Breathtaking Corruption

Earlier this week the European Union Home Affairs Commissioner, Cecilia Malmstroem,  a Swede, said that the widespread corruption in the European Union was “breathtaking”. Crikey,  who would ever have thought that?

This corruption costs the European taxpayer (people like you and me) somewhere in the region of 120 billion euros each year (that’s £99 billion in real money) although Malmstroem said the figure is probably even higher. Breathtaking doesn’t even come close. What single word does?

Still, at least it’s now official and a member of the European hierarchy has finally admitted publicly what many of us have known or suspected for years. The question is though, what are we and the British Government going to do about it? More pertinently, what can we do about it?

 

An Act of Humanity

There was a bit of a storm this week over the Government’s decision to make a U-turn and allow approximately 500 Syrian refugees to enter the country on temporary visas. The Prime Minister has been criticised by some of showing weakness and of political posturing but others take a different view.

There is no doubt that previous governments have allowed immigration to get out of hand and only recently have our rulers started to realise the mistakes they made in opening our borders to all and sundry. Immigration is now a very hot political potato and public opinion seems to be firmly against any further mass influx.

Many believe that charity should begin at home and, looking at the economic problems we still face, that has to be right. However, there are times when common decency and humanity have to take a front seat and now is one of those times.

We in the West, in spite of the daily images on our television screens, can barely imagine the extent of the suffering of that tragic country and having made, in my opinion, the correct decision not to become militarily involved the least we can now do is try to offer some small comfort to those who so desperately need it.

Of course, that comfort will come from the taxpayer but that should be no consideration – I’m sure we can all think of far worse examples of government expenditure.

Small Beer

What a dreadful shock, a politician admits to smoking crack cocaine. The story, if it can be called that, of Toronto Mayor Rob Ford’s drug taking, whilst evidently in a drunken stupor, has made headlines across the world.

I get the impression that many people are more upset by the fact that he only admitted to his wrongdoing after six months of denial than by the deed itself.  That may well be the case but,  putting it to one side, it seems to me that in an age where drug-taking is at epidemic levels worldwide (throughout all levels of society – including politicians, the judiciary and even journalists!), this is actually pretty small beer.

Not for a moment would I seek to condone such foolish and potentially life-threatening behaviour but, personally, as a voter I’m far more concerned by politicians embezzling public funds and faking expenses claims than by anything they might do in their private lives. Surely, the only question that needs to be asked by those clamouring for his head is this –  is he any good at his job? If he is why not  leave him alone, let him suffer the humiliation from the worldwide exposure of his stupidity and let him get on with being Mayor.

Anyway, what might his successor be like? I don’t see too many Mother Teresas in national or world politics these days and sometimes it really is a case of better the devil you know.

Syria Crisis Over?

Well, it looks like the Syria crisis is over, at least as far as the West is concerned. President Assad has now agreed to hand over the chemical weapons which he doesn’t have and has never used, so that’s all right then!

It seems to me that nobody has covered themselves in glory in this squalid matter. President Obama, decent man that he undoubtedly is, has shown himself to be even more indecisive and dithering than many of us thought he was in the first place. No doubt he has spent the last month regretting ever talking about the crossing of red lines. His deputy, John Kerry, for all his humanitarian concern has proved to be all hot air and his talk of carrying out an “unbelievably small” strike on Syria was laughable. Americans have a splendid phrase about walking the walk and Obama and Kerry should observe it very carefully.

President Putin of Russia, that wily and crafty fox, has turned out to be an unlikely peacemaker since it was the Russians who brokered the deal which ended the crisis and got Obama off the hook. His country will no doubt continue to sell arms to Assad.

We British have our Parliament to thank for making our unrealistically ambitious Prime Minister think again and avoid committing British troops to yet another ill conceived foreign adventure. The opportunistic French have had their brief moment in the limelight as America’s best buddies and may well continue to make grave pronouncements backed up by nothing but rhetoric. Always been good talkers, the French.

The United Nations has shown once again that, in its present form, it is worse than useless and cannot be relied upon to do what it is supposed to do namely to keep the peace and prevent tyrants from butchering their own people. It needs an urgent overhaul and we in the West should be pressurising our politicians to campaign for that overhaul. It is not right or fair to expect the Americans to sort out the world’s multitude of problems.

In the meantime, the real victims of this tragedy, the ordinary Syrian people, who want nothing more than to live in peace and security with their loved ones will continue to pay, with their lives,  the price of Assad’s cruelty and the UN’s incompetence.

Syria – The Debate Continues

It’s astonishing how the decision of one man can affect the whole world and when that man happens to be the most powerful man in the world he has to make sure that he thinks carefully before he acts and that he gets those decisions right first time.

President Obama is clearly a cautious man, and there’s nothing wrong with that. However, his official title of Commander in Chief means that he must make a decision sooner or later.

 I’ve been in the USA for over a week now and I haven’t met one person who is in favour of bombing Syria. When I turn on the television I see reports of demonstrations and protests against military action and it seems clear that if Congress (in effect the American Parliament) were to take a vote now they would vote against it too. Of course, that may change.

In the meantime Obama must be agonising over what to do. The American constitution is a complicated creature although there is a clear sequence of events. The President can take any action he sees fit where he perceives a threat to national security. As one political commentator said recently, the President acts, Congress reacts and the US Courts review.

There was no constitutional need for Obama to delay his plans (real or otherwise) to bomb Syria and refer the matter to Congress. If he truly wanted military action and believed it was necessary then it would have been carried out weeks ago – irrespective of what the rest of the world might say. It may be nice to have friends and allies but the cold fact is that America is so powerful it doesn’t really need any.

To me, President Obama is a truly modern politician (like a recent UK Prime Minister I can think of) who throws a proposed  policy or action up in the air, observes the kind of reaction it elicits and then proceeds accordingly. It seems to me that on this occasion at least, his caution may prove well-founded. 

The Right Vote

There may well  be a lot of “national soul searching” as George Osborne, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, put it after Parliament voted yesterday against the UK joining in any punitive military attack on Syria following the use of chemical weapons in that country. I’m sure he’s right and I’m sure too that Parliament was right in voting the way it did. If nothing else, it shows that the Prime Minister and his Government cannot act without first consulting the wishes of the people via their democratically elected representatives.

As mentioned before in this blog, involvement in Syria would be a big mistake, as it undoubtedly was in Iraq and Afghanistan and to a lesser extent Libya. Yes, all those countries were or are ruled by dictators whose behaviour is naturally abhorrent to anyone with an ounce of morality but what is to be gained by foreign involvement? Once the dictator has been removed who or what is going to take his place? Since the answer to that question is normally hard line Islamists it is probably better to leave the military despot in charge. Better the devil you know and all that. At least these despots generally have no wish to take on and destroy the West, unlike the hard core fanatics of Islam.

Military involvement in Syria by any western nation would be a huge mistake for many reasons and, in any event, it appears that there is still no concrete proof who was responsible for the chemical attacks in the first place. It may well have been the Syrian Government but it could also have been the struggling rebels who, let’s face it, have much to gain from western involvement. Chemical weapons are both repugnant and horrific and many in the West are rightly concerned by their use. However any death by violence is horrific. Are the people in favour of intervention saying that the death of 200 women and children by chemical weapons is worse than their death by bullets and bombs? If so, why? The end result is still the same.

This is a dangerous vicious world and horrible things are happening on a daily basis in virtually all of its four corners. What about the genocide in Somalia and other parts of Africa, the continued massacre of Kurds in Iraq, the torture and murder in North Korean prison camps and the butchery of Mugabwe’s cruel regime in Zimbabwe? Are people agitating to intervene there too? Where do we draw the line?

The United Nations was set up, among other reasons, to police the world. It’s sad that the security council often proves toothless due to the exercise of the member’s veto and unless they change the rules to allow action by majority vote the UN’s impotence and prevarication will continue. As for the UK, well, we are a small nation, no longer with the voice that we used to have. On a global stage we are weak both economically and militarily. Sad and brutal though it may be, we have no business getting involved in what, basically, are other countries’ problems.

Protection or Oppression?

There’s a very delicate balance between national security and individual liberty, a balance that’s sometimes very difficult to maintain. These are dangerous times and since the monstrous attacks of September 11th, 2001 the West has had to live in constant fear of those who would destroy us.

We in the UK, like most western countries, have given our government extended powers of arrest, detention and investigation in an attempt to provide further protection from the threat of terrorism. In return the Government surely has a duty to ensure that this power is used firmly, fairly and most important of all, proportionately.

Last week, UK Immigration officers at Heathrow airport detained a young Brazilian man, David Miranda, who just happened to be the partner of Glenn Greenwald, the Guardian newspaper journalist, who recently exposed details of illegal US and UK espionage activities. Miranda was taken away for questioning, locked up in a sealed room, denied the right to see a lawyer until the last minute and was then, after the maximum nine hours of interrogation permitted under the anti-terrorism laws, released without charge.

This was an example of a distortion of that balance between security and liberty, an example of authoritarian behaviour  based more on paranoia than an honest attempt to protect the nation from harm. It was an example of a misuse of power, of a government using its extended anti-terrorism power as an instrument of oppression. In short, it was behaviour more redolent of a totalitarian police state than a western democracy. We, and our law-abiding visitors, deserve better.

http://www.johnenglandcommonsense.com

Housing Abuse

Reports of lottery winners and other wealthy people living in state-subsidised housing have at last encouraged the Government to pass legislation to prevent it from happening in the future. It is now proposed that all prospective tenants will be means tested so that if they earn more than £60,000 a year they will either have to leave their council-owned and housing association properties or pay the full market rent.

Whilst this is no more than common sense isn’t it crazy that  it was allowed to happen in the first place? Why should the taxpayer subsidise people who have the means to pay for their own accommodation? Particularly whilst others, with a genuine need of state assistance, remain on seemingly never-ending waiting lists.

Those found guilty of abusing the system can have no complaint if they are named and shamed by national newspapers. The Sunday Times, recently revealed that Bob Crow (proud communist and General Secretary of the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers) lives in a subsidised home in North East London despite the fact that he earns £90,000 per annum (nearly four times the national average) and Frank Dobson, former Labour Health Secretary lives in a council flat despite his  MP’s annual salary of £66,000.

Sadly, we are now used to politicians of all parties fiddling expenses and screwing the system but it particularly grates when we are told of champagne socialists ripping us off whilst proclaiming equal rights for all. Perhaps they need to be reminded that the welfare state exists to help and assist those in genuine need of assistance – not to make fat cats fatter still. It’s fortunate, to say the least, that we still have a free press able and willing to expose such iniquities and bring these public figures to account.

 

Challenging the System

The story of Edward Snowden, the American who leaked details of his government’s  surveillance, specifically computer hacking, makes interesting reading. He is now in hiding, having fled to Hong Kong, where he made his revelations public. Consequently, the FBI have evidently put him at the top of their “most wanted” list. Surely, nobody can be surprised at what the US Government has been up to, nor any other government for that matter. This is what governments do. Power and control are comfortable bed-fellows and it was ever thus.

Without government there is anarchy and clearly, to govern effectively, there has to be some measure of control. There also has to be, in a democracy at least, proper safeguard of individual liberty. The difficulty, as all governing bodies have discovered since primitive man began forming organised tribes, is getting the right balance between the need to control and the freedom of the individual.
As members of a civilised democracy we can only hope that the state protects and safeguards the interests of all law-abiding citizens equally, free from oppression and prejudice. If the line is crossed and the balance falls too firmly in favour of the state we must ensure that, through all lawful means (including court action) the balance is reset and government is reminded of its duties and responsibilities. That is the beauty of democracy.
Edward Snowden may well have another agenda but I hope not. The fact that he felt able to stand up to the US Government and expose what he felt was wrong and corrupt is to his great credit. We are not quite yet into the 1984 scenario described by George Orwell in his prescient masterpiece where the little man, Winston Smith, stood up to the system before it eventually crushed him. We must do all we can to ensure that we never are.

Time for a Change?

Now that the dust has settled on UKIP’s spectacular success in last week’s local elections the major parties must be wondering about the significance of  that success. Many will explain that it was simply a protest vote against the Government, a regular mid-term occurrence, of course. Maybe it was, but that doesn’t explain why the official opposition, Labour, did equally badly? Maybe this time, it was something more than a simple protest vote.

Maybe this time it was an indication that people really are sick and tired of the traditional ruling parties, they are sick of the same old dogma, the same old posturing and the same old lies.

Maybe they are tired of the ruling liberal elite who have no idea of what is going on beyond the confines of their cosy metropolitan coffee shops and wine bars but who condescend and patronise the rest of the country as if they and only they know what is best for us all.

Maybe they are tired of the political correctness and over regulation that together stifle any attempt to succeed in business and create a better life for their families.

Maybe they are tired too of the arrogance, incompetence and corruption of the European Union and the endless delays and broken promises by our politicians in giving us a vote to decide on continued membership of that Union.

Maybe they are sick of unrestricted immigration being forced upon the country without consultation, where people with no connection to this country and who have made no contribution to its well being are given houses, state benefits and unrestricted use of the NHS at the expense of British taxpayers who have contributed to the welfare state throughout their working lives.  Maybe they are sick of being called nationalistic or racist when daring to question the wisdom of such a clearly foolish policy.

Maybe they are tired of seeing our state schools churn out hordes of illiterate, ill-educated children with no hope of a decent future.

Maybe they are tired of the fact that the NHS and all other national institutions are clogged up with incompetent and inefficient bureaucrats.

Maybe they are sick of seeing the rights of offenders being put above those of their innocent victims and of seeing criminals given ridiculously lenient sentences where, too often, they are free to reoffend at will.

Maybe that is why they voted against the Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Parties.

Maybe they have finally had enough and are ready for a change.

If the result of last week’s elections exposes one truth, it is that if politicians wish to remain in power they need to listen carefully to the needs of the people who elected them into that power in the first place. Listen to them and don’t treat them like children, to be humoured and sent away with a pat on the head and a packet of sweeties.