Saturday 30 March 2013

First slimy toad of the Spring spotted.

The extension of winter due to global warming has seen a delay in the annual visit of toads and frogs to my garden so I've been scouring the internet to see what's happened to them.

One was seen here ( centre of photo above) and was tweeting about the SNP being more interested in the independence referendum than the rape of a child.

The toads in my garden have more respect than this Lord.

Friday 29 March 2013

Lookalikes...

I was watching the debate about the bedroom tax on tv the other night and couldn't help noticing....

Margaret Burgess SNP MSP...

Wendoline....

Thursday 28 March 2013

A permanent embarrassment and an occasional disgrace.

It's been predictable seeing the BBC slavering over ex Labour Foreign Secretary David Milliband as he heads off to make more money in New York. He's to head up the 'International Rescue' charity (sic). The man who supported the illegal invasion of Iraq that resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands and the destruction of the country will be doing international rescue work for £285k plus exes (allegedly). Like when Tony Blair became a peace envoy in the middle east it's another 'you couldn't make it up' story.

Mr Milliband has made millions doing speeches in the most unsavoury corners of the globe. Just like his former leaders Gordon Brown and Tony Blair.

Mr Milliband is the BBC's favourite type of politician. New Labour, son of marxists and never worked in the real world. Total believer in the EU and the global warming scam etc. Who could forget his 'carbon card' for citizens plan. He wanted us to carry a debit card that we would hand over to be debited whenever we bought goods. This would record our 'greenieness' or something.

He backed down on numerous occasions from rescuing the country from Gordon Brown. Leaving others like James Purnell to take the hit instead.

So farewell Mr Milliband and be careful that the door doesn't hit your arse on the way out.

Oh and don't worry about the costs of dumping a by election in South Shields on us. We'll cover the election costs of another donkey with a red rosette for you.

Wednesday 27 March 2013

Aberdeen Bay....Scotland's scenery continues to be destroyed by useless windmills.

Tragic news for Aberdeen Bay today. Eleven useless windmills are to be built offshore at a cost of £230m.

The beautiful scene above will be ruined in order to pander to the 'green renewables revolution'

All the usual rubbish has been spouted on the local tv stations tonight. "Enough power for 50,000 homes" and " ensuring a low carbon future with sustainable green energy" were repeated often.

All rubbish of course.

The windmills will provide 25% of their claimed output at most. Often providing nothing when it's not windy or too windy to operate. Windmill output falls dramatically after about 10 years and replacement of key parts is expensive. California has 14,000 windmills that have been left to rot. The UK's 4,000 windmills regularly produce nothing. Especially in winter when high pressure sits over the UK for weeks. Maintenance on a 640 feet high windmill in the North Sea in winter will be 'challenging'. The windmill will just be shut down until the weather improves.

They will require 100% back up from coal, gas or nuclear energy.

According to the met office there's been no 'global warming' for 17 years despite a massive increase in CO2 levels and hundreds of coal fired power stations opening around the world. Despite this our politicians still believe in the global warming myth.

Offshore wind power has been a disaster elsewhere. Costing 4 times the cost of expensive onshore wind power and being prone to failing foundations due to swirling sea currents. Not to mention the effects on local fishing grounds and bird migrations. Germany has belatedly realised it's mistake of relying on wind power and is building 23 new coal powered stations to ensure their lights stay on. Scotland is just the next country on the list to suffer the windmill scam. Until we come to our senses and switch back to coal or gas.

The windmills will be built abroad and shipped here with few local jobs.

Any 'green' jobs created will be hugely offset by the loss of jobs in tourism and other productive sectors that could have been supported instead. The latest estimates are that 3 real jobs are lost for every 'green' job created. Donald Trump has already scrapped his £750m golf complex expansion as he doesn't see the point of investing more money in a complex next to these 11 white elephants.

And meanwhile we all freeze in the worst Spring for 50 years. Struggling to pay the inflated bills required to cover the mandatory 'green taxes' added to our energy bills.

We had the luxury of pandering to the believers in the global warming religion during the boom years and when we had the cushion of a surplus in energy production. But the country is now struggling financially and our energy 'cushion' is being dismantled. 10% of our energy capacity has just been lost with 2 coal fired powered stations being closed as they don't conform to EU green CO2 emission targets. Billions of pounds is being frittered away on windmills and other follys which should have been invested in reliable energy production like coal or gas or nuclear.

When will the madness end ?

Monday 25 March 2013

The EU....the new Soviet Union.

Great article from Mary Ellon Synon on the EU. A must read......

The New Soviet Union: Cyprus shows how the EU destroys democracy.

Here is my Saturday Essay in the Irish Daily Mail. It is a lengthy piece, but then in the countries caught in the eurozone, interest in what is happening in Cyprus is intense. British readers can be happy they are not trapped in the single currency. But they are still trapped in the EU...which is why they may want to read on.

Before I can explain what this Cyprus crisis means to Ireland, I have to dust off some Soviet-era vocabulary: nothing else will do.

First, nomenklatura. This was the name given to the self-propagating Communist Party elite who controlled Soviet government, industry, finance and most of the caviar.

Next, apparatchiks. These were the unquestioning loyal subordinates of a Communist apparat or administrative system.

As for other words from the USSR era – transnational, class betrayal and colonialism – you already know those, so now I can get started and explain what Ireland must learn from what the European Union nomenklatura did to Cyprus and its president in the early hours of March 16th.

Picture the scene. We can do that because three reporters from the Wall Street Journal, one in Brussels, the others in Berlin and Nicosia, have managed to piece together an hour by hour account of events leading up to the announcement that eurozone finance ministers would force the Cypriot government to confiscate €5.8bn from bank deposits.

What has happened since that night remain other issues: the rush to Moscow by the Cypriot finance minister desperate for a loan, the attempts by Cypriots to find a Plan B, the possibility of Cyprus leaving the euro.

But above all, there is what happened over the night of the 15th on the sealed-off upper floors of the European Council building. It was the best illustration yet of why a former senior European Commission economist now refers to the EU as the New Soviet Union: the treatment of the President of Cyprus that night showed just how the power over the member states has shifted away from democratic control and into the hands of the unelected elite of a transnational European empire. And what happened to the Cypriot president that night could happen to any Taoiseach.

So, as I say, picture the scene. That night there were ten hours of negotiations trying to put together a deal that would keep the banks in Cyprus solvent. What the Cypriot banks needed was €17.5bn. But the Germans were unwilling to allow such a bail-out. Already the Berlin propaganda machine had been pumping out stories that the Cypriot banks were stuffed with Russian hot money, and decent Germans were not going to protect the deposits of Russian oligarchs.

Which was racial stereotyping by the Germans. There are plenty of legit Russian businessmen. A lot of such businessmen may have shifted their money into Cyprus to get it away from banks controlled by Putin and Medvedev. Such businessmen clearly thought that EU banking played straight. Now they know different. But that is another story with other implications for how investors from outside the EU will now regard the safety of eurozone banks, including Irish banks.

It also has implications for anyone in the EU who thought that the EU law forcing all member states to guarantee bank deposits up to €100,000 meant something.

This week some of us sat in the press room at the European Commission and listened to Olli Rehn’s (below) apparatchiks deny that confiscation of a percentage of Cypriot bank deposits under 100k was in breach of this legal guarantee. They insisted that this wasn’t confiscation, it was a tax. Since taxes are the ‘competence’ of member states, it didn’t breach the law.

The apparatchiks insisted that, anyway, this was a one-off because the case of Cyprus was ‘special.’ By last Wednesday night however, news had leaked out that the Spanish government now plans to ‘tax’ bank deposits by up to 0.2 percent. You might say that’s not much. But whether it is 0.2 percent or 20 percent doesn’t matter. The precedent of raiding bank deposits with the Troika’s blessing has been set.

Back to the move against Cyprus. It started on the Friday evening when Jeroen Dijsselbloem (below), president of the eurogroup, called an emergency meeting after the European summit. According to the Journal, ‘Just after 5 p.m., finance ministers, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde, ECB executive board member Jorg Asmussen and the EU’s economic-affairs commissioner, Olli Rehn, filed into a meeting room on the fifth floor of the Justus Lipsius, which houses the EU’s ministerial meetings and summits.’

Now, this is significant: ‘Cyprus’s newly elected President Nicos Anastasiades (below) stayed behind in the country’s delegation on the seventh floor.’ The democratically-elected president was not allowed in the room as the unelected Olli Rehn began with his plans for how to get €5.8bn out of Cypriot bank depositors.

Mr Rehn wanted a straight ‘haircut’ on all deposits in all banks. But then Christine Lagarde (below) said they must gouge between 30 percent and 40 percent from all deposits over €100,000 in the two main Cypriot banks.

The horrified Cypriot finance minister said this couldn’t happen. He began the first of several scrambles upstairs to where President Anastasiades was being kept in isolation. Of course he was. This is how an empire treats uncooperative colonial natives. In the 19th century, Belgian colonial gang-masters would lock Congolese wives alone in windowless sheds until their husbands harvested the right amount of rubber.

In the end, as a representative of Mr Anastasiades told the German newspaper Bild, ‘the Germans held a gun to our chest.’ It was at some time after a meeting of the inner core of the nomenklatura which began in another room at 1 a.m. that Mr Asmussen of the ECB ( below) pulled out the gun. He told Mr Anastasiades that either he agreed to the deal on bank deposits, or EU funds would be cut off to the country’s two main banks.

Just to ramp up the 3 a.m. terror, Mr Asmussen then rang Mario Draghi ( below ), president of the ECB, in front of Mr Anastasiades. The German warned Mr Draghi that the ECB might have to deal with the collapse of the Cypriot banks on Monday.

You know the rest. The eurogroup came out and announced that the Cypriot president had agreed that there would be a levy on all bank deposits.

Again, this is significant. The EU system of government operates by keeping in place the institutions of the governments over which it has taken power. The public had to be told that it was the president of Cyprus himself who had decided to seize deposits.

Two British historians, Christopher Booker and Richard North, identified this system in their history of the EU, The Great Deception: ‘It is central to the nature of the “project” that the parliaments, officials and judiciaries of each of the member states should all be left in place. But behind them [the project] erected a new supranational power structure which worked through these national institutions, controlling them and enlisting their active collaboration in a way that remained largely out of view.’

If you go through the statements of Monnet (below) and other founders of the project as long ago as the 1920s, ‘the one thing above all the “project” could never be, because by definition it had never been intended to be, was in the remotest sense democratic. The whole purpose of a supranational body is to stand above the wishes of individual nations and peoples.'

It would be supranational government by technocrats, ‘unsullied by any need to resort to all the messy, unpredictable business of elections.’

‘The only useful role left to the politicians in this process was to lend it a veneer of democratic legitimacy.’

Which is why the nomenklatura were in such a fury when the Cypriot parliament refused to cast a single vote in favour of the deal: the members of parliament were not being ‘European.’ Indeed, in a top level conference call among eurozone officials on Wednesday – notes from which were leaked to Reuters – the Cypriot parliament’s democratic defiance was denigrated as ‘emotional.’

In fact, the parliament’s defiance was magnificent. But I did not cheer. I know that in the EU, a Yes vote is forever, but a No vote is only ever temporary. The Troika apparatchiks immediately delivered the message that the parliament must keep voting until they get the right answer.

This technique is familiar to anyone who remembers the politics of the USSR: vote all you want, but there is just one possible result.

I am not the only one to see that Soviet similarity. I go back to that former senior commission economist I mentioned at the top. He is Bernard Connolly. I have quoted before from the new edition of his book, The Rotten Heart of Europe.

Mr Connolly (below) was infamously forced out of his job in 1995 when he wrote the book questioning the prospects of monetary union. From his vantage point as one of the nomenklatura, Mr Connolly saw the truth of the ambitions of this elite. They wanted ‘to complete the elimination of sovereignty, law and political legitimacy in Europe, freeing elites – a European nomenklatura – from any residual constraints either of democratic control or law.’

To do this, they have persuaded the ‘useful idiots’ ( below) across the member states to suppress the results of referenda and to topple democratically-elected governments ‘in manoeuvres reminiscent of Stalin’s tactics in Eastern Europe after the war.’

What Mr Connolly means, first, are the results of referenda not just in Ireland, but in the Netherlands and France. In 2001, the then-president of the European Commission, Romano Prodi (below), and other members of the elite made a decision behind closed doors to draw up an EU constitution. They promised that it would not come into effect unless it had the unanimous consent of all member states.

Within a single week in 2005, both the French and the Dutch voters rejected the constitution. Here is how Nigel Farage, MEP and leader of the UK Independence Party (below), recalled the moment in a recent interview in the Financial Times: He was drinking champagne in the Brussels press bar to celebrate the Dutch rejecting the EU constitution in a referendum when a German MEP came by and said, ‘You may have your little celebration tonight but we have 50 different ways to win.’

Indeed they have. By 2007 they had produced the Lisbon Treaty ( signed by Gordon Brown..below) , which was the constitution in everything but the title on the front page. You know the rest: in 2008 the Irish people rejected the treaty. The nomenklatura rejected the democratic result.

In 2011 the nomenklatura pulled off two Soviet-style coups. They toppled the elected governments of both Greece and Italy. It was Hungary 1956 without the tanks.

That year George Papandreou (below), then prime minister of Greece, announced he would hold a referendum on the further austerity demanded by the Troika. But the nomenklatura would not allow a democratic vote. They demanded Mr Papandreou abandon the referendum. The humiliated prime minister was forced to resign.

The Troika then manoeuvred in one of the nomenklatura, Lucas Papademos (below), former vice-president of the ECB, as prime minister.

The EU elite also toppled the government of Silvio Berlusconi. Following a secret telephone call – later leaked to the Press – Chancellor Merkel told President Giorgio Napolitano of Italy she was worried that Prime Minister Berlusconi wasn’t strong enough to deliver the kind of reforms in Italy that ‘Europe’ wanted. The old Communist Napolitano got the message. He destabilised the prime minister at home, while the ECB got busy rocking the market in Italian bonds. Mr Berlusconi was forced out of office, and President Napolitano parachuted in the unelected choice of the nomenklatura, again one of their own, former European Commissioner Mario Monti. (below)

If you think the nomenklatura has not been willing to topple an Irish Government, remember the pressure Jean-Claude Trichet (below), then president of the ECB, put on Finance Minister Brian Lenihan to force him to accept a bailout against the wishes of the Irish people. The pressure was of course applied in secret, we learned about it only from letters and notes of telephone calls released last year.

Mr Trichet pushed Mr Lenihan ( below) to accept the terms being offered by the Troika, threatening that the ECB would otherwise cut all emergency funding: that would have toppled the Government.

The finance minister resisted. But he was finally pushed into the deadly deal after Patrick Honohan (below), governor of the Irish Central Bank, said publicly a bail-out was necessary. That statement finished Mr Lenihan.

What is important to note is the Dr Honohan, though always referred to in Ireland the governor of our central bank, is something else in the EU. He is a member of the Governing Council of the ECB: that makes him a member of the European nomenklatura.

It is now clear the nomenklatura intend they should be without any constraints of democratic control. Mr Connolly notes that they have transferred powers to ‘unelected, unaccountable and explicitly anti-democratic bodies.’ These include the eurogroup, the ECB, the bail-out funds, in particular the new European Stability Mechanism, ‘which, astonishingly, has complete legal immunity for itself and its officers.’

He notes the undemocratic powers of the IMF and the G20. Then there are the banking and supervisory bodies, and the economic government of the euro area which is meant to ensure economic ‘discipline.'

This ‘discipline’ is why the democratically-elected members of our Dail must suffer the humiliation of knowing that a German parliamentary committee now sees our Budget before they do: the committee, free from Irish democratic control, acts for the nomenklatura.

On their trips to Brussels, the Taoiseach and Finance Minister pose as part of this ruling elite. If they were to put Ireland first it would be a class betrayal of their colleagues in the nomenklatura. Alas the Irish people are so submissive that they allow this evil idiocy by our Government.

But the Mediterranean peoples are not submissive. Judging by the mood of the peoples of Greece and Italy in particular, they have had all the pain they can take. The crowds are already on the streets in their thousands. Now all they need are leaders.

Which is why Cyprus gives me hope. Like that old Soviet villain Lenin, I know that worse is better.

Cypriot mattresses offering 100% savings on conventional investments.

Savvy Cypriots who put all of their savings under the mattress were celebrating today with 100% of their savings still in place. Although the cash is a bit squashed it is eagerly accepted in local shops and petrol stations.

But depositors in Cyprus who naively assumed that the Laiki Bank of Cyprus would look after their money have been wiped out after a 'deal' to save Cyprus was struck in Brussels.

.

"By simply putting their money under the mattress in their own home it would still be there today " explained a mattress expert.

Reports that sales of these 'magic' mattresses in Spain and Ireland and Greece and Portugal have reached record levels have yet to be confirmed.

Meanwhile sales of the popular game 'Wipeout' are reported to be falling sharply across the eurozone as people seek an escape from their reality.

Sunday 24 March 2013

Saturday 23 March 2013

Puzzle solved....

I wondered why I had to keep topping up the bird food....

Apparently grey squirrels are a pest so I can't even trap it and let it free in the woods somewhere unless I want to get a hefty fine. They are too much of a threat to the indigenous red squirrels. Being bigger and more aggressive and carrying squirrel pox. A disease that they're immune to themselves but is fatal to the native red squirrel.

The grey squirrel will eat all the birds eggs ( assuming Spring ever arrives and the birds start to nest) so it's a quandary what to do with this thing.

Squirrel pie might be on the menu.

Lambs to the slaughter.

Champagne and fireworks greet euro in Cyprus 2008....

"This is the dawn of a new era and a change to our way of life," said Papadopoulos."

It has certainly changed their way of life right enough.

Either slaves to the Russian mafia or slaves to the Troika.

Not much choice really.

"The countries' leaders made symbolic withdrawals of euros from cash machines just minutes into the New Year"

I think the folk in Cyprus would be glad to 'symbolically' remove all of their money from the Cyprus cash machines. If only.

"The Cypriot Finance Minister, Michalis Sarris, has said the euro will benefit consumers and businesses alike because of the eurozone's low inflation, low interest rates and large market."

It only benefits those on the euro gravy train....

The EU 'elite' can escape the chaos in Europe and 'work' at the new EU HQ in Barbados...

Their main task will be to spend £230m on re training banana growers. Nice.

New Manager Strachan can't make it happen.

I dragged myself down the pub last night to see Scotland's latest World Cup qualifier game against Wales.

It was the new manager Gordon Strachan's first competitive game in charge.

It started quite lively and we actually went one up against Wales when Grant Hanley scored just before half time. This made the half time chat quite pleasant. Especially when the free jock pies were passed around.

Sadly Scotland couldn't maintain the lead. Snodgrass was flying into the Welsh players once too often and was sent off with a penalty going to Wales. We thought that the penalty had been flunked as it seemed to bounce up and hit the bar and come out. But the replay showed it going in.

Needless to say the Welsh scored again a couple of minutes later with a Kanu header. And it was all over.

It's claimed that this is the worst team that Scotland have ever had. Probably right. Beaten twice by Wales ( home and away) is a humiliation.

Serbia on Tuesday I think. Piece of cake.

Thursday 21 March 2013

Did I miss anything ?

Phew, I've been out of circulation for a few weeks fighting the grim reaper so have missed the start of the meltdown of the EU. Typical luck ! Always away when the real excitement begins. Who would have thought that they would start dipping their greedy paws into people's life savings ? Well quite a lot of people thought it actually. It's the logical final step after they have tried everything else to keep the bankrupt system afloat. It'll all be sorted out by Monday though. The dry run on Cyprus didn't go according to plan as the people said 'No'. Frau Merkel needs re relected and wanted to be seen to be 'tough' but she will have to find another way to get elected. Being 'tough' on the people of Cyprus hasn't worked. Cyprus is bust as it was forced to take a 75% haircut on it's Greek Bonds in order to help it's 'EU colleagues'. No retrospective help for Cyprus though.

No sign of the UK protesting about the theft of UK citizens cash. A planeload of euros to keep the troops happy. That'll show em...

It was good to see the galloping Major Joyce (MP) getting stuck into the taxpayer subsidised bevvy again. I wonder if the former Army shiny will do the decent thing this time and stand down. Give some other red rosette from Falkirk a chance to feed at the trough for a couple of years instead. Armed Forces clerks were called shinies as their trouser arses were always shiny with sitting all day at their desks.

It took 12 London bobbies to carry him out of the parliamentary boozer this time compared to only 8 bobbies last year. Either Eric is putting on the beef or our police are getting weaker. They should re introduce the old rules for policemen. Six foot bruisers who you wouldn't mess with unless you had a death wish.

I don't have a death wish so can hopefully hold off the grim reaper ( with the help of the brilliant NHS ) for as long as possible.