I read reports about how machines will soon destroy most peoples jobs. Then I walk down the high street and marvel at how human beings manage to prosper by selling each other services that nobody previously thought were needed.

Logging off

When I get up on Christmas Day, I shall light a fire. It will be one of a diminishing number of days that I do so. That is partly because of environmental worries but also because, as I get older, logs and coal seem to require too much physical exertion.

As I carry the loads from the cellar, my body simultaneously struggling with the effects of seasonal overindulgence, I shall reflect that my parents did this every day for more than 40 years. Forget motor cars, TVs, vacuum cleaners and washing machines. The most transforming technology of my lifetime was domestic central heating.

Source: http://www.newstatesman.com/2016/12/merry-christmas-new-statesman

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