Corvus Bulletin 11:Mind Your Pi’s and Rho’s (Covid Inquiry June-Dec 2023)

“I am listening to them. Their loss will be recognised” (Baroness Hallett)

Bereaved Families

The UK covid inquiry officially began August 2022. After the resignation of Lady Poole and 4 senior lawyers, the Scottish inquiry finally got underway 22nd October 2023. Chair Lord Brailsford pledged to place the impact on people’s lives central. Ahead of UK public hearings mid-June, Prof. Pollard of Ox Vax (remember him?) told Newsnight not enough was being done to prepare for future pandemics. On QT, Ayesha said we must learn lessons, Lord Sumpter complained Sweden had already done theirs and government didn’t have a legal leg to stand on and, Cabinet Office (CO) bidding to block their release, weirdo tory minister Lee Rowley claimed WhatsApp messages were irrelevant.

Baroness Halibut started by promising an ‘investigation the nation deserves’ with answers to the 3 main questions of preparedness, response and lessons for the future*. ‘Excluded from sharing key evidence’, Bereaved Families lined up outside holding photos of deceased relatives. Praising their ‘dignified vigil’, Halibut assured them she listened but hoped they’d understand the difficult balance she had to strike.

On preparedness, David Cameroon didn’t accept previous underinvestment in the NHS but confessed to prioritising flu over other respiratory viruses. George Osborne didn’t regret austerity, while former CMO Sally Davies said there weren’t enough medical staff and lockdowns damaged a whole generation of children. Mark Drakeford blamed issues in Welsh care homes on Brexit dominating cabinet meetings.

Amidst the interminable blame-game, The Cock turned into the new Captain Hindsight. He deflected questions by putting the onus on everyone else for unreadiness and lack of medicines. Saying a no-deal Brexit was a distraction, he apologised for all fatalities and understood why people didn’t accept that. He then went to talk to Bereaved Families leaving actress Lorelei King, whose brother died of covid, in tears. The next day he attested that with the benefit of hindsight, an earlier first lockdown could have saved many lives, regretted not overruling advice on asymptomatic transmission and denied lying but admitted the evidence was now clear that Van Dam was right to say the ‘protective ring around care homes’ was a broken circle. Pointing to a toxic culture for needing someone to blame, he called The Scumbag a ‘malign actor’. The Scumbag tweeted he spoke rubbish. Ex-NHS CE Simon Stevens subsequently declared The Cock wanted to decide who lived and died rather than top medics.

At Phase 2 in November, former deputy CO sec Helen MacNamara who Scumbag called a cunt**, said government had no real-life experience or ‘business as usual’ model early 2020. No input from women in Number 10 nor CO meant they became effectively ‘invisible overnight’ and covid policy gaps (e.g., childcare). Told there was a plan 10 days before lockdown, she hadn’t seen one and feared thousands dead, akin to a ‘dystopian nightmare’. She returned from having covid 2nd April to find Boris absent with it and drafted a document on how to manage when he was ill. She stated restrictions were never followed in Downing St. but as she was fined for attending a lockdown party and brought the karaoke machine to aide Hannah Young’s leaving do 18th June 2020 as featured in the Channel 4 Partygate film, should have known better!

Lord Mark Sedwill, CO sec until autumn 2020, apologised for recommending ‘chicken pox’ parties to boost herd immunity and, so far up Bori’s arse, ‘his ankles were brown’, had pressed The Bumbler to sack The Cock. He was replaced by Simon Case who likened working in Number 10 to ‘taming wild animals’.

The Glove-Puppet apologised to Bereaved Families for mistakes, agreed lockdowns came too late, criticised tiers and said the impact on children wasn’t considered. Loath to criticise Boris in retrospect, he felt they all deserved a share. Rabid Raab disagreed with Saj that The Scumbag made Bori’s decisions. Thicky Harries admitted infected patients were discharged to care homes and claimed she warned government to safeguard kids. On Newscast, ex-civil servant Jill Rutter found ‘precautionary principles’ interesting; politicians wanting certainty before acting effectively dumped on scientists and PHE. Health threats not treated the same as others like terrorism, it was suggested that UKHSA should sit on the National Security Council.

As part of module 2, the inquiry asked if measures such as social restrictions and lockdowns were in the public interest. Pat Vallance’s diary revealed ‘Number 10 in chaos as usual’ and Boris viewed the pandemic as nature’s way of getting rid of old people. He also dismissed long-covid as ‘bollocks’. Ex mandarin Alex Thomas described an ‘anxious, chaotic and divided’ relationship between CO and No. 10 in the early days. Illustrating dysfunctionality at heart of government, Hugo Keith QC disclosed messages between Simon Case and Boris, autumn 2020: SC: always told Dom real PM but Carrie really in charge.BJ: How true, Smiley face. SC: We look like a terrible joke, I can’t cope with this. I’m going home.

The PM ‘changing strategic direction every day’, Case reached the end of his tether, took sick leave and didn’t attend the inquiry due to a ‘medical issue’ ‘Deeply sorry’ for sending the BYOB garden party e-mail May 2020, former PP Martin Reynolds said government couldn’t deal with the crisis and wrote in his diary that Boris was a weak and ineffective PM. He revealed a ‘shit list’ of people for the chop – it was shit because Scumbag wasn’t on it! Agreeing there was no plan, Boris dithered and took too long imposing lockdown, Lee Cain said it was the wrong crisis for the PMs skillset (whatever that was) but it was a huge undertaking. Keith read The Scumbag’s messages out calling government ‘useless fuck-pigs, cunts and morons’. Dom replied that minister’s incompetence was far worse than his Pi’s and Rho’s. Lord Lister disclosed Boris volunteered to be jabbed with covid live on TV. Meanwhile, claiming to have changed his phone several times and not backed them up, Rishi Rich failed to handover messages from his time as chancellor.

All the bods appeared in what was dubbed Science Week, to reveal the burden of overwork and death threats. Vallance said Boris was bamboozled by The Science and ignored advice on restrictions, believed tiers ineffective and ‘eat out to help out’ which he wasn’t consulted on, helped the spread. The Scumbag ‘happy to see people die’, diary notes showed ministers’ surprise when the CMO piped up. Chris Witless agreed the pandemic preparedness plan wasn’t useful, although lack of data and testing early March 2020 was the big problem. Lockdown #1 a bit late, there were no good options and he advised Van Dam to wait for more data before declaring an epidemic. With hindsight, they could have done things differently. ‘Absolutely not’ consulted on ‘eat out to help out’, Van Dam found out about it on telly and felt allowing mass gatherings spring 2020 ‘unhelpful’. At PMQs, Gareth Thomas asked why Vallance said Rishi didn’t take his advice but 2 years ago, Boris declared they always followed The Science. Rishi spouted the usual lies.

Mass media coverage patchy, a BBC News presenter speaking MLE (Multicultural London English) was almost unintelligible. On Newscast, Laura K. thought the inquiry confirmed how bad things were with government almost imploding, Brexit creating factions and civil servants struggling to grapple with policy. Jo Co asked her Daily Politics panel: who was to blame for the toxic culture – Boris or The Scumbag? Err, the PM appointed them! Due to the 3-cunt rule, HIGNFY used country house instead to ridicule the goings-on. Positing the inquiry was a waste of time, Jeremy Vine queried why it didn’t investigate if covid originated in a Chinese lab. Because that’s not what it’s about you idiot! Even more idiotic, a caller declared the hearings a disgrace and an insult to the bereaved and hoped they didn’t get paid. I suggested she didn’t know what an inquiry was, but Phil reckoned many people didn’t want to contemplate culpability. Others had all-but forgotten about it as evinced by my visit to an elderly neighbour. When I knocked on her door in October, she felt unwell. “Can I help?” “No, I’m waiting for it to work through; it’s one of those things; you know, that thing everyone had 3 years ago and we had to wear masks.” “Covid?” “That’s it!”

Still being grilled in December, The Cock said he resigned over his affair with Gina Colander as he was accountable for not following the rules and that sooner lockdowns could have prevented school closures Jan 2021. He praised Liverpool mayor Joe Anderson for cooperation and regretted he was no longer with us – Joe tweeted he just took his pulse and was still here! Criticising Bunman for putting politics before health by failing to agree a support package, Bunman retorted the problem was with Cock. Attending in person, Bunman complained of London-centric decision-making and fellow Metro Mayor Khan whinged of exclusion.

Boris in GTFC Bobble Hat

Allegedly preparing for a year, Boris appeared at the inquiry for 2 days early December, arriving under cover of darkness at 7.00 a.m. sporting a GTFC bobble hat – much to the chagrin of Grimbarians. ‘Deeply sorry’ for pain, loss and suffering, 4 protestors brandishing papers reading ‘the dead can’t hear your apologies’ were ejected. The Bumbler admitted to male-dominated meetings and misjudging scale: “It would certainly be fair to say of me, the entire Whitehall establishment, scientific community…we underestimated the scale and the pace of the challenge…We should have collectively twigged much sooner. I should have twigged.” Defending the overall approach, he denied excess UK deaths second only to Italy, said he didn’t sack The Cock (who’d gone off to do ‘Who Dares Wins’) because he was ‘intellectually able’ and doing his best, conceded tiers didn’t work leading to lockdown #2, was perplexed at scientists’ claims of being unaware of ‘eat out to help out’ and denied advocating letting the virus rip. Not reconciled with deaths, he knew from experience how horrid it was and focused on saving lives. Regretful of Partygate, he claimed public perception of events was a million miles from what actually happened. CO losing its legal challenge to block full release of his documents, a pleased Halibut expected to receive material pronto, but Boris forgot his old phone’s passcode. Needing help to retrieve it, he couldn’t explain why messages disappeared and blathered about WhatsApp going down and coming back up again with data erased.

Rishi apologised to all sufferers but defended ‘eat out to help out’ which he didn’t believe was risky and denied not consulting medics. Panned for putting money before lives, some claimed it saved the hospitality sector, others that it made little difference. Unaware The Treasury was called a death squad, he repeatedly said ‘I don’t recall’ before the inquiry was adjourned until 2024.

Outside the inquiry, a plethora of evidence emerged, proving cronies still got away with it. A study by the Best for Britain group found government wasted £100bn over 4 years on ‘crony contracts’, ‘duff deals’ and ‘outrageous outgoings’ including £15bn on unusable PPE, £140m on the unlawful Rwanda deal, £2bn scrapping HS2, and ½ bn on unused post-Brexit custom inspection sites. £14.9bn PPE written off, plus £3.3bn for TIT, PAC found no proper controls and an inventory impossible 3 years on. Chair Meg Hillier understood pressures at the pandemic’s outset, but lax controls and finance didn’t help, creating a huge challenge of what to do with stockpiles. Finding UKHSA unable to prepare auditable accounts and Jenny Harries lacking ‘technical experience’, Jenny countered she was working with DHSC to overcome ‘inherited’ financial challenges.

On a Medi pro documentary, Michelle Moan confessed she knew about the PPE deal but it was nowt to do with her. She then informed Laura K. that while she lied, she did nothing wrong or illegal. Hubby Doug Barrowman confirmed Moan could be a beneficiary of the £60m profit:’ that’s what you do when you make money’ (splutter!) Wondering who thought the interview was a good idea, Wes Streeting railed at people getting away with ripping the country off and reiterated labour plans for a covid corruption commissioner. Amidst a criminal suit, Oliver Dowdy insisted there was no cronyism in awarding contracts. Rishi said he took the issue incredibly seriously and denied Moan had told government of her involvement. Keir called it ‘a shocking disgrace from top to bottom’.

Babylon Healthcare, which The Cock gave £20m DOH money to for the ‘doctor in your pocket’ app, went bust. There were calls to investigate Leeds company Clipper Logistics £130m subcontracts to distribute PPE. A spokesperson insisted there was no connection to boss Mr Parkin personally donating dosh to the tories. Tom Moore charity trustee and daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore was paid ‘thousands’ to attend charity events. The money went to Maytrix Group (her and hubbies’ company). Instructed to demolish the Captain Tom Foundation Building in their garden, she was reduced to using public spas.

In other news, The Met belatedly issued 24 fines over the Jingle & Mingle do and paid compo to 2 women arrested at the Clapham Common vigil for breaking coronavirus laws. Patsy Stevenson and Dania Al-Obeid didn’t know they’d met there.

Plans for annual covid boosters were unveiled in August. Despite limited info, not yet a variant of concern and only 3 UK cases, Omicron version BA.2.86 aka Pirola, caused covid and flu jabs to be brought forward to 11th September. Not being over 65, immunosuppressed or care workers, we didn’t qualify and couldn’t buy it even if we could afford to, as Mike Gammon seemed to think we should (at least not yet). The NHS whinged of short notice and begged government to plan better next year. As the number of cases rose to 36, most in a Norfolk care home (one hospitalised, all recovered), UKHSA believed there was some community transmission and urged the eligible to get jabbed. Telly doctor Chris re-emerged to tell BBC Breakfast Pirola had 30 mutations and might bypass immunity but be less hazardous to health. By November, subvariant JN.1had spread to 12 countries. Originating in Denmark, the name Pirola combined Greek letters Pi and Rho, and also happened to be Spanish Galician slang for male anatomy!

Covid and flu still rose in the UK at the end of 2023 but there was less than 2022. Meanwhile, China’s first winter without lockdown since 2020 brought low immunity, lots of flu and inundated hospitals. WHO demanded they release data. Covid vaccine mRNA developers Katalin Kariko and Drew Weissman shared the Nobel prize for medicine. Moderna planned dual vaccines by 2025, and treble ones the year after. Prompted by the emergence of long covid, further research uncovered long colds causing coughing, tummy ache and diarrhoea for up to 4 weeks. As we were ill most of December, I wondered if we had it.

The NHS’ 75th anniversary was celebrated in July with a service at Westminster Abbey, a Tom Hardy bedtime story and suspension of the hardship fund and counselling service due to overwhelming demand. Mary Parsons who administered the first covid vaccine, wished people recognised it was ‘such a treasure’: “We don’t know what we’ve lost until we lose it.” First NHS baby Aneira Thomas agreed we took it for granted. Meanwhile, millions waited for treatment as Rishi’s promise to reduce the lists floundered, alongside his other daft priorities.

*Covid inquiry areas and modules- 4 underway:

  1. Resilience and preparedness
  2. Core UK decision-making and political governance
  3. Impact on healthcare systems
  4. Vaccines and therapeutics (including anti-virals)

Others to be announced included: The care sector, PPE procurement, Test and trace, Government business and financial response, Health inequalities and the impact of Covid-19, Education, children and young people, Other public services (including frontline delivery by key workers).

**Scumbag said of MacNamara “I don’t care how it’s done but that woman must be out of our hair – we cannot keep dealing with this horrific meltdown of the British state while dodging stilettos from that cunt.” Disappointed Boris didn’t pull Cummings up on his ‘violent and misogynistic language’, MacNamara responded: ‘It’s horrible to read, and both surprising and not surprising.‘

Part 105 – Jubilation?

“The PM has repeatedly shown he is unable to uphold (British) values and the reaction of the public at St Paul’s showed they know it too” (Lucy Powell)

Imperial Nonsense

Haiga – Reflections

The wee hours of 1st June, I dreamt of sitting in an ambulance wearing a face-mask.  Odd having a covid dream after so long, was it a premonition of another wave?  OneDrive did 500,000 ‘processes’.  No idea what the heck they were, Phil managed to stop them so I could use the laptop.  Bank statements revealed my benefit increased mid-April by a mega £3.50 a week – not even enough for a pint!  Putting stuff in cupboards, a small pot fell out to land in the cafetiere.  Another one bites the dust!  Thank god for the spare.

In his annual report, Lord Geidt said whether Boris’ fine broke the ministerial code, was a ‘legitimate question’.  The Bumbler replied he took full responsibility, had apologised to The House, there was no intent to break rules, paying a FPN wasn’t a criminal offence and quitting over ‘miserable’ Partygate was irresponsible amid ‘huge pressure’ on the economy, war and a ‘massive agenda’ he was elected to deliver.  Did he mean Brexit?  Rabid Raab insisted a confidence vote wasn’t imminent.  Lisa Nandy called it ‘a damning indictment’ of the PMs leadership: “that successive ethics advisers…feel they can’t trust (his) integrity…This is a government that is rotten to the core, that the rot (sic) starts from the top.”  Airport chaos worse during half-term, Tui cancelled 200 Manchester flights.  Sharon Graham said aviation bosses slashing wages and sacking staff during the pandemic, got rich on high profits and low pay.  Reaping what they’d sown, they should hang their heads in shame.  Quite!  Why book people on holidays they couldn’t get to?  In defence, Airlines UK said they didn’t know exactly when all restrictions would be lifted nor how much travel would be possible by summer.  Raab demanded airlines, airports and ground handlers met him to discuss over-booking and ill-preparedness.  Dreadful Doris announced Bradford as UK City of Culture 2025.  Maybe they’d clean up the Odeon and fill in the big hole for the festival of dire youff poetry.

Sun tempted me to don the new dress and open windows Thursday.  News stopped for Platty Joobs, we joked the so-called pageant would be the largest handmade parade in history, remembered jubblys (still available) and invented retro 1950’s dishes such as jubilee potato – just potato.  YouGov found only 9% of young people thought the royals relevant.  Nevertheless, we broke the rule of no lunchtime telly for the flypast.  Definitely the highlight of the day’s celebrations with all the planes and helicopters, Queenie with selected family on Buck House’s balcony, seemed impressed by the forming of a ‘70’ in the sky.   Enough nonsense, I hung washing out.  The Woman Next Door assured me it wouldn’t rain but the day didn’t live up to the billing of wall-to-wall sunshine.  Increasingly convinced the forecast was a conspiracy, maybe I shouldn’t have told her that!  The only sign of royalism in the co-op a woman wearing a cheap t-shirt emblazoned with ‘happy jubilee’, Phil found an infestation of red gammons in town.  They didn’t need sun, just beer!  Making a courgette and lemon cake was easy except I grated my thumb knuckle.  Icing it the next day, I wished I’d remembered the unopened Sicilian lemon essence earlier.

Oldies at a Jeremy Vine jubilee party Friday, I guffawed at an engrossed Phil but agreed their reminiscences were sociologically interesting.  Putting the telly back on for St Paul’s chimes, we mistimed it to see Boris speaking.  He and Carrie got booed going to the thanksgiving service.  Too much after the excitement of the flypast, Queenie missed it.  Justin Welby and Randy Andy missed it as they had covid – ha! ha!  We left the bells ringing for 4 hours to visit a favoured clough.  Coming back, we found a roll of old maps at a street corner and the town centre chocka; like any weekend except for the odd bit of bunting and flags in shop windows creating a patriotic enclave near the micro pub (see Cool Placesi).

A consultation began on restoring the crown to pint glasses and pounds and ounces in shops.  Chris Philp ((aka American Psycho Patrick Bateman) said imperial measures were universally understood and would bring ‘a bit of our national culture and heritage back on the top shelf’.  Alicia Kearns called it a load of imperial nonsense, Asda boss Lord Rose called it ‘utter nonsense’, National Market Traders Fed said it’d just create hassle and historian Mary Beard termed the debate a ‘nostalgia war’.  Harry Styles at number 1, the Sex Pistols didn’t get in the top 10.  We didn’t bother digging out those Stuff The Jubilee badges!  100 days since the invasion, Russia controlled 1/5 of Ukraine.  Uncle Joe pledged more weapons and urged a change in US gun laws after mass shootings in May killed Texan primary schoolkids.

Saturday, we investigated the route of Younger Brothers’ sponsored Leeds-Liverpool canal bike ride next weekend.  Doubting we’d be up on time to cheer him, Phil was keen to visit the wonder of the ‘straight mile’ sometime.  The smattering of stalls and displays at the art launch rather underwhelming, it did include our crossings workshop poems. 

Ben The Caterpillar

We had a bash at Tetra Pak printing with The Printer.  No tracing option, I called over to my old drawing teacher nearby: “You know how rubbish my drawing is!”  She chuckled.  Using styli, I etched a lopsided butterfly and Phil a very detailed bee, the antenna drooping as he ran out of space.  He again whinged kids’ efforts were better, especially Ben The Caterpillar.  We washed ink off our hands and wandered up the riverside.

Rippling with colour, tiny bugs with transparent wings hid on leafy stems; only visible on zoomed-in photos.  Surprised to see the crap market on, we battled through a packed square to ask for lavender oil at the aromatherapy stall.  The price almost doubled in 2 years, I gave it a miss.  We found a few bargains in convenience stores, browsed the new witch bookshop (aka Harry Potter emporium) and waylaid an erstwhile pub mate going to a trad pub for a Jive Bunny disco.

Phil’s back pain worse Sunday, I thought it maybe from hunching over the etching or going out the house 2 days running.  Cold, grey and damp, we stayed in.  20 years ago we might have gone for Gin and Pimm’s at the canalside pub before nicking cake at the parish church garden party.  More sedate these days, I wrote a haigaii and tackled the landing.  Planning to clean the rug, by the time I’d hoovered and rebuilt a tripod storage basket which predictably collapsed, I was knackered.  A blissfully unaware Phil didn’t hear the clattering and swearing!  Sleep mediocre, I couldn’t remember the last time I’d had a decent night.

Shats told Sophie Raworth other countries had airport staff shortages.  Nowt to do with Brexit, there’d be no special visas for foreign workers.  Touring with Jeff Beck, a ‘humble’ Johnny Depp spent £50,000 on a Brummie curry.  After 4 days’ hard toadying by her subjects, Queenie appeared on Buck House’ balcony.  Saying she was ‘humbled’, took the biscuit!  Lucy Powell wrote in The Guardian that as labour captured British values, cherished institutions and believed our best days were ahead, they enshrined patriotic principles more than tories.  Short-term ‘red meat’ policies like selling Channel 4 and reverting to imperial measures, diminished our global reputation, cost jobs and denied us ‘moments of togetherness’.  Grimsby Town returned to league football and Wales beat Ukraine to reach the world cup.  A jubilant Gareth Bale said the ‘crazy journey’ was ‘literally what dreams are made of’.

Monday mostly spent on admin, I thanked The Researcher for posting my takeover blog and discovered the main Crossings expo was at the town hall next Saturday, for one day only until it moved elsewhere. Why such short notice?  I read a letter from NHS pensions and registered to access details online.  Unsure if getting the paltry amount now would affect my benefit, I rang and spoke to a nice Geordie.  He didn’t know but clarified I could draw on it anytime after my next birthday.  As it would go up with inflation, I decided to leave it ‘til I really needed it, which might not be long the way things were going!

Thousands stranded by cancelled flights at the end of half-term and Platty Joobs, those who made it back faced Yorkshire bus and London tube strikes.  Jesse Norman published his letter to Boris saying the Gray report showed he ‘presided over a culture of casual law-breaking’ and to describe himself as ‘vindicated’ was ‘grotesque’.  He also lambasted the Rwanda policy, selling channel 4, the ‘foolhardy and illegal’ Northern Ireland policy, banning noisy protests and no ‘sense of mission’.  In letters to the 1922 committee, MPs cited the St Pauls booing and jitters before 2 byelections.  Some post-dated until after the long weekend, the threshold of 54 was reached.  Hoping to ‘draw a line’ under it, Boris wrote to all his MPs and addressed the committee before the evening’s confidence vote.  He won by a mere 68.  As reporters stupidly stood in Downing Street at teatime, they ignored a woman in a taffeta dress posing at the shiny door and in the evening, Bella Ciao blasting in the background.  Pressure Drop Brewery reduced staff work time from 5 to 4 days for the same pay.  ONS reckoned UK coronavirus restrictions led to £140bn ‘forced savings’.  I bet tories hated that!  Twitter failing to supply fake account info, Elon Musk threatened to pull out of the deal.

Waking with a claggy throat Tuesday, I moped and almost stayed abed but didn’t.  Opening a pack of coffee, I discovered Ocado sent beans instead of granules.  Grinding them tedious, I dossed with a cuppa and started draft-posting the journal before going to the co-op.  Previously just grabbing essential milk, I red shelf labels to note a 4-pinter was almost ½ price by volume.  How had I missed that money saver?

Heartless tory Brendan Clark-Smith moaned to Jeremy Vine that people used ‘personal tragedy’ to try ousting the PM.  Speculation continuing on his future, Boris thanked cabinet for their support and vowed to get on with the people’s business, level up, cut government spending and taxes.  He told them to look at ways to reduce costs and drive reform.  PAC reported Levelling Up decisions gambled taxpayers’ money on slogans.  Will Haigh likened the PM to a mad pilot who’d locked himself in the cockpit and being inducted into the Order of the Bath, Pat Vallance was ‘disappointed’ by the rule-flouting.  Labour urged The House to vote for committee for standards in public life recommendations giving Geidt powers to initiate investigations into ministerial code breaches.  79 migrants brought ashore, 10,000 made dodgy channel crossings so far this year.  Russia in control of ½ Donbas, Vlod said ‘heroic’ defence of the region continued.  Calling him a concrete friend to Ukraine, he was jubilant Boris survived the confidence vote.  Talks failing, RMT announced another tube strike 21st June and the first national action in 30 years affecting Network Rail and 13 TOCs on 3 days later in June.  Monkeypox became a notifiable disease.

Downward Spiral

Haiga – Showtime

Overnight indigestion persisting into Wednesday, I exercised through discomfort, moved tons of clothes (drying ridiculously slowly for June) and vacuumed the living room, finding an easter chick beneath the sofa and a wine stain on the throw.  On the front bench at PMQs, Trussed-Up Liz resembled a corpse.  Saying the confidence vote showed his own party loathed the PM, Angela Eagle asked if they didn’t trust him, why should we?  Boris harped on about those imaginary high-wage, high-skilled jobs.  Ian Blackford referenced Monty Python’s Black Knight: ‘it’s only a flesh wound’.  Rather than laying into the PM, Keir dwelt on the NHS’s GP shortage, decrepit buildings, waiting times and ambulances arriving after patients died.  I hated to agree with Boris that the line of attack wasn’t working.  Goblin Saj later waded into a row on NHS Digital removing the word ‘woman’ from advice on cervical and ovarian cancer.  As if there weren’t bigger things to worry about!  Costs spiralling out of control, the HS2 West Coast mainline link was cancelled, thus rendering the project an expensive Brummie commuter line.  Esther McVey wanted it scrapped altogether.

Buzzing Flowers

I posted a journal entry and again baffled by the short notice, shared a Crossings expo poster attached to an e-mail.  Fatigue, aches and pains mitigated against a planned trip to Shopping Town but Phil wanted gentle back exercise.  Strolling down the street, he photographed doors.  A neighbour entered her house as he took a snap.  “Do you like my door?”  Noting the lovely entrance tiles, she asked did he want another pic?  “No, just the door!”  She didn’t think we were nuts at all!

We wandered terraced backstreets for more doors and spectacular grasses until needing refreshment, we got pop from the shop and sat on the riverside.  On the way back, we chatted over the wall to New Gran drinking outside the corner pub, about jubilee weekend antics and her recent birthday.  Having disappeared from her profile, I wasn’t sure of the exact date.

UK GDP stagnating, the OECD growth forecast dropped to 3.64% for 2022 and 0% for 2023. Minimum pricing in Scotland backfired as drinkers stinted on food to buy alcohol.  Was that what pub-goers round here did?  Network Rail contingency planning, the RMT said they were open to ‘meaningful discussions’.  Admitting a vacancy freeze, TfL insisted there’d be no redundancies or pension changes.  The WTO warned of a global food crisis due to the blockade.  The UN held talks in Turkey for a grain corridor and Russia demanded Ukraine removed mines first.

Shopping on Thursday, even reduced stuff was beyond budget.  I wasn’t surprised hard-up families skipped meals, according to charities.  I jested with My Mate at the till that Phil’s back problem conveniently meant he couldn’t carry shopping.  On the way back, 3 geese waddled down the road with a pair of adorable fluffy yellow goslings.  Unconsciously exclaiming ‘aww!’ I observed nobody else stopped to look – miserable gits!

Speaking in Blackpool, Boris maintained we couldn’t spend our way out of the cost of living crisis and higher wages would push up prices, leading to a 1970’s-style spiral of stagflation.  Unions decried abandonment of the high-wage, high-skilled economy pledge.  The latest wheeze to shore up support was extending ‘right to buy’.  Including housing associations, housing benefit could be used to pay off or apply for mortgages, with a ‘help to buy ISA’ – good luck saving a deposit on the crap interest rate!  He vowed a house would be built for everyone sold.  Not the 30,000 formerly promised, Keir cited a pilot in Small Heath where homes weren’t rebuilt as it cost more than what they sold for.  The re-hashed plans ‘baffling, unworkable and a dangerous gimmick’, Shelter’s Polly Neafe predicted we’d be “stuck in the same destructive cycle of selling off and knocking down 1,000s more social homes than get built.”  On QT, Psycho Bateman said every house sold meant a family off the waiting list.  Care4Calais, Detention Action and PCSU* asked the high court for an injunction to stop the first Rwanda flight.  Bonnie Prince Charlie called the policy ‘appalling’ and a caller to Jeremy Vine advocated unused boats intercept and process migrants in The Channel and blow them up!  The case lost, an appeal was due Monday.  Aslef drivers striking on different dates late June, TSSA balloted Avanti West Coast staff.  PAC criticised DHSC for burning unused PPE from the start of the pandemic.  Europe’s largest Spinosaurus was discovered on the Isle Of Wight.

Worried a headache presaged illness Friday morning, I minimised exercise and chores, posted a blog and managed an afternoon walk.  We crossed to the church garden where one gosling slept and the other hid beneath an adult’s wing, before heading up to woods and farmland (see Cool Places).  Coming back on the towpath, the Canal Dweller loudly declared he loved my Valley Life articles and a man resembling Dave Angel walked ahead of us, prompting a chorus of Moonlight Shadow.

Due to increased transmissibility of the 2 newest Omicron variants (BA.4 and BA.5), covid rates in England went up for the first time since April.  Unable to wait for council tax rebate cheques to clear, the hard-up queued to cash them at pawnbrokers, losing £15 if not turned away.  ONS found 52% used less domestic energy, 46%, bought less food and 40% made less non-essential car journeys – not such a bad thing.  Minister Heather Wheeler apologised for calling Birmingham and Blackpool godawful places, saying the comment didn’t reflect her actual views.

About to leave the house Saturday, a sudden downpour necessitated the anorak.  At the Crossings expo, we spoke to Drawing Teacher at the door and watched the photo slideshow.  Overlong with too many from organisers, Phil fidgeted as we waited for mine appear.  After seeing all but one, the laptop froze.  We left Drawing Teacher and co-volunteers fiddling with it.  The square packed with al fresco quaffers, I quipped: “the cost of living crisis biting hard!”  Phil said it felt ominous.  Did he mean the pub vibe?  No, the air.  Sure enough, another sharp shower descended.  Finding the cake I made last weekend mouldy, I sulked.  Phil fed the green stuff to crows and the pigeon squatters and bought one from the co-op to cheer me up.

Loud voices and a revving car woke me early Sunday.  Brekkie should’ve been a breeze but a splattered tomato, broken egg, blinding sun and a crashing lid stressed me out.  Phil came to the rescue.  I insisted we prioritise incomplete chores that he offered to do Thursday, then edited photos, added to the ‘spring animals’ Facebook album, made one of orange and pink flowers and watched telly.  Deciding we still liked Waterworld, we wondered if the film got panned 30 years ago because it was ahead of its time.

Commentators all agreeing everything was going to shit, CBI boss Tony Danker said households were going into recession this year; i.e., buying less shit.  Leaked before publication Monday, the food strategy contained vague words like ‘initiative’ and ‘liaison’ and no direct interventions such as sugar tax.  Getting us to eat venison was the only concrete idea.  Schools were ‘deeply disappointed’ at no extension of free meals.  22% of kids eligible, Julie McCulloch of the Assoc. of School and College Leaders said poverty affected closer to 30%.  McDonalds re-opened in Russia as Tasty: That’s It.  In the US, demos demanded gun law changes to stop the murder of kids and Google engineer Blake Lemoine claimed his AI Lamda was sentient.  It considered itself human and feared being turned off, comparing it to death.  Accused of anthropomorphism, Lemoine was suspended, but what if he was right?

Relaxation techniques failing to distract me from tummy ache, I slept fitfully and still felt iffy on Monday.  Hanging damp towels out in a breeze, neighbours sympathised with the travails of drying laundry in the unheated indoors.  Tired from activity, I dossed before posting the haiga and writing.  In the co-op later, I could hardly hear myself think – I’d forgotten how noisy it was after school!  Using leftover lentils to make surprisingly good pâté, we reminisced about hippy cafés and Phil posted a 1970’s-style art.

The UK economy shrank in April for the second month in a row, further risking recession.  The government blamed the negative -0.3% on covid recovery and extra spending.  As the Northern Ireland protocol bill was published, Boris went to wear a Hi-Viz and drive a tractor at a farm in Hayle, Cornwall and Micheal Teashop called it a new low point.  After all the palaver and whingeing last year, ALW sent a message to the last stage performance of Cinderella that it was a ‘costly mistake.’

After I wasted Tuesday morning applying hot water and defrosting spray to an ice lump in the fridge, Phil hacked it off.   Going to the garden, I tripped over the empty dustbin left at the front door and waited for the window cleaner to move his hose, snaking round the corner, so I could put the bin back.  I planted sprouted veg ends then attacked overgrown shrubs and creeping weeds.  Warmer than it looked from inside, I was about to give up with a hot thirst when Phil emerged wearing a jacket.  “Are you off somewhere?” “No.”  Realising it wasn’t cold, he took it off and helped sweep debris.  Yorkshire ostensibly the best place to see the full Strawberry Supermoon, it was so low here that it hid behind hills.

Wages fell 4.5% in the last quarter when 9% inflation was taken into account.  Unemployment was up slightly but vacancies reached a record 1.3 million.  8.8 million inactive due to older workers retiring early during the pandemic, Jon Ashworth accused ministers of ‘utter complacency’.  As persistent staff shortages fated airports to more chaos, DfT and CAA instructed airlines to cancel summer flights.  Which? told the commons business committee the industry and government must jointly shoulder blame.  Petrol at a record high 191.2p per litre, government pulled the plug on the electric car discount.  Losing their appeal, Detention Action and PCSU called sending people to Rwanda before a full judicial review in July ‘scandalous’ and the UN High Commission for Refugees said it was ‘all wrong’.  Judges assessing the move necessary to deter dangerous crossings could be construed as political.  Boris cited criticism from Charlie and CofE grandees and reproached lawyers representing migrants for ‘abetting’ criminal gangs.  Instead of the 100 deportations originally planned, Individual case hearings brought the figure down to 12, then 7 then 1.  The ECHR stepped in to completely ground the Tuesday night flight to Kigali, saying before establishing legitimacy, there was no legal route back.  Undeterred, Rwanda stood ready to welcome migrants and the UK started planning another flight.  Two refugees later claimed to have been beaten up and dragged to the plane.  Meanwhile, 440 arrived in dinghies.  Whitby council banned second homes and the unearthed Blue Peter time capsule from 1981 was opened live on This Morning to reveal a pile of slime – slime capsule!

Coronation Chicken Kiev

Haiga – Pasture-ised

The next day starting better than the last few, we made the twice-postponed trip to Shopping Town (see Cool Places 2iii).  A shame we missed PMQs, as data showing the UK had the second lowest growth rate globally with only Russia worse, Keir went on the attack.  He obviously took Rayner’s advice to ‘put more welly into it’!  Boris was rebuked for claiming labour were on the side of people traffickers.  Nasty Patel Believed the Rwanda plot was fully compliant with domestic and international obligations.  Disappointed and surprised by the ECHR decision, she blamed the ‘usual suspects’ and the opposition for thwarting her efforts against the willy of the people.  She told MPs prohibitions on flights to Kigali wasn’t an absolute bar and those ordered to be freed would be tagged while relocation was ‘progressed’.  Furious tories called for secession from the meddling ECHR.  Did they not know The Council of Europe was set up after WWII and had nowt to do with the EU?  And I bet they didn’t mind the ECHR intervening in the case of captured Brits fighting in the Donbas sentenced to death!  Yvette Coop called it ‘government by gimmick’.  Yep, gimmicks for gammons!  Lord Geidt resigned.  Not saying why in a short public statement, a letter to Boris disclosed later, indicated the final straw wasn’t Partygate but being asked to offer a view on government measures risking ‘a deliberate and purposeful breach of the ministerial code’.  Deemed to concern tariffs on Chinese steel, Phil thought it bogus.  A fortnight later, government extended the tariffs for 2 years, against WTO rules.  The EU triggered further legal action over the NI protocol.  Maros Sefcovic said the UK’s unilateral act had ‘no legal nor political justification’.  One of the biggest Anglo-Saxon burial sites was uncovered on the HS2 route.  At least some good came out of the glorified commuter line!

Cleaning the bedroom Thursday, Phil crawled under the bed to screw a detached leg in place, despite his back. After hoovering, I worked on the journal and pegged bedding out.  The Woman Next Door and a friend chatted on her doorstep then promptly went inside –  did they fear eavesdropping?  In the quiet co-op, my basket totalled just short to use a coupon.  The cashier let me grab one more thing for a low-cost shop.  I trudged home in blazing sun and persuaded Phil out to the garden.  Clearing another debris pile, we observed the myriad life including what he called springtails.  Sure they were to blame for my bites, he thought it unlikely as they were a kind of shrimp.  Fatigued and overheated again, I lay down.

Expecting GDP to drop by 0.3% this quarter, BOE sent a letter to Rishi stating the obvious on a succession of large economic shocks and raised the interest rate to 1.25%.  British Chambers of Commerce moaned it wouldn’t address the global causes of increased business costs and labour worried of the impact on families.  Shutting down ½ the rail network, Shats said strikes endangered thousands of jobs and promised legislation to enable the use of agency workers.  Unions said that was unsafe and recruitment firms fretted they’d be held responsible for putting temps crossing pickets in harm’s way.  On QT, the useless red wall tory said nowt and Thangam Debonnaire claimed the Rwanda ploy already wasn’t working as it didn’t deter dangerous channel crossings.  Former ethics adviser Alex Allen told Newscast failure to sack Patel wasn’t the reason he resigned but didn’t explain what was.  Sad his mate Geidt was put in a difficult position, he had no plans to re-apply for the post – currently on hold.

The laptop excruciatingly slow after a restart Friday, I didn’t get very far drafting blogs.  As I hung another load on the line, The Woman Next Door outside reading, remarked I was always washing.  “No; just making use of the good weather.”  We walked up to a hillside settlement, enjoying a picnic en route (See Cool Places) and returned via the predictably rammed town centre.  Boozing gammons deterred us from a pint.  Sweaty and smelly, I showered and lay down to rest.  Officially a heatwave, it was greyly muggy when I fetched the laundry in.  A dog-walking neighbour agreed it felt like it might rain – it didn’t; for almost a week.

The jubilee bank holiday was blamed for coronavirus spreading across the UK.  More hospitalisations but low ICU cases and death, total fatalities stood at 179,363.  Boris avoided a conference organised by red wall tories in Doncaster by going to Ukraine, prompting the moniker Chicken Kiev.  Newspaper ‘I’ aligned his calls to Vlod with dates bad news broke including Partygate and the confidence vote.  Paul Scuzzball said airport staff should work longer hours.  Kate Bush’s Running Up That Hill knocked Harry Styles off number 1 thanks to Stranger Things.  Phil advocated burning a gannet colony infested with bird flu on Bass Rock.

Listening to music Saturday, Black Star made me sad.  Not because it was Bowie’s last album but because it was 6 years since the Brexit vote, Jo Cox’s murder, the death of Eldest Brother and Mum going into hospital.  I put something cheerier on, edited photos and went to the co-op, spotting a reduced chicken and an old pub mate for the third time in as many weeks after not doing so for years.  He did say that would keep happening!  Served by a young man at the kiosk, My Mate on the adjacent till stared into space.  Not bored, but having a moment.  A merc indicating to turn right stopped for me at the zebra and parked on the street below.  As I caught up, Councillor Friend got out.  “I didn’t recognise you in that posh car!”  It was her boss’, who lived in Spain.  She’d given it a run to go canvassing in sunny Wakefield (unlike the overcast upper valley).

Plans to tag migrants arriving by boat was condemned for treating those fleeing persecution as criminals. New ambassador for women’s health, Dame Lesley Regan wanted one-stop community hubs and new cost of living tsar David Buttress said private companies must help with rising prices.  Saying they did what they could, nice capitalist Richard Walker couldn’t increase wages but gave staff an ‘unprecedented’ 15% discount on Iceland products.

Although wobbly first thing Sunday, I arrived at the market slightly earlier than usual.  Stopping to chat with a neighbour untangling roots from a large pot, we had no idea why her normally friendly dog ferociously barked at me.  Besides knobbly veg, I found 2 books in the phone-box and bargain herbs in the convenience store.  After washing the filthy veg, I collapsed on the sofa to recover and write.

Told on Sunday Morning airline bosses said he didn’t know what he was talking about, Shats sniggered and side-stepped blame for opening and closing borders during the pandemic.  After accusing unions of bribing rail workers to strike, he took no responsibility even though he’d not spoken to them for a month, erroneously griped they’d gone on a demo instead of meeting bosses, refused to intervene, dismissed RMT calls for him to do so as a stunt and said there was no class war.  Keir reckoned he ‘fed off’ the division.  TSSA complained TOCs hadn’t shared plans to shut ticket offices.  New army boss Gen Sanders wrote to all soldiers that we needed an army ready to fight Russia.  Heatwaves saw 400C temperatures in Europe and monsoon floods killed at least 70 in Bangladesh.  US kids aged over 6 months ridiculously qualified for covid jabs.

Chilly after a cold night, Monday became warm and sunny.  I ignored a slight headache to strip the chicken carcass before putting food waste out.  B&B Man stood on the communal wall pegging sheets, hampering recycling bin access.  Still struggling after lunch, Phil suggested sitting in the sun.  I snapped back shopping needed doing and some help would be good.  He hung washing up while I went to the co-op for a heavy load and recovered with a cuppa outside.  Phil joined me the garden bench, made gazebo-like by overhanging freesia.  I lazily pulled at weeds and pruned, almost bumping into The Widower on his fourth walk-past.  I then attacked an overgrown buddleia on the adjacent steps.  Phil helped sweep before a doze amid the sounds of birds and bees, interrupted by Phil chuntering and Walking Friend’s hello, on her way to meet The Poet.  I sleepily lay on the bed and briefly nodded off with book in hand.  Phil sighing loudly in the evening, I asked what was up.  He wasn’t making enough money.  The war actually partly responsible for Shitterstock work drying up, he decided to give up the Leeds studio.  With hindsight, he could’ve done so ages ago but who knew things would be this shit 2 years on?  He rang the council next morning to arrange to vacate within 3 months.  Coronation Chicken was a couple of weeks late but made a delicious retro dinner.

2 million with long-covid, Kings College found 50% less chance from Omicron as opposed to Delta.  Sufferer Terence Burke won a case to be classed as disabled, clearing the way for an unfair dismissal claim.  Last ditch talks to avert strikes fruitless, Psycho Patrick Bateman defended Boris on Newsnight, calling rail practices Spanish and 19th century.  Still refusing to intervene, banging on about modernisation could be seen as incitement.  Halfords offered free bike hire.  Luggage piling up, Heathrow imposed a cap.  EasyJet cut summer flights by 10% and Ryanair promised rescue flights.  Their Stanstead base not as badly hit, O’Leary attributed ground staff shortages to Brexit.

Slightly more sleep led to a better start Tuesday.  A waning half-moon and sun blazing through the landing window, I wondered was it a solstice phenomenon?  English Heritage ludicrously placed netting on Stonehenge to bar nesting jackdaws.  We researched local standing stones for our own midsummer jaunt but went to a clough instead.  Even in the shade, we struggled with heat and dehydration (see Cool Places).

On the first day of the strike, Keir wrote to shadow ministers telling them not to join RMT picket lines.  Diane Abbot was one of several labour MPs to defy him.  A Cloudflare crash affected millions of coffee-cuppers working from home.  Metro reported on Londoners struggling to work on buses.  Lucky for them they weren’t Arriva, in the 3rd week of striking up north.  NEU to ballot teachers on possible industrial action in the autumn unless offered a pay rise above 3%, NHS, fire and postal workers could also strike, after new inflation figures Wednesday and Boris babbling about ‘staying the course’ but promising a return to triple lock pensions meaning a 9.1% increase.  Where was the parity?  Unite said ‘cost of living’ bonuses up to £3,000 offered to Lloyds and Rolls Royce staff, fell short of what was needed.

No Reasons To Be Cheerful

Haiga – High Summer

After lengthily cleaning the kitchen Wednesday, I collapsed on the sofa for PMQs.  Not answering a question on allegedly requesting an official appointment for Carrie, Boris wittered about high employment.  Keir wanted to know how many meetings ministers held to avert strikes?  An evasive PM insisted they were the party of the railways.  Keir answered the question – none – yet Boris had time to attend a lavish do and sell a £120,000 meeting.  To claims the government blamed everyone else, contradicted each other on pay rises and cuts, rolled over on banker’s bonuses and slashed nurses’ pay, Boris attacked picketing labour MPs and spouted the usual crud on taking tough decisions.

Hanging upstairs rugs on the line to expunge dust, The Widower happened to pass.  “Do you have a carpet-beater?” “Somewhere.”  While he looked, I used a telescopic duster and Phil used his fists.  The Widower not finding the beater, I said: “We’re improvising. Phil’s pretending it’s Boris Johnson, or any other tory of your choice!”  Old upholstery spray cleaner meant for cars was effective and quick-drying in the hot sun.  Refreshing with homemade pop, I greeted The Decorator backing into the last parking space.  The Woman Next Door then stopped right in front of us.  In the middle of doing stuff, I politely asked her not to.  She said she’d just unload and left the engine running, forcing me to move from the bench.  A lovely early evening, the sun briefly reached the nearer bench.  I sat with the Kindle watching news until the sun moved out of range and BBC London came on.  Planning mushroom pasta for dinner, 2/3 of a value box had gone fuzzy.  Not a bargain if you chucked most of them!  I thought substitute chilli was ample for 2 days but there wasn’t much left.  Phil denied being a greedy git.

NAO reckoned Ofgem added £94 to every household gas bill by letting weak suppliers into the market, leading to collapse.  After accusing the government of lying on Newsnight, Mick Lynch asked Carole Gammone on Jeremy Vine ‘what are you even saying?’  Quite!  She was in favour of the pensions rise as nobody could live on £250 a week.  They and me, lived on half that!  Only 50% of northern trains running between strike days, TSSA settled for an extra 7.2% but RMT talks broke down. Lynch said Shats wrecked negotiations ‘by not allowing Network Rail to withdraw their letter threatening redundancy for 2,900 of our members’.  Until the government unshackled them and TOCs, there’d be no settlement.  Delightfully-named Network Rail negotiator Tim Shovellor insisted the majority of job losses would come from ‘voluntary redundancy and natural wastage’.  Were his ancestors steam engine firemen?  A clause was hastily added to the Bill of Rights to ignore ECHR injunctions before Rabid Raab presented it to the commons (ref Rwanda).  Vaccine-derived polio virus detected in London sewers sparked a nationwide hunt for the culprit and calls for parents to get their sprogs immunised.  An Afghanistan earthquake killed 1,000.  The useless Taliban halted a search for survivors the next day.

Though warm and still Thursday, cloudy skies deterred me from painting windowsills.  Hefting shopping back from the co-op, I was startled by a dog behind a hippy van on the street below barking.  Not at me but Next-Door-But-One ahead of me on the steps.  Already nervy, my bad mood intensified when the handle on the so-called bag for life broke, tumbling loose mushrooms to the floor.  Rain came in the form of a light shower at siesta time, lulling me into a 15 minute snooze.

Brexit Day Cartoon

On the 2nd day of the rail strike, the local mill café owner whinged of no customers to Look North and Kwasi Modo said using agency staff wouldn’t undermine safety.  Unions disagreed.  BA check-in staff threatened peak season strikes at Heathrow if pay reductions made during covid restrictions weren’t reinstated.  Not even asking for an increase, bosses claimed some staff were offered the 10% back – yeah, managers! 

No bunting or parties to celebrate 6 years since the referendum results were declared, I turned off Newscast when Nasty Nigel appeared and found an apt cartoon for Brexit Island asking: how’s that going?  Meanwhile, the EU started a 10-year process to admit Ukraine.  A UK rise in racially-aggravated assault was attributed to Euro 2020.  Over the pond, Owen Diaz turned down $12m compensation for racism at Tesla.

Friday, I tackled the kitchen runner.  The spray ineffective, woven chickens re-appeared after applying liquid cleaner.  I went outside in sultry afternoon warmth before more rain came (fine drizzle rather than predicted yellow thunder, a distant rumble was heard) and hacked at rhododendron near the back wall, accidentally lopping off quince branches.  Resting was disturbed by Shed Boy and  mate communicating unintelligibly.

An estimated 23% rise on the previous week, 1:35 with covid worried health experts.  The unjabbed were urged to get one, the elderly to be boosted, and the infected to not spread it.  Imperial College found vaccines saved 19.8 million lives; in rich countries.  The tories lost by-elections in Wakefield to Labour and Tiverton where Lib Dems overturned a seismic 24,000 margin.  A ‘distressed and disappointed’ Oliver Dowdy resigned as party chair at 5.30 a.m.  Hobnobbing at CHOGM** in Kigali while Carrie and Camilla had a nice chat, Boris said he’d keep going and address concerns of voters who wanted him to get on with the job.  Err, no; they wanted you to jog on!  Dreadful Doris tweeted he faced the worst cost of living crisis since WW11.  Perhaps that was the one preceding Halo.  Reviewing the new Paramount+ series, Jeremy Vine queried why in futuristic sci-fi’s, the world was always a desert – duh!  National debt interest reached a record £7.6 billion.  Outgoing CBI chair Bilimoria advised tax cuts.  The US supreme court ended the constitutional right to abortion.  Pro-lifers rejoiced, others warned of back-street terminations and death.  Together with allowing gun-toting in the streets and coalpits to choke the air, The Trump might as well still be in charge.  A choked Amy Garcia announced the sudden death of former Look North colleague Harry Gration.

Shed Boy noisily scraping out weeds woke me early Saturday.  Inevitably followed by pressure washing, we’d wondered how long they’d let the joyful blooms flourish!  At The Great Get-Together in the park, we perused stalls, picked up worthy freebies and joked with Councillor Friend and her Partner that a unit of beer on alcohol measuring cups wasn’t even a ½ pint.  When did that happen?  Maybe the cup should be expandable or telescopic!  Not much for adults, no free cake left and music deafening, we headed to the quiet of a riverside bench and searched for fish, espying piles of rubbish instead.  Gusts of wind and spots of rain ominous, we went home along the canal.  At the river bridge, trout swam in the languorous shallows topped by car pollution.  Shed Boy sweeping up, I asked if he’d take detritus I’d cleared from the steps along with his stuff to the tip.  He said yes, if he got someone to take him.  Thanking him, I silently queried why he couldn’t use his own transport.  As the sun re-emerged, I topped up the binbags with more veg matter from the steps.

On Sunday Morning, Swiss Toni spouted the usual tory crap.  Sharon Graham called David Lammy refusing to support BA strikes a new low for labour.  Politics North extrapolated from the Wakefield by-election, most Yorkshire seats turning red.  The laptop inexplicably turning itself off overnight, I restarted to post my brother’s birthday card on Facebook and write a haiga.  Sewing the rest of the day made my fingers sore.

As Russia resumed bombing Kyiv, the G7 meeting in Bavaria put a price cap on their oil, banned their gold and joked about emulating Putin’s posing.  Putin advised working on themselves before baring all.  Boris bantered with Justin on who had the bigger plane.  Chris Bryant called his hubris deranged.  Prince Charlie accepting $3m cash donations in carrier bags from Qatar raised questions of undue influence.  A suspected terrorist attack killed 2 men in Oslo.  Pride events cancelled, some defiantly marched a couple of days later.

Barely able to keep my eyes open, it took a while to sleep and I woke after 2 hours feeling woozy and my Monday morning, I had pain across my forehead.  I managed to fetch the laptop to post the haiga and write in bed.  Depressed by debilitation, maybe it wasn’t such a surprise as I’d done many different things in the 6 weeks since the last bout, which was quite good-going.  Fetching my lunch, an empty cereal box balancing on the tray for the recycling pile, fell under my feet on the stairs.  Unable to move, I shouted for Phil’s help and fell back in bed exhausted.  He disposed of rubbish and went to the co-op for basics plus reduced ham.  Repose disturbed by the now daily ritual of geese in the street below, I looked out to see the growing goslings picking at moss between cobbles, as adults kept watch for cats and cars and Shed Girl tried to tempt them with grass for phone pics.

A recommended 15% rise in legal aid fees not implemented, barristers went on strike.  A juniors salary of £12,000 more like that of a barista, did they mix up the job descriptions?  Cruise missiles killed at least 20 when they hit a shopping centre in Kremenchuk.  Decrying a war crime, Vlod asked G7 for more defence systems.  In response to Russian aggression, relevant leaders went straight from Bavaria to Madrid to agree a boost to NATO’s Allied Reaction Force on the eastern flank.  Boris pledged UK military spending would increase to 2.5% of GDP by 2028.  In Westminster, the NI protocol bill passed the first commons vote and Dreadful Doris hosted a summit of broadband and mobile providers who made ‘stay connected’ pledges.  A man shot dead an Atlanta Subway worker over too much mayo on his butty and 48 migrants boiled to death in an abandoned truck outside San Antonio.  Another 2 later died in hospital and 3 men were arrested.

Rarely rising from my sickbed Tuesday, diggers beeping ‘stand clear’ and sirens screeching down the valley joined the squawking geese to hamper rest.  Phil catered.  His special omelette with ham, mushrooms and cheese was reminiscent of Greek holiday lunches!

2021 Census results showed the population in England and Wales grew 6%, less than expected, with 1:6 over 65.  Baroness Heather Hallett began the delayed Covid-19 public inquiry.  7,000 in hospital, Jeremy Vine and Storm both had covid.  Stand-ins asked was it time to reintroduce measures?  Nobody would take any notice!  Doctor Sarah advised face-masks in crowded places.  MP/barrister turned commentator Gerry Hayes said the court system had ‘fallen apart’ and the cabinet were spineless.  With ‘substantial and persistent concerns’ The Met were on special measures.  That didn’t stop 20 cops arresting Stop Brexit man Steve Bray, on the day the Police, Crime, Sentencing & Courts Act came into force.  BMA members urged to ‘channel their inner Mick Lynch’, it was hard to sympathise with GPs on £100k demanding an extra 30%.

After a bad night, I watched PMQs in bed Wednesday.  The Bumbler still galivanting, Rabid Raab faced Rayner in Kung Fu Panda heels.  Spouting the usual codswallop, he cheekily winked and jibed at her.  She asked, with Boris vowing to stay on until 2030, would the party prop him up that long?  Raab quipped he’d last longer than her leader to which she retorted, we couldn’t stomach him for 8 minutes, never mind 8 years.  She was closer to the truth, as it turned out.

Unexpectedly charged another month’s studio rent, Phil stopped the direct debit and headed for Leeds. I thought it’d do him good to feel active, but he was so skint I had to give him the train fare.  Seeing him off, the trellis strew the pavement again.  It wasn’t even windy!  I shooed him away and went out in my dressing gown to prop the dam thing up, glad the weather was slightly better than the previous two days.  Left to my own devices, I brooded on the dire financial situation to be interrupted by Phil phoning to ask if I needed anything from Wilkos.  I told him to get glue to fix a fragile old book I was reading.  Stocks so low customers asked were they closing down and a 9 week wait for supplies, was it from Ukraine?  Fuzzy from another short afternoon sleep, I juggled with dinner, irked when Phil rang from the return train.  Forgetting to eat and drink all day, he scoffed food and gulped liquids.  He’d made friends with a guy from an old Leeds rock band who took loads of the pesky furniture for his music studio.

After 6 months suspension on full pay, a written warning and a FPN for partying during lockdown, Sheffield council boss Kate Josephs apologised and returned to work.  Harriet Harman would lead the Privileges Committee investigation into Boris’ lies.

During a terrible night, external humming and brightness vied with the stupid flashing laptop.  Mediation led to fitful sleep.  Thus Thursday started badly.  Phil was also tired, from lugging furniture.  Off to Leeds again, I griped at lack of communication and not being told anything until reaching crisis point. “I didn’t want to worry you.”  No warning even more stressful, I asked: “Were you going to wait ‘til we were literally choosing between heating and eating?”  Considering options, he searched for local part-time jobs.  What the hell was a food production operative?  Depressed because he’d tried hard to make self-employment work, he declared himself a loser.  “No you’re not. You couldn’t know about covid or the war.”  I made him a butty to take, nipped out to peg fusty towels on the line and went back to bed.  Very warm, I opened the window as the racket which had plagued me since Monday abated and picked up the laptop when Phil called from Leeds, panicking he’d left an empty wheelie case in the park.  Irked I’d have to go for it, I saw it near the door and rang him back. “Sorry, my mind’s all over the place.” “Calm down,” I screamed ironically.  Mollified by an apology, I said at least he hadn’t lost the case.  Too jittery to write, I hoovered the bedroom and brought the towels in as a woman walked a beautiful shiny black Labrador ‘puppy in training’ past.

Chris The Pincher resigned as tory whip after getting pissed and groping men at the Carlton Club.  Labelled a Pound Shop Harvey Weinstein in 2017 by Alex Story, an official complaint and suspension from the party came the next day.  Piers Corbyn got a fine for organising the Trafalgar Square anti-lockdown demos.  An upgrade to the Trans-Pennine line between Huddersfield and Dewsbury was finally announced – already pretty good, what about the crap line we relied on?  Ukraine claimed to have re-taken the tiny but strategic Black Sea Snake Island.  Russia said they withdrew as a gesture of goodwill.  Unlikely to alleviate the grain crisis, nobody was jubilant.

* PCSU – Public Communications Service Union

**CHOGM – Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting

References:

i. My Cool Places blog: https://hepdenerose.wordpress.com/

ii. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

iii. My Cool Places 2 blog:: https://wordpress.com/posts/hepdenerose2.wordpress.com

Part 104 – Unbelievable!

“As I have said for years…it’s far more expensive to be poor. Now the experts in data gathering are backing that up” (Jack Munroe)

Disingenuity

Haiga – Salad Daze

We spent May Day hairdressing.  It was good to have my dull rainbow hair coloured in, but I strained my shoulder showering dye off.  Panicked by alarming grill noises later, I jarred the same shoulder which also sported an itchy insect bite.

Bank Holiday Monday dull and damp, at least it wasn’t pouring like a year ago.  I forced myself to exercise the shoulder, did boring chores and went to the co-op, seeing New Gran on her way to the community pub.  “For a change from the usual?” I joked. “Well, it is a bank holiday; not that I need an excuse!” she laughed.  She was dithering over buying a painting for her older daughter who recently turned 30 and gave birth.  Two men sat twiddling their fingers in the art shop, wouldn’t let her in.  They obviously didn’t need her custom!

Scotland closed covid testing sites; those with fever were instructed to stay home.  The weekend awash with Ploughboy memes referencing Neil Parish, and accounts of a ‘sexist of the year’ award at No. 10’s Christmas party, Lindsay Hoyle wanted radical action to change parliament’s ‘cosy culture of debauchery’.  Jeremy Vine discussed ‘sexism training’ for MPs.  “They don’t need any!” chortled Phil.  After an 11 day pause in dinghy crossings, 254 migrants arrived, making a total of 7,240 for the year so far, treble that for the same period 2021.  100 civilians were evacuated from Mariupol before a major onslaught and Serge told Italian telly Hitler had Jewish blood and the ‘biggest antisemites are Jews’.  Israeli counterpart Yair Lapril hit back: “only Nazis are Nazis” and demanded the Russian ambassador apologise.

Completing a postal ballot for the local election I couldn’t remember whether to detach the declaration.  The step-by-step guide made it sound more complicated than it was.  Though tired, I went to post it Tuesday afternoon and bought cough drops.  My head heavy after Sweet Shop Man whinged about prices, I trudged home.  Despite fatigue, I got little sleep.

On BBC Breakfast, Keir took responsibility for a colleague originally saying Rayner wasn’t at Beergate but accused tories of mud-slinging ahead of elections – it didn’t compare to Downing Street’s industrial scale shenanigans.  As a curry house back-tracked on claims 30 dishes were delivered to the Durham office, Richard Holden urged local police to re-investigate.  Meanwhile on GMB, Boris promised more help with the cost of living but referenced the previously announced phased-in support.  Challenged on 77 year old Elsie riding buses to avert fuel costs, he lauded the 24-hour freedom pass as his idea.  Jon Ashworth spluttered: “It is utterly shameful that pensioners have no choice but to sit on the bus all day to avoid racking up heating bills at home…to respond by boasting about the London bus pass reveals just how out of touch this narcissistic prime minister is.” BP’s first quarter profits £5 billion, they expected to pay £1 bn extra tax and invest £18 bn in North Sea oil and gas and renewables by 2030.  2 days later, Shell announced profits of £7.2 bn, almost triple for 2021, and pledged to invest £20-25 bn in the UK over the next decade.  Greenpeace joined calls for a windfall tax, to “ease pressure on households feeling the pinch and reduce our dependence on oil and gas.”  Shit-show P&O restarted passenger ferries.  On video link to the Ukraine parliament, Boris rebounded Vlod’s ‘finest hour’ words and promised a £300 m aid package.  Vlod warned the Black Sea blockade threatened a world grain crisis.  UEFA banned Russian teams for the next season.  In court, families began a class action law suit for ‘inordinate and unreasonable delays’ processing visas for the Homes for Ukraine scheme, ex-pub landlord Tarek Namouz allegedly sent covid loans to Isis, anti-lockdowner Lance O’Connor got fined £50 for holding up a makeshift gallows outside parliament and Notts police chief Caroline Henry was clocked speeding 5 times in 12 weeks.

No PMQs Wednesday because of the elections, I enjoyed the peace, ordered vitamin D and texted Walking Friend who was about to go on a jolly in the lakes.  Continuing the spring clean, I heaved the study sideboard out to vacuum dust clumps and added coins to bank bags I’d stashed months ago.

Blaming fuel rises not the war affecting fertiliser and feed costs, Useless George suggested as aggressive supermarket competition kept prices low on ‘things like chicken and poultry’ (sic), we buy cheaper own-brand foods.  Lambasting the patronising and ‘woefully out of touch government’, Pat McFadden said they had ‘no solution to the cost of living crisis’ and Wendy Chamberlain said they were ‘living in a parallel universe’.  Money Saving Expert had already advised downshifting a brand to cut shopping bills by 30%.  Way ahead of you, Martin!  The UK implemented 63 new sanctions, vetoed service provision but not lawyering, and the EU would implement a ban on Russian oil ‘in an orderly fashion’ Natürlich!

Oversleeping Thursday, I rushed to do washing before an Ocado delivery.  Arriving a tad late, the grumpy driver unbelievably queried why he’d bothered coming at all!  Waiting to peg sheets on the line, the window cleaner’s van blocked access and his hose snaked up to the houses opposite.  As I hauled the groceries down, a stupid bottle carrier broke and beer smashed on the floor.  Mopping up a lake, I slid and got broken glass in my hand.  Meanwhile, the window cleaner did our front then disappeared again!  I waited a vexing full hour to get the van shifted.  Before Phil went voting, I recited useful do’s and don’ts according to the BBC such as: take your kids but don’t let them write on the ballot paper, vote if you’d been drinking but not be disruptive, and not take selfies.  Nobody in the polling station, he chatted to Counsellor Friend in town, trying not to swear when yummy mummies approached.  She won by a stonking majority.  Tories lost hundreds of seats countrywide to liberal and labour gains including 2 London councils and the new South Yorks and Cumberland authorities.  Keir declared it a major turning point but the BBC unbelievably tried to spin their wins as losses.  Boris vowed the government was “absolutely determined to keep going with every ounce of compassion and ingenuity that we have”  That’s about an ounce then, you disingenuous twat!

I lodged a refund request and complaint with Ocado, and thought we might as well get the rest of the shopping done to leave Friday free.  Too tired to do anything on returning from the co-op, I whined at a crap day.  I did find a spark of energy early evening to sow sowed wildflower seeds.  Phil popped out to enjoy birds’ evensong and spot wild garlic on a neighbour’s steps.

The polls shut, Fiona Bruce bizarrely pointed out the QT audience mainly voted tory.  Nowt new there then!  Dismissing a windfall tax, disgraced-by-porn ex-minister Damian Green insisted oil companies already paid more corporation tax.  The Black (Brexit) Farmer got booed saying Boris delivered.  Louise Haigh maintained there was a vast difference between Partygate and Beergate and police were clear labour broke no laws.  Unfortunately for her, the investigation re-opened the next day in light of new evidence.  Mr. Green said nowadays, MPs were more honest about transgressions and blamed wider society – aka twitter.  Screenwriter Jack Thorne said ministers were definitely in a bubble with no experience of real life, and should face manslaughter charges for excess care home deaths when covid tests were restricted early in the pandemic.  The Brexit Farmer stuck to the line of lack of information leading to bad decisions.   Ms. Haigh reminded us Jon Ashworth warned of the dangers of discharging patients early 2020 but they didn’t care.  During droney election results, I retired to lie in a stupor, have a long dream and wake in the early hours.

The WHO attributed epidemic levels of obesity in Europe partly to covid lockdowns.  An estimated 15 million covid deaths globally, triple those officially recorded, in India it was 10 times more and above average in the UK.  As it was announced London’s Elizabeth Line would open 4 years late on 24th May in time for the queens’ platinum jubilee, Shats threatened to refer Khan to the electoral commission.  Calling him a sourpuss, Khan retorted it was up to TfL, not the mayor.  650 Yorkshire Arriva bus drivers offered a below inflation pay rise of 4.1%, voted to strike indefinitely from 6th June.  Warning of contracted growth in the last quarter of 2022 and a recession in 2023, the BoE interest rate rose to 1%.  The pound promptly fell against the dollar and euro.  A semi-conductor shortage led to less car production.  Were they from Ukraine too?

The weather too crap to go out Friday, I hoovered the landing, prompting a cactus on the windowsill to fall apart.  Phil tackled a bathroom sink blockage.  So much for a fun day!

Based on random testing, ONS reported UK covid infections down 32% in the past week.  Bill Gates outlined future plans for a global pandemic response on The One Show, which could stop the spread within 100 days, according to his book.  Convenience chain McColl’s set to collapse threatening 1,100 shops and 16,000 jobs, a Morrison’s takeover was confirmed Monday.

Unbelievably sleeping 7 hours straight, a muffled knock seeped into my dreams Saturday.  As Phil got up, I vaguely grasped it’d be the vitamins.  Glancing at the clock, I was shocked at the hour and still tired despite extra kip.  I stayed home, writing and gardening.  Sunday, we went in search of bluebells.  The nearby wood didn’t disappoint with an extensive spread.  We also got a first glimpse of kids but no lambs.  We returned via the towpath where a goose couple herded their fluffy brood, ducked in the convenience store and hurried through the packed square. (For more details, see Cool Placesi)

Sinn Fein won a historic victory in Northern Ireland with the neutral Alliance Party third.  The DUP blocked reforming Stormont and Rabid Rabb threatened to rip up the Brexit protocol.  As it emerged the Beergate curry was planned and Keir was accused of ‘quaffing’ San Miguel, Nandy called him ‘Mr. Rules’, said he’d self-isolated 6 times and probably knew the law better than the cops.  The next day Keir and Rayner said they’d do the decent thing if fined.  Tod Bowley of LA Dodgers, bought Chelsea FC.  In a classic Leeds United move, a sliding tackle got Luke Ayling sent off.

Supercilious

Haiga – Uncaptured

Phil was contacted by a well-known retailer with a view to selling prints in their flagship store.  The gig paid 5%.  Stingy, but better than 0% or 10 cents from Shitterstock.  He spent Monday selecting brutalist photos for a proposal.  I posted a haigaii, an album of bluebells (slightly more popular than the dandelions), worked on the journal and went to the co-op.  On the way back, New Gran walked down the street with her mum behind, and daughter and grandchild in front.  Four generations in neat chronological order!

The cost of living biting hard, 1:7 households skipped meals.  Staff issues, a lack of Border Farce guards and a travel spike, led to queues outside Birmingham airport, EasyJet removing seats from planes and Shats  allowing new recruits to start training before passing security checks.  Swiss Toni met Northern Irish party leaders in Belfast.  The DUP repeated a refusal to appoint a deputy first minister until the protocol issue was resolved; Micheal Teashop said it could be.  Over the weekend, 60 civilians were killed sheltering in the village school in Bilohorivka.  On Russian Victory Day, Putin said NATO posed ‘unacceptable threats’ but didn’t declare ‘all-out war’ as promised.  Saying he told fairy tales, Ben Wally compared the despot to a Nazi and pledged another £1.3 million to Ukraine.  Protestors waved Ukrainian flags and shouted ‘murderer!’ at Russian ambassador to Poland, Sergey Andreev.  Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zenlyana had to flee after chucking borscht at him.  Vlod awarded Jack Russel Patron a military service medal for unearthing 200 explosives.

Tuesday, I posted the journal’s April entry, got rid of the dead cactus, reused the pot and chanced sprouting celery in the greenhouse, protected from slugs by the last of a roll of copper tape.

His mum suffering ‘episodic’ mobility issues, Bonny Prince Charlie read the 8 mins 45 secs queens speech.  Even he looked bemused in ridiculous Admiral of The Fleet regalia. Starting with plans for high-wage, high-skill jobs, it went onto list a load of stuff we already knew and a pile of guff on Brexit. Predictably no immediate help, Keir called it: “The latest chapter in a pathetic response to the cost of living crisis.” The IPPR said it was ‘cosmetic surgery for an economy facing a heart attack’ and Child Poverty Action lamented ‘a far cry from what struggling families needed to hear’. The CBI welcomed ambitions for a growing economy.  Well, the capitalist would, wouldn’t they? The 2-year programme belied speculation of an early general election.  Phil reckoned it was because Boris knew tories were too spineless to get rid of him.  I thought he was the spineless one, having taken out everything that upset back-benchers.

Aberdeen University and King’s College found diabetes trebled the risk of severe covid and doubled that of death but could decline if well-managed.  in an effort to disrupt supply lines, Odesa was pounded.  Russia’s modern precision weapons depleted, old Soviet stock was more likely to miss intended targets.

Waking with tummy ache Wednesday, I struggled on.  Crap morning weather, depression and fatigue mitigated against a planned trip to big town.  I moped.  Despite Phil’s efforts to cheer me up and the sun coming out, I didn’t want to go anywhere or do anything.  In the end, I finished spring cleaning the study, left him to hang pictures on dust-free walls, steamed winter coats and asked for help putting them away.  Normally doable by standing on the bed, he fetched the ladders.  When I said even I could do it with ladders, a tiff ensued, worsening my exhaustion.

On BBC Breakfast, a supercilious Glove-Puppet dismissed the idea of an emergency budget and affected silly voices: “It’s an example of some commentators trying to take a statement that is commonsensical, turning it into – capital letters – a big news story, when The Treasury quite rightly say ‘calm down’ ” (in a Scouse accent).  Rayner tweeted: “Is the cost of living crisis just a joke to them? This is not a serious government. We need an emergency budget right now.”  Nandy said Gove was “making jokes and using silly voices while families across the country are struggling to survive. This isn’t a game…Take it seriously. Do your job”.  He also told GMB calls for Boris to resign over Partygate were ‘bonkeroony’.  “Snifferoony more like!” snorted Phil.  Memes of The Puppet sniffing coke ensued.

The poorest hit harder now than at the height of covid as rising prices and government policy pushed 1.5 m into poverty, NIESR* suggested a £25 a week increase in Universal Credit to stop ¼ million households ‘sliding into extreme poverty’.  Labour MP Alex Cunningham said there should be no need for food banks.  Ashfield MP Lee Anderson, ex-miner and labour councillor turned tory twat, incredulously replied there wasn’t; if people budgeted and cooked properly, they could make a meal from scratch for 30p.  Tracy Bin proposed a £2 cap on Yorkshire bus fares.  Ukraine cut off a gas pipeline to Europe.  Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was shot dead in the West Bank.  Palestinians blamed, her colleague who survived the attack knew it was Israeli soldiers.  Police waded into her funeral Friday, hit mourners with batons and almost toppled the coffin.  Dan James was sent off during Leeds United’s 3-0 defeat to Chelsea.  More red cards than any other team, at least they’d win something this season!

On the market Thursday, a couple told Jolly Veg Man about the Eden Project coming to Morecambe.  Comparing it to Southport and Blackpool.  As Jolly Veg called the latter kitsch, I extolled its virtues.  An old mate chipped in he used to go for Northern Soul weekends and recently visited while protesting against fracking on Preston New Road.  He worried that not only would the public order bill ban direct action (XR vowed millions would take to the streets against it), the security bill allowed authorities to break the law.  He agreed even tories were realising Boris was awful, excepting gammons saying ‘at least he got Brexit done’.  “I’m still waiting for Rees-Moggy to tell us what the benefits are!”  Phil joined me in the square and we headed into the Mill Café.  Not tempted by the menu, we made a quick exit, laughing at a lamp made from a cheap old camera in the shop window – a snip at £75!  In the tearoom garden, we debated the NI protocol.  Phil thought Irish Joe would stop them scrapping it.  The next day, Lord Frosty said Joe should keep out of it.  Would Airforce One be landing soon?  Phil spent ages browsing the camera cabinet in the big charity shop and got nowt.  I bought DVDs, an old postcard and a dress.  Looking posh, it was, incredibly, Matalan!  In the children’s hospice shop, we found Photographer Friend.  With a recent penchant for the colour, she tried on a pair of orange sandals.  I observed they were too big.  Phil disagreed.  Luckily, she took my advice.

A caller told Jeremy Vine that at his food bank, a woman called tory policy ‘capitalism for the poor and socialism for the rich’ i.e., the poor had to pay their own way while the rich got tax breaks.  Touché!  GDP shrank by 0.1% in March, largely due to less retail spending.  Rishi blamed Putin and ‘other global challenges’ (which he couldn’t make ‘disappear’) rather than Brexit or government inaction.  National Grid did a deal with Ofgem to pay us £200 million excess profits; which worked out at £9 per household over 2 years.  Wow!  At an away day in Stoke, Boris instructed cabinet to find ways of cutting civil servants by 1/5.  The biggest departments being the crucial ones like health, DWP, MOD, and as the PCS pointed out, DVLA and Passport Office clearing a backlog, furious unions warned of strikes. Mark Serwotka, said: “This is not about efficiency. This is about the prime minister trying to create a smokescreen to detract from his utter shambles of a government.”  Dave Penman, FDA added: “without an accompanying strategy these cuts appear…like culture wars or even worse, ill-thought out, rushed job slashes.” Prospect’s Mike Clancy called it: “an outrageous act of vandalism on our public services…Throughout Brexit and the pandemic, we have never been more reliant…on our civil service.”  After BP said it wouldn’t affect investment, Rishi apparently told Treasury staff to investigate a windfall tax.  Boris conceded: “we’ll have to look at it.” Another 50 Partygate fines brought the total to over 100, many relating to the December 2020 Christmas party.  As the EU prepared to lift requirements for flight passengers to wear masks next Monday, Lufthansa stopped Orthodox Jews boarding at Frankfurt for refusing to wear them.  They later apologised.  After Boris co-signed military agreements with both countries, spooked by the Ukrainian invasion, traditionally neutral Sweden and Finland (with an 800-mile land border with Russia) applied to join NATO.  Boffins grew cress in soil from the moon and an EHT** collaboration took the first photos of a 40 million miles-wide supermassive black hole.

Squatter

Friday 13th, I’d forgot I’d left the laptop updating overnight and waited impatiently for it to restart.  Combined with Phil’s ramblings interrupting my thoughts, it was some time before I could write.

Dodging dust from Shed Man sawing chipboard for oversized planters, I headed to the co-op for the usual gaps on shelves and reduced steak.  I spotted Phil at the kiosk and sent him back for mushrooms while I loaded the conveyor. 

Coming back, he pointed to a pigeon nesting in an ‘air brick’ at the back of house, explaining quizzical looks through the kitchen window – we had a squatter!

North Korea admitted they had coronavirus due to Omicron.  Carlsberg boss Martin Entwistle lost an unfair dismissal case for holding a piss-up in a brewery during restrictions.  Suffering heavy losses in Donbas, Russia threatened to cut off Finland’s gas while Ukraine started the first war crimes trial.  A Russian tank commander pleaded guilty.  Maybe a life sentence was preferable to returning to Russia.

Shed Man’s hammering woke me early Saturday.  I tossed and turned ‘til 9, then he stopped!  Milk in the jug lumpy, I replenished but that also turned to cheese.  Still in date, was the warm weather, crap co-op stock-keeping or Brexit to blame?  A beautiful day, I ignored tiredness to visit a higher wood, our efforts rewarded by our first lambs, more bluebells and poppies.  Gorgeous but somewhat strenuous, back home I experienced wooziness and deafening tinnitus.  Both overheated, tepid showers helped (for more details, see Cool Places i)

Sam Ryder’s stellar Eurovision performance put the UK top of the judges’ leader board.  Inevitably overtaken by Ukraine thanks to the public, what was the point of the interminable voting?  Germany came last and France sang in Breton – almost English!  Kalush Orchestra later auctioned their trophy for £713,000 and raffled the frontman’s pink hat for £293,000 towards the war effort.  Gone midnight, we watched a short film and I attempted to photograph the almost-full super blood moon just as clouds covered it.

Ed Millipede called a windfall tax ‘an unanswerable case’ and urged Rishi ‘get on with it’.  On Sunday Morning, Wannabee PM Jeremy C**t said it wasn’t the time for a leadership change and Kwasi Modo unbelievably said they didn’t expect the EU to fully implement the Northern Ireland protocol.  Politics North footage showed outraged gammons meeting in Linton-on-Ouse village hall after letters to government went unanswered.  the RAF base was called Alcatraz and Guantanamo-on-Ouse.  Gammon-on-Ouse more like!  Refugees slated to arrive within weeks, there was no sign of them by the end of the month.  Ministers said arrangements weren’t finalised.  A statute of Thatcher in Grantham was egged during installation.

Ludicrous

Haiga – Colour Burst

Even with an anorak, taking rubbish out on a wet Monday made me soggy and moody.  I checked when Walking Friend would arrive.  Right then, as it turned out.  Heading to town, we came across The Poet who checked details for wild swimming and a bonfire with their Bradford Friend Wednesday.  Having lunch in the Mill Café, I initially thought grittiness was in lettuce but it was actually the day’s special of spinach frittata.  The waitress took it away to be replaced by a regular toasty.  Finishing tea on the terrace, my friend unbelievably received a call asking her to work.  She declined at such short notice.  In the small hospice shop, a guidebook to the lakes omitted her holiday spot.  Perhaps that’s why she found it so idyllic.  As the sun emerged, she asked if I fancied a hike.  “No way! I’m already flagging and still need to go to the co-op.”  Bargain shopping en route, I got dinner plates and a scarf, which I tried wrapping round the plates to stop them banging my legs.  Now too hot for the anorak, I stuffed it in the carrier.  A small girl on the wavy steps wore a tiara and another a pinny and cap.  We speculated as to whether it was fancy dress or normal everyday attire.  As we parted ways, I staggered to the co-op.  The ATM empty, I resentfully paid for 2 items by card and struggled home, cursing the heavy crockery – at £2.50 for 4 and an exact match for our cracked ones, I couldn’t pass them up.  I collapsed on the sofa where Phil predictably tutted at the food grit story – he’d have eaten it without complaint.  A siesta fruitless, I sighed with fatigue.  As he eyed me askance, I reminded him rather harshly, he’d promised to dispose of dead flowers.  He snapped back he would do it.  Upset, I stomped to the bedroom and heard him going to the bins before coming to see if I needed anything.  Calmer by then, I replied I’d just needed some time to myself.

Towing the party line on focusing on long-term economic growth, safeguarding minister Helen Maclean incredibly said the answer for some was to work more hours or get another job.  A caller told Jeremy Vine many food bank users already had 2 jobs and still couldn’t afford to eat.  Ian Murray called the advice ludicrous and out of touch and Frances O’Grady called it ‘a bit rich’.  What do you expect from rich tory snobs?  McDonalds were to sell all 850 Russian restaurants.

Feeling terrible Tuesday, I stayed in bed.  Phil seemed surprised that my exhaustion hadn’t dissipated overnight.  “You still don’t get it!” I railed. “Yes I do.”  After bathing, I fetched the laptop to write while he got supplies.  During afternoon coffee, I hurled mouldy grapes out the bathroom window.  They landed neatly in the community garden.  I doubted they’d grow into vines.

3.7% unemployment, there were more vacancies than jobless for the first time in almost 50 years, but wages stayed low.  Disparities in Yorkshire, especially between Bradford and Leeds, were stark.  Calling it a postcode lottery, National Energy Action complained those who didn’t pay by direct debit faced longer waits for council tax rebates and as vulnerable families turned off their gas and leccy, Feeding Britain called on Ofgem to intervene.  The Police Fed gave Nasty Patel a hard time.  Fair enough, but why did you need food banks on £40,000 a year?  Trussed-up Liz informed MPs of plans for a trusted trader scheme and green and red lanes in Northern Ireland.  Likely illegal, Maros Sefcovic warned the EU would respond with ‘all measures at its disposal’ if Britain acted unilaterally.  They wanted negotiations based on their October 2021 proposals which Truss had rejected.  Stephen Doughty alleged they either didn’t understand their own agreement, they weren’t upfront about its reality or they intended to break it all along.  A court heard Trafalgar Square rallies August-December 2020 broke covid laws.  ‘Holding’ not the same as ‘organising’ a gathering, would tinfoiler Piers Corbyn get off on a technicality?  Ukraine declared the Mariupol mission complete, 260 steel plant fighters were evacuated to separatist-controlled territory, and 1,000 surrendered by Wednesday.

Woken by tweeting birds in the early dawn, confused by the days and unable to even stretch, I stayed abed Wednesday and watched PMQs.  After an arrest for sexual offences and abuse of public office, an unnamed tory was on bail and told not to attend.  Cartoon Fabricant tweeted he’d be there to prove it wasn’t him.  The opposition focused on fuel.  When a backbencher claimed 9,000 died last year due to cold homes, Boris prated about a £9.1 bn package and offered hollow sympathy.  Keir dwelt on windfall tax, quoting company bosses in favour of it, to be given unemployment figures, claims hikes were short-term and spurious arguments on the principles of business tax.  Asked when he was going to cut bills, Boris promised to look at measures to get people through to the other side and hinted at tax cuts in July; only possible as they took tough decisions during the pandemic.  Keir spluttered: “He doesn’t get it!”  While the PM dithered and pretended the economy was booming, gas bills went up £53 m a day, profits soared; we’d heard it all before and couldn’t afford to wait.  Ian Blackford wondered how Rishi could say acting now was silly while his colleagues advised we learn to cook and get better jobs.  Ed Davey said farmers could help feed us, but costs of the 3 F’s (fuel, feed, fertiliser) through the roof, they’d slashed support before embedding a new scheme.  Action for Children asserted families needed help now, not warm words hinting at future action.

Getting hot, I opened the window for a bee to instantly buzz in.  Lunching alone, I considered putting the TV back on for company.  However, I manged to keep to the new regime of not doing so even though it was hard breaking the habit.  In the muggy evening, The Met Office warned of blood rain and yellow thunder.  20,000 lightning strikes recorded, houses set afire and travel disruption in the South East, we had none.

Getting hot, I opened the window for a bee to instantly buzz in.  Lunching alone, I considered putting the TV back on for company.  However, I manged to keep to the new regime of not doing so even though it was hard breaking the habit.  In the muggy evening, The Met Office warned of blood rain and yellow thunder.  20,000 lightning strikes recorded, houses set afire and travel disruption in the South East, we had none.

April Inflation hit 9% – a 40-year high.  Closer to 11% for the poor whose income mostly went on food and fuel, at least they could eat spuds which dropped in price.  First-time shoplifters stealing to eat, Kit Shithouse ludicrously said cops should always prosecute, even the starving.  Martin Lewis retaliated with threats of ‘civil unrest’.  We lived in hope!  Rishi Rich told the CBI there’d be business tax cuts in autumn.  Oil giant CEs labelled the ‘new oligarchs’, he was said to be ‘warming’ to a windfall tax, with the public wildly in favour.  The Rwanda plot failing to put migrants off, Border Farce used ferries to rescue them from dinghies in the channel.  Prof Van Dam’s knighthood ceremony was postponed as he caught covid.

Fluffy Goslings

Much better by noon Thursday, I accompanied Phil to town for a bit of shopping and flower-spotting in the sunshine.  Sweet Shop Man joked about his partner aka sister-in-law.  I refused to get involved in domestics but at least he wasn’t bemoaning prices for a change.  Rooks squawked on the riverside.  Unusual for the larger corvids to come into the centre, a glut of food including cake and pan-o-rice could explain it.  We giggled at geese parading their fluffy goslings in front of paddling kids.  They’d obviously learnt begging techniques from the jackdaws!

Annoyed Phil let me sort groceries alone, I lay down to rest but got tummy ache and asked him to bring washing in.

Operation Hillman concluded.  126 Partygate FPNs, Boris nor Carrie, Rishi or Simon Case, got more.  Sue Gray’s report unlikely to name all those involved and cops not explaining why Boris was fined for attending the cake ambush and not any of the more ‘serious’ events, Former DPP Lord Ken MacDonald griped: “without the police providing an explanation for that it’s very difficult for us to understand why they came to the conclusions that they did…This was a major scandal at the heart of government…we remain very much in the dark about who was involved, who organised the parties, and who was responsible…that’s not good enough.”  Yvette Coop added: “These were the people making the rules, the PM was in charge, he needs to take responsibility.”  Bereaved families said they’d been ‘gaslit’.

The weather back to normal grey Friday, and darkly wet by evening, at least I was up and about.  I expunged the worst muck from the living room and kitchen.  In the co-op, it took 3 attempts for the reader to accept my card.  My namesake said it didn’t like Satan’s Bank.  An item seemingly missing from the freezer deal, when he arrived to help carry, Phil said he’d get it the next day.  But he was later immobilised by a recurring back problem.  Flareups often random, he blamed heavy bags.  As he put a finger-trigger to his head, I advocated painkillers rather than suicide.  He settled for wine.

Autumn covid jabs for the vulnerable and older age groups would exclude us.  Rees-Moggy poo-pooed a windfall tax as ‘raiding the honeypot of business’ while Rishi and Ms. Murthy made the Sunday Times Rich List.  Colchester, Doncaster, Milton Keynes, Bangor, Dunfermline, Wrexham, Douglas and Stanley were made cities for the jubilee.  Blackburn, Boston, Crewe and Goole missed out.  Wondering why never Blackpool, I discovered their last bid in 2011 was withdrawn as the labour mayor thought it a waste of money and brought no benefits – nobody didn’t visit because they didn’t know where it was.

Hot flushes and hunger meant no lie-in Saturday.  I left Phil to a bath soak.  Stressed by a cluttered kitchen, it deepened when he brought the washing down.  I’d deliberately not asked him to, but he said putting socks on was harder.  I replied to an e-mail from The Researcher on the guest blog and expo venues and mused over an arts festival launch.  It seemed odd to be happening during the jubilee weekend, until I noted they got Platinum Funding.  Not known for being royalist, townsfolk obviously changed their tune when money was offered!  As Phil insisted on taking over the hoovering, manageable by sitting on the floor, I went out to potter.  Failing to fix secateurs with a missing spring, he helped prune anyway.  I cooked the bulk of dinner then he put rice on, went to buy baccy and left the pan to boil dry.

Early Sunday leg cramp eventually eased with shaking and rubbing.  Not wishing to disturb Phil, I was about to get brekkie when he sprang to life.  His back still bad, he groaned, apologised, then suggested an outing.  Mishearing, I thought he said for lunch.  “No, a run.” “Really? Can you even walk?” “A bit.” “Is it a good idea? I had no plans as I thought you wouldn’t be able to do actual walking and the weather’s a bit crap.”  He insisted on getting out.  We took a cyberman helmet to the nearby charity shop (good riddance!) and went to the park to see flora.  While the ‘wildflower patch’ was mowed, we found tons of dandelion clocks and daisies, horse chestnut candles and 1 clover.

On Sunday Morning, E-on boss Michael Lewis said rising gas prices were due to the Russian pipeline – I recalled it started before then.  Citing schemes to help people struggling with bills, he admitted they could do more.  Higher standing charges due to ‘failures’ last year, he couldn’t lower costs but had lobbied Ofgem to do so and government to do more such as reinstating the UC uplift.  Queried on the £6.6 bn profit, he said that was worldwide and equated to £20 per customer in the UK.  Moonlighting from a heist movie we’d just watched, Nads Zahawi spouted the usual blather and deflection over Partygate.  As nobody named in the Gray report objected before the 5.00 p.m. deadline, publication was imminent.  In a thrilling end to the season at the top and bottom of the premiership, Leeds beat Brentford to stay in at Burnley’s expense.

WTF!

Haiga – Lift Off!

Waking with a heavy head Monday 23rd, Phil interrupted haiga posting telling me he’d sold a tapestry, weirdly costing the same as a standard print.  I imagined his brutalist photos writ large rather than trees.  In the co-op, I inquired about the missing freezer deal item.  The nice cashier directed me to a colleague who indicated a solitary pack which I’d missed.  By then, a queue had formed at the kiosk.  I waited ages for an ancient man to pay a gas bill.   On hearing a booming ‘hello’, I turned to see New Gran’s partner.  Poised to ask if she’d bought the oil painting, he was off.  After lugging bags and stuffing the freezer, I was knackered.

Following days of denials, No. 10 admitted Boris, anticipating the end of Operation Hillman, met Sue Gray early May to discuss ‘timings and publication process’ of her report.  ITV news published pics of Boris drinking behind a booze-littered table, toasting Lee Cain at his leaving do, November 2020.  Rayner railed: “This is clearly a social gathering…people will be disgusted.”  No. 10 insisted The Met had access to all photos.  Insiders told Panorama weekly parties, condoned by the PM, were listed in the diary as WTF – ‘Wine-Time Friday’.

Tuesday mostly a boring round of chores and writing, we discussed potential for touting my photos.  He reckoned I had even more of flowers than him and thinking daisies and dandelions might make good placemats, I edited some, signed up to Society 6, but chickened out of verifying the account.

Spreading since last week to 18 countries, there were 71 monkeypox cases in the UK.  The infected had to self-isolate for 21 days.  Responsive to smallpox vaccine and Tecovirimat and most cases mild, the wider population was at low risk.  80 climate protestors took over Shell’s AGM and 3 arrested.  Lithuania proposed a passage to get grain out of Odesa, defying the Russians to stop a fleet of ships.  Allegedly raised with Trussed-Up Liz, Downing Street dismissed the idea.  As idiots swarmed onto the Elizabeth Line, a fire alarm caused chaos.  Cat-kicking footballer Kurt Zouma pleaded guilty and would do 180 hours community service.  A geothermal exploration project in Ryedale inspired daft ideas about re-activating extinct volcanoes.  Who wouldn’t want a boiling hot lido in the middle of Edinburgh?

Wednesday morning, Phil took up my offer of fetching brekkie  “I see, you only want to do it on apple days!”  A Westminster TV marathon involved PMQs, a statement from Boris and a response from Keir.

Undistracted by a skirt-clad Rayner crossing her legs, Boris boasted he was great, had driven up investment and jobs and put his arms round people (ugh!) doable by taking tough decisions.  Keir said the PM had seen sense at last regarding a windfall tax, quipped hindsight was a wonderful thing and referring to delivery to No. 10 that morning, asked: “What was it about the Sue Gray report that attracted him to a U-turn this week?”  Boris reacted with more bragging, bizarrely saying: “Put that in your pipe!”  Accused of complacency leading to the lowest growth of all major economies except Russia and a passport backlog, Boris babbled.

Responding to the Gray reportiii, Boris said he took full responsibility but wanted to explain the context.  According to him, there were 8 breaches of covid laws in over 600 days.  Staff, allowed to go to the office under exemptions, worked long hours, and he sometimes went briefly when they ‘gathered’, to thank them for hard work.  He was unaware that some went on longer than necessary and fell foul of the rules as Gray found, because he wasn’t there and was ‘appalled’ by some behaviour, particularly the treatment of security and cleaning staff to whom he apologised and expected those responsible to apologise.  He pointed out Gray acknowledged the ‘significant changes’ already made in line with recommendations in her interim report.  Keir countered the report was testament to how they’d treated the public’s sacrifices with utter contempt, believing it was ‘one rule for them, another for everyone else’.  It was about trust; he was clear what leadership looked like and didn’t break any rules.  Any attempt to compare drinking beer with a meal to ‘this catalogue’ was ridiculous, but he would step down if found guilty, because honesty, integrity and responsibility mattered.  “The game is up. You can’t be a law-maker and a law-breaker”; it was time the PM packed his bags so government could function again.  Boris retaliated that a sanctimonious ‘Sir Beer Korma’ failed to live up to the high standards he expected from him.  A privileges committee investigation into contempt by the PM would drag on.

A siesta hampered by external noise and coldness, I donned leggings under my jeans – in late May FFS!

Working on my novel for the first time in months Thursday, I got distracted researching conjuring tricks.  Fed up stuck in the house again on a showery day, a decent Friday forecast again raised hopes of something fun.  I forbade Phil help with the co-op shop.  Amidst the usual random foray, several items had noticeably gone up in price but with an effort hunting out basic ranges and 2 for 1 offers, I stayed in budget.  I agreed with Jack Munroe who told the BBC shopping on £20 a week was ‘exhausting’ as she supported Superdrug’s pledge on basic toiletries.  Late evening, a sunny spell tempted me outside.  Clambering on the bench moving pots around, my knee got wet and I went back in after 5 minutes.  Phil emerged from a rest groaning, saying it was just a twinge – likely story!

Rishi Rich announced a £400 discount per household regardless of wealth and including second homes, instead of the £200 loan, with top-ups for low income households on benefits, disability benefit recipients and pensioners. There’d also be another £500 m for councils to allocate.  £10 bn more borrowing and a 25% ‘energy levy’ (NOT windfall tax!) raising £5 bn from oil and gas companies, would pay for it.  Unlevied electricity generators were under review.  The NEF reckoned a 91% tax relief on investment would cost more at £5.7 bn, and the true cost was £21 bn.  Rachel Reeves said Rishi was dragged kicking and screaming into a U-turn: “the chancellor has finally realised the problems the country are facing (sic).”  Suspiciously soon after Gray’s report, Ed Davey griped it only replaced what was taken away in taxes and called it a ‘Rishi Scam’.  He could have said party trick!  The SNP agreed it wasn’t enough as the increased price cap would still exist next year.  The IFS warned it might lead to more inflation and staunch tories termed it ‘throwing red meat to socialists’.  Rishi insisted it was pragmatic.  Paul Hebbletwit gave a sham apology to sacked P&O workers, saying there was no other way to deal with the situation.  The shitshow subsequently lost a contract with Border Farce to provide contingency travel services at juxtaposed ports, whatever that meant!  M&S finally pulled out of Russia, warning it’d cost £31m.  RMT members at Euston and Green Park cancelled a tube strike during jubilee weekend but there’d be a much bigger one Monday 6th June.  Meanwhile, Mick Lynch said there could be a deal to avert a national rail strike if bosses talked.

Interminable faffing meant it was gone by the time we went walking Friday.  The bright afternoon looked inviting but a biting wind made us shiver.  We walked on the sunny towpath, detouring to explore a desire path and speak to an elderly man about his funny old souped-up car. Phil conjured images of a geriatric F&F, with OAPs racing in the deserted early morning streets.  We returned via the park where the woman who lived next door was meeting a friend. Not seeing each other for weeks, we chatted briefly.  According to her sister, Poland also had unseasonal wind – was it the same one? (for more details, see Cool Placesi)

I left Phil at the co-op to find an ambulance backing up our street.  Concerned for The Widower, I was relieved to see him pass – it was probably a regular call for End Neighbour.  Too late for a siesta, I got coffee then realised Phil wasn’t back and must’ve gone to town.  I rang to ask him to buy pickles but he was almost home.

Nasty Patel’s PPS Paul Holmes quit due to the ‘toxic culture’.  Daniel Briceno Garcia was found guilty of stabbing his landlords in a bloodbath while paranoid about covid in lockdown #1.  After EasyJet cancelled 200 flights due to a glitch, the Port of Dover told people heading to the continent to pack food and water in anticipation of delays and the RAC predicted 17.9 million leisure trips over the weekend.

Gardening on a mostly cloudy Saturday, I overheated during a blast of sun, stripped off a layer and gulped water.  I caught the woman next door racing from car to door, and talked to Decorating Neighbour who suffered from chronic fatigue, possibly post-viral.  I shared my wisdom, experiences of life on a reduced income and unreadiness for foreign travel.  He concurred but planned to visit his daughter in Australia later in the year.  Phil came out in a shirt.  Was he off somewhere?  No; just too hot.  Despite Friday’s walk affecting his back, he tidied up a rosebush and made chapatis to go with curry.  I’d forgot how much smoke they produced, which all rose to the bedroom.  “Do it outside in future; on a bin lid!” I coughed.

Screeching geese and leg cramp, for the second Sunday running, ate into shuteye.  Rising woozily, I opened the curtains to see grey to the east and blue to the west, which soon went.  I hurried to the Sunday market for fresh supplies, getting spat on in the cool air.  The crammed square a slalom, I found the knobbly veg stall already packing up, grabbed a few items and went to the convenience store.  Back home, the woman next door was getting in her car.  It tickled us that we’d now seen each other 3 times in as many days.  Mentioning the veg trip, she told me she was fasting because she lacked energy – go figure!  I spent the rest of the day on an Ocado order, writing and avoiding toadying, now in full swing in the build-up to the jubilee.

The Bumbler changed the ministerial code so they no longer had to resign if they broke it.  Met with derision and claims it was to save the PM’s own skin, 4 more tories publicised letters to the 1922 committee.  Swiss Toni insisted Boris would survive a confidence vote and Sue Gray wasn’t pressured to amend her report. Raging over its contents, Boris shouted ‘put the dog down!’; referring to a barking Dilyn.  Apparently not the first time, it wasn’t as bad as yelling: ‘I am the effing Fuhrer’ despot-style as The Scumbag attested.  An aide wrote Simon Case that Carrie held another flat party after the cake ambush which wasn’t investigated.  Rayner demanded the PM came clean.  Johnny Depp unbelievably turned up as a special guest at Jeff Beck’s gig in Sheffield.  It later transpired he’d won his case against Amber Herd.  Meanwhile in Paris, The Mona Lisa was ambushed by cake by a man disguised as a granny in a climate change protest and the champions league final turned into a debacle.  The French blamed Liverpool fans with fake tickets.  Russia advancing in the east, Vlod visited frontline troops in Donetsk.  After Finland and Sweden held talks with Turkey over their NATO bid, Recep still objected, saying they protected the PKK.

Haiga – Lace Work

With numb limbs, I rose late Monday, posted a haiga, sent photos to The Researcher for the takeover blog and worked on the journal.  Adding chick peas to leftover curry sauce for lunch, I observed it came to under 30p a portion, then realised with bread, it didn’t!  Metro’s Liz Burcher did it for a week, ate less than 900 calories a day and lost half a stone.  A trip to the co-op quiet during half-term, I substituted extortionate pitta for tortillas.  Was there a yeast shortage?  Was it from Ukraine?

Senior tory Jeremy Wright issued a no confidence statement, bringing the known total to 28.  ONS tracked 30 food basics bought by low income households since April 2021, showing pasta up 50%.  Bread, mince, rice, juice, cereal, chicken, veg oil, baked beans, onions, toms, tea, coffee, bananas and mixed frozen veg, amongst other things, went up.  Besides spuds, chips, sausages, pizza, apples and cheese went down.  Milk stayed the same.  The algorithm excluded Aldi and Lidl as they didn’t allow online ordering, and obviously co-op freezer deals.   A vindicated Jack Munroe said people were priced out of their own dinners.  On the covid front, face-mask were no longer required in Wales, Shanghai lifted a 2-month lockdown but citizens had to wear masks and avoid gatherings, and 3 gorillas tested positive at Cabarceno Nature Park, Spain.

Waking lots in the early hours, getting up was even harder on Tuesday.  By the time I’d bathed, lateness reached weekend levels.  As I cleaned the inside of the living room windows, Phil quipped it was in case the queen came round. “I think she’s busy this weekend, but you can put your bunting up, ha, ha!”  A chugger knocked on the door as I brought step ladders down.  I said it was a bad time. “I’ll come back later.” ‘Don’t bother!’ I muttered.

Andrea Leadskull told constituents that as Gray exposed unacceptable leadership failures, tories must decide individually on the right course of action. Will Haig reckoned MPs went back to their constituents in half-term and had a think, Boris was in ‘real trouble’ and a confidence vote imminent.  Boris desperately rang round colleagues to garner support.  He also wrote to civil servants, thanking them in one sentence and telling them there jobs were at risk in the next, according to Mark Serwotka.  Meanwhile, Durham police sent Keir and Rayner Beergate questionnaires.  Teaching unions asked Rishi and heist movie actor Nads Zahawi for free school meals for all kids of families on Universal Credit.  Euro-zone inflation hit 8.1%, due to the usual suspects of fuel, covid and the war but not Brexit!  As Russia blamed sanctions for the food crisis, Vlod accused them of lying and stealing 500,000 tons of grain.  The EU would embargo 90% of Russian oil imports by the end of 2022, exempting the Druzhba (‘friendship’) pipeline to appease Viktor Orban.

* National Institute of Economic and Social Research

** Event Horizon Telescope

References:

i. My Cool Places blog: https://hepdenerose.wordpress.com/

ii. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

iii. The Sue Gray Report: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1078404/2022-05-25_FINAL_FINDINGS_OF_SECOND_PERMANENT_SECRETARY_INTO_ALLEGED_GATHERINGS.pdf

Part 103 – Ship Of Fools

“(They) broke the law and took us all for mugs. If they had any decency they would be gone by tonight” (Lobby Akinnola)

April Fools

Haiga – Threshold

The world ran by a bunch of fools, we didn’t mark the 1st of the month with April Fools jokes.  The grocery bill was mercifully not too hefty but the bags were.  I cursed not asking for Phil’s help lugging them home.  Motivated by persons unknown sweeping the steps at the side of the house, I cleared the gutter Saturday, failing to unblock the end.  Cloudy all weekend, at least it didn’t rain during the free Crossings walk and workshop Sunday.  In the art shed carpark, The Leader made introductions and dished out notebooks.  We set off on familiar paths, noting a profusion of daffodils absent from the riverside 2 weeks ago, along with wood anemones.  Returning on the lesser-travelled Crows path, a walker’s action volunteer related its rescue from developers by residents 12 years ago.  Back at base, we got free tea and cake.  Amazed such project funding still existed, Phil ate 3 pieces.  The workshop proved inspiring although I remained sceptical about the over-use of descriptions.  Featuring heavily in creative writing these days, I suspected it featured in university courses.  Later, I selected photos for the project showcase including a haiga.i

The covid rate at 1:13, Prof Naismith said we were all likely to have BA.2 by summer.  Easter hols starting for some, chaos ensued at ferry terminals and airports.  Officially blamed on absence and covid checks, the shortages were also due to furloughed staff leaving.  Security checks on 220 new recruits awaited, passengers missed flights at Manchester airport and boss Karen Not-So-Smart resigned.  45 buses and 2 Red Cross trucks headed to besieged Mariupol.  Evacuation underway at last, a photo-journalist got shot.  The Pope criticised ‘dictatorial leaders’ and said the world couldn’t ignore the migrant crisis.  As the Oscars academy continued with disciplinary procedures, Will Smith resigned.

Barely able to move Monday morning, after 10 minutes stretching, I got back in bed.  Phil looked offended when I didn’t laugh at his larks but I felt too awful.  I made a big effort to fetch coffee and the laptop.  Going up and downstairs exhausting, pains shot through my head and I became tearful.  Covid infections still rising, the list of symptoms now included fatigue, exhaustion, aching, headaches, sore throats, shortness of breath, blocked or runny nose, loss of appetite, diarrhoea and nausea.  So all of them!  Wondering if I had it, Phil reckoned they were symptoms of living in England.  In fact, additions were to stop people going to work with flu.  Feeling overwhelmed by a ‘to do’ list, I posted the haiga, dispatched photos for the showcase, and worked on blogs.  Except mealtimes, I stayed abed for 3 dull days.

5-11 year olds were offered low dose jabs.  Oil terminal blockades by Just Stop Oil and XR into a third day, 100 protestors were arrested in Kingsbury.  Lucy Powell called the privatisation of Channel 4 ‘cultural vandalism’.  Tracy Brabin feared for Leeds jobs and ‘We Own It’ told Dreadful Doris to keep her hands off.

Less head pain and a bit cheerier Tuesday, I posted an entry on Cool Placesii , stopping writing when head fug set in.  Phil went to the co-op.  Another power cut meant no fresh milk or veg.

The covid Situation in Shanghai ‘extremely grim’, citizens suffered lockdowns and online food shortages.  After visiting Bucha, Vlod addressed the UN security council, saying the worst war crimes since WW2 merited Nuremberg-style trials.  Russian rep Vasily Nebenzya dismissed footage as fake and pro-Putin broadcaster Vlad Solovyov said they chose the name because it sounded like butcher.  Red paint was poured in the propagandist’s Italian villa pools.  Back after a glitch, Jeremy Vine appeared with hand-written signs. As Cuadrilla were given another year to explore fracking in Lancashire, Mike Gammon claimed reports of tremors were Russian propaganda.  Err, no, it’s you believing in conspiracy nonsense!

Eking the last of the fresh milk, Phil made porridge on Wednesday and went to the other shop.  Working on ‘Home from Home’ (see Cool Places 2iii) took most of my day.  After ineffectual quiet time, I went to the kitchen and panicked when I saw no milk, then spotted it in a bag.  Prepping dinner together a bit fraught, I left him to it and dossed on the sofa.  As he sent off photos for the showcase, he asked me to check details but I said it was far too late to think and went back to bed.

While Boris defended the National Insurance rise to fund the NHS and Goblin Saj pressed patients to return, 6 Yorkshire hospitals warned them to stay away from A&E, unless dying.  In the latest sanctions, the UK added 8 Russian oligarchs to the list, froze Sberbank and Credit Bank of Moscow’s assets, banned outward investment and iron and steel imports, and vowed to stop coal imports by the end of the year.  Sanctioning Russian PM Mikhail Mishustin and Putin’s 2 daughters Maryia Putina and Katerina Tikhonova, the US also cut off links with Sberbank as well as Alfa Bank.

Better but lacking energy Thursday, we were sat on the sofa when Phil noticed a reply from the Crossings workshop leader, even though he’d only sent his photos the night before.  I was incensed until I saw she’d e-mailed me too.  Supplies low, I headed to the market in the nithering wind.  What a load of rubbish!  No loo roll or fish, I got a few veg and went in the convenience store to find reduced chicken and bacon, so not a completely wasted trip.

The energy strategy mainly featured hydrogen, offshore wind and nuclear power.  Great British Nuclear had a target to fulfil 25% of demand by 2060, building a power station a year.  There was a £30m competition to make heat pumps, and a new round of licensing for north sea oil and gas from autumn, despite UN calls for rapid cuts in fossil fuel use.  Onshore wind unpopular, it was encouraged with discounts for affected communities.  Keir called it too little too late and: “a cobbled together list of things that should have been done over the last 10 to 12 years…(and) doesn’t even tackle important things like insulating homes…”  Kwarteng had already ordered a report into the science and impact of fracking, but said the pause in extraction would stay unless new evidence showed it was ‘safe, sustainable and of minimal disturbance…’  A 23-mile lorry queue at Dover caused chaos on roads surrounding the M20.  Suspended P&O crossings were blamed – nowt to do with Brexit!  UNHRC threw Russia out.  Ukrainian Foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba begged for weapons to save lives and prevent the war spilling over into other territories.  Beloved Mr Ben creator David McKee died.  My tiny kid-fish brain never clocked there were only 13 episodes!

No Joke

Haiga – The Artist

Friday, I worked on the journal and waited impatiently in the co-op for a man dithering and a cashier fiddling with buttons.  Coming to help, Phil had a cheeky search for long-gone chocolate slabs on the easter display.  Finding none, he said he’d have to go elsewhere but with 3 bars at home, I told him not to bother.  Rising from a siesta, a marked drop in temperature presaged a loud crack of thunder followed by large balls of ice – thunder hail!  It soon turned to rain.  Enjoyment of dinner was marred by Phil telling me Rishi Rich was technically a US resident until recently, thus not paying UK tax.  The scum held a Green Card until October 2021!  He demanded an enquiry into the source of the leak.  The opposition demanded ministers declared their residency status.  Meanwhile, Ms. Murthy said she “understood the British sense of fairness”, coughed up UK tax on her income but remained a non-dom.

Covid rates still high across the UK, they rose in the Yorkshire region to 1:12, but fell slightly in Scotland.  Thousands in hospital but not on ventilators, ONS said it was too soon to say infections were levelling off.  A Russian missile hit a train station in Kramatorsk, killing 50 trying to evacuate before a full-scale offensive.

Phil answered a door knock early Saturday to be handed an easter ‘goody bag’ from the local carers’ group.  Containing a fleece blanket, thermometer, first aid kit, jelly sweets, greetings card, fluffy chick and chocolate bar (making 4 in total), it resembled an elderly care package.  Phil joked about sticking the thermometer up his bum.  I cleaned the living room and he overhauled the kitchen lights, then rested in a bid to ease tummy ache.  His discomfort persisted into Sunday.  That didn’t stop him coming foraging in nearby woods.  At the wild garlic patch, two women approached from below.  Fearing competition, I pretended to take aim but they didn’t stop.  Celandine nestled among the extended crop, creating a salad of yellow and green.  After filling a bag, I picked up a couple of excellent twisty red branches, perfect for hanging decorative easter eggs.  Keeping to the lower meandering path, we magically saw a couple of deer chasing each other.  The Victorian stairways carpeted with crunchy leaves inspired the week’s haiga (for a fuller description, see Cool Places).

P&O said there’d be no Dover ferries until at least Friday.  Stuck in queues and losing thousands a day, meat exporters called for the prioritisation of fresh produce.  Boris went to walk the streets with Vlod and wave – why was he so popular in Kyiv?  As he travelled by car, helicopter, military plane and train, a convoy of Russian tanks headed for Donbas.  The Oscars harshly banned Will Smith for 10 years.

After posting the haiga Monday,  Phil helped evict a mini zoo of larvae and spiders from the bathroom.  Having not fixed the mini mixer, he made wild garlic pesto in the pestle and mortar.

High infection rates having a ‘major impact’, The NHS Confederation felt abandoned and urged government to rethink the ‘living with covid’ plan, reintroduce mitigation, and reinvigorate the public info campaign with renewed focus on mask-wearing and gathering outdoors.  A Number 10 spokesperson said no; thanks to vaccinations, treatments and better understanding, it could be managed similarly to other viruses.

The Tuesday top-up shop was astronomical again.  Was it due to small seasonal additions or rampant inflation?  The Widower looked bemused by easter eggs.  I advised on vegan options for his granddaughter.  The weighty bags made my shoulder ache but it eased off after an unusual 5 minutes afternoon kip.

Smart Energy GB found rising costs led to habit changes and a UCL survey found us more worried by money (38%) than covid (33%).  Anxiety and depression levels the highest for 11 months, 51% didn’t feel in control of their mental health.  Unemployment fell to 3.8%, but with 76,000 economically inactive, there weren’t more jobs.  The Met issued 30 more Partygate FPNs – Boris, Rishi and Carrie Antoinette were included for The Bumbler’s birthday bash.  Apologising, he said he only went for 10 minutes and didn’t know it was a party.  “He should contest the fine then,” advised Phil, “that would be hilarious in court!”  The first sitting PM ever to be exposed breaking the law, the most Covid fines issued in a single street or workplace and more to come, it confirmed Downing Street was full of crooks.  Keir said they’d broken the law, repeatedly lied to the British public, were totally unfit to govern and should resign.  Lobby Akinnola of Bereaved Families agreed they had no authority, took us all for mugs and would be gone by nightfall if they had any decency.  Approval ratings plummeting, Boris reportedly begged Rishi to stay to save Big Dog.  Operation Red Meat looked more like mincemeat!  Evil kids cartoon villain Michael Fabricant subsequently compared it to nurses having a cheeky post-shift drink, justice minister Lord Wolfson resigned and our MP Craigy Babe said they must go.  They didn’t.

Wednesday, I baked an easter cake and wrote.  Not seeming long since the last submission, a message from Valley Life had taken me by surprise.  I considered the feature almost finished but sifting e-mails later in the week, noticed a word limit increase.  How had I missed that for a whole year?  I checked with The Owner who also passed on lovely feedback from ‘a neighbour’.  Probing revealed it to be The Widower.  As earlier rain cleared, I’d have loved an evening walk if I wasn’t dead tired.  Instead, we watched a programme on BBC4 about Stonehenge’s removal from Wales – not stolen as the Welsh claimed, but taken by migrants.

Inflation rose to 7%.  With pre-tax profits of £2.03 billion, Tesco gave staff 1.5% ‘thank you’ bonuses for coping with pandemic, supply chain and inflation challenges.  Pay rises would come in July.  Uncle Joe accused Putin of genocide and the presidents of Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia visited Vlod.

Waking with a scratchy throat for the third morning running Thursday, Echinacea banished it.  Opening the bedroom window, I heard then saw 2 typhoon jets zig-zagging over the next hill.  The laptop misbehaving even after a restart, I persevered with writing but got head fug and hung washing on the line.  Decorating Neighbour was sweeping the street.  I asked if he’d done the steps.  “I don’t go that far.” The co-op bustling, I forgot essential items.  Counsellor Friend was stocking up before joining the great easter getaway.  With no P&O ferries, railway engineering and airport queues, I wished her luck!  Having a nightmare with veg falling on the floor and a cluttered sink, Phil eventually helped.  Knackered, I bemoaned an almost-gone afternoon.  An item in metro on easter laughter disappointingly contained no actual jokes.

UK covid infections fell except Wales, for the first time in 6 weeks, suggesting the surge of BA.2 had passed the peak.  Bonnie Prince Charlie gave out Maundy Money on behalf of the queen.  The latest madcap scheme to deal with dinghy crossings involved putting the navy in charge of the channel and sending migrants to Rwanda.  Copied off Denmark, there were only 100 places under the ‘migration and economic development partnership’ aka offshoring single black men.  Boris said the plan was possible because of Brexit freedoms but conceded it could be legally challenged.  Keir called it unworkable, extortionate and an attempt to distract from Partygate.  Phil mused it might not put people off: “After all, we’re always being told to ‘Visit Rwanda’ on the footie!”  However, interviewees in a Dunkirk camp maintained the crossing was risky but they’d risked much already and pointed out accepting Ukrainians into our homes was double-standards – touché!  The First of stricter UK reception centres at RAF Linton-on-Ouse slated to ‘open soon’, bewildered villagers were up in arms at no consultation.  More sanctions were announced by the UK and EU, against Russian oligarchs who propped up the so-called Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republic. Imports of iron and steel and exports of quantum tech were banned.

Bridge of Sighs

Haiga – Inner Voice

After I was asked if the photos I sent for the Crossings expo were mine even with my name on, Good Friday, Phil was asked which object he’d written about.  “Can that writing woman not read?” I sighed.  He went shopping for the items I’d forgotten and flowers.  As he tried to put them in a vase, I took over while he toasted hot cross buns for a hasty lunch.  The beautiful roses stayed fresh-looking for over 2 weeks.  Wending up to the upland village, we stopped in the playing fields where Phil allowed a rare snap, later garnering several ‘likes’ on FB.  In time for a mid-afternoon performance, It was lovely to see the Pace Egg play after a 2-year absence, and also the kids and grandkids of Deceased Friend, for their traditional family get-together.  Viewing obstructed, hearing became impossible during the final act because of the chattering classes.  What was the point of going if they were more interested in bragging about themselves than listening?  We made a hasty getaway and were heading downhill when Phil decided he needed a snack from the burger stall outside the pub.  Hearing music, we wandered into the beer garden.  Phil commandeered the one free table while I got the second pints of the day.  As the novelty act doing bad cover versions wore thin, we retreated to the penfold.  A man with 2 dogs hovered at the entrance before letting one loose to run round in an ellipse.  He denied that explained rutted soil beneath a picnic bench.  Methinks he lied!  Despite extreme tiredness, night-time sleep was mediocre.

The next day, the Crossings expo preview invite landed in my in-box but not Phil’s.  Narked at doing ‘work’ at the weekend, Phil said it wasn’t work. “It is for them, and on Easter Saturday to boot!”  Still tired, I stayed home, hung sheets on the line and cleaned.  Meaning to garden in the nice weather, I seemed to run out of time and mislaid flower seed packets.  Phil popped to the shops.  Town rammed with drinkers but no more than expected, we didn’t understand why this weekend was picked to hold a hipster beer festival.  While he was out, I hastily made him a card featuring early spring blooms.

Spring Blooms Card

Birds tweeted in grey pre-dawn light Sunday.  I sighed grumpily, wondering what they had to be so cheerful about and turned over until hazy sunlight made sleeping impossible.  Dull-headed, I forgot it was easter, then remembered to print the card and give it to Phil with a pack of Haribo’s.  He felt bad getting me no confectionary until I reminded him we had stacks of chocolate and he got me flowers.

To refresh fuddled brains, we took a leisurely stroll west on the canal, avoiding squawking geese protecting their nests, admiring showy tulips and chatting to The Biker outside his houseboat.  Complementing the restoration of his granddad’s plane, we agreed they didn’t make tools like that anymore.  A sign on the chicken farm honesty box helpfully informed us turkey eggs were like hens eggs but bigger!  Tempted by a promise of refreshments in the pavilion, we stepped onto the diminutive stone bridge to the cricket club.  No match on, it was closed.  We rested on an equally picturesque bridge near the lock.  Serving also as a crossing point, an arrow indicating Warland, prompted Phil to invent a film plot wherein puritan villagers refused to accept the civil war was over.

Archbishop Welby called the Rwanda ploy ‘ungodly’.  Responding in The Times, Nasty Patel said it was ‘bold and innovative’ and challenged anyone to come up with a better idea.  How about opening safe, legal routes for migrants?  Charities lambasted the Nationality and Borders Bill for not preventing child trafficking.  Theresa May later added she couldn’t support the policy on the grounds of ‘legality, practicality and efficacy’ as it split families and encouraged trafficking of women and children.  Patel refused to reveal eligibility criteria.  Gammons were incensed at small print allowing Rwandans to come to the UK in exchange.

The laptop very noisy Monday, Phil stopped the daft MS newsfeed.  Accompanied by music, I started spring cleaning the study, finding the mislaid wildflower seeds behind the desk.  Outside planting one in a pot, a neighbour from across the way asked if I knew which cat visited her garden.  “They all look the same to me!”  Unbelievably, The Great Escape was the best bank holiday film on telly all weekend, apart from Barabbas.

Face-masks no longer mandatory but ‘strongly advised’ in Scotland, spotted without one at a barbers, Sturgeon was again called a hypocrite.  Police had words.  In their latest covid wave, Shanghai reported 3 deaths bringing the overall total to 4,641 – still lots less than the UK.  Shats launched the gimmicky half-price rail tickets wheeze with a cheesy YouTube videoiv.

Tuesday a boring round of chores, writing and shopping, in the evening, I returned a missed call from Aunty.  She liked the old postcards of her locality I’d sent her with easter greetings.  Found in a charity shop, I promised to send more if they turned up.  Using the last of the bargain chicken to make soup, we’d got 4 dinners for £2.50  (and a lunch).  The affordable alternative to veganism!

Swiss Toni said Boris’ FPN was like getting a speeding ticket.  Ed Davey spluttered that was ‘an insult to bereaved families’.  Alastair Campbell contested the claim Blair got a speeding fine while in office, pointing out security disallowed driving.  It later emerged The Bumbler racked up £4,000 in speeding tickets while at GQ magazine.  In the commons, he repeatedly apologised to MPs, acknowledged the ‘hurt and anger caused’, but insisted it didn’t occur to him it breached rules.  Keir said he dragged everyone down to his level.  Saying he wasn’t worthy of holding office, Mark Harper publicised a letter to the 1922 committee.  Referral to the Privileges Committee and more fines imminent, ministers repeated pleas to await the full Sue Gray report.  The economic forecast bleak with the war and covid, the IMF judged the impact on the UK particularly severe with growth down to 1.2% in 2023 because of the ‘triple whammy’ of fuel, food and tax rises.  ¾ of civil servants still working from home, Rees Moggy told them to go back to the office.  The missive including tables of who was working where, FDA union’s Dave Penman said ministers were ‘vindictive’ and behaving like luddites’, when the private sector embraced flexible working.

On PMQs Wednesday, Boris conveyed 96th birthday greetings to the queen and informed us he was going to India.  Keir said once the cameras were off for the public apology, Boris went to his backbenchers to privately blame everyone else and say Welby wasn’t critical enough of Putin, when actually the archbishop said the Ukraine invasion was ‘an act of great evil’.  He invited the PM to apologise for slander, getting a flat ‘no’ in response.   Ian Blackford claimed 82% of Scots thought Boris lied.  While the commons debated the Buildings Safety Bill, protestors complained it didn’t help everyone affected by the cladding scandal.

The NOA found government departments uncoordinated on foreign travel rules with no assessment of the impact on the industry.  1:9 workers in insecure jobs, Frances O’Grady joined Zero Hours Justice’s Julian Richer and Living Wage Foundation’s Katharine Chapman to criticise delaying the Employment Bill announced in 2019: “Boris Johnson has done nothing to show he is serious about upgrading workers’ rights,” she said.  1.5 million cancelled streaming subs.  Prime and Netflix the last to go, did it explain splitting the current season of popular Ozark?  Just Eat and gambling firm 888 also haemorrhaged customers. A longitudinal study confirmed what I already knew – anti-depressants didn’t improve long-term quality of life.

Holed up in the Azovstal Steel works, Mariupol die-hards worried they were in their final hours and Vlod offered to exchange them for captured Russian soldiers.  The next day, Putin claimed victory in the city and ordered a ring around the steel plant.  Moscow tested a new ICBM to make anyone threatening them ‘think twice’.  Satan 2 wasn’t yet ready for deployment.  The Inflow of oil and gas profits bolstering the Rouble, Germany planned to stop using Russian energy products by the end of the year.  Wimbledon banned Russian and Belarussian tennis players.

Thursday, I tweaked the Valley Life article, cleaned the bedroom and hung sheets on the line.  Bright and breezy, they twisted up but dried quick.  Phil went to Leeds just after I went to town for a whizz round shops.  Picking up bin-end wine and a ½-price easter egg, I waited in the convenience store for a man chucking stuff in a sack.  What looked like a big shop, was actually parcels for delivery.  Wanting to linger in sun, pedestrian areas were fully occupied thanks to school hols.  A dumb couple stood on the bridge, commenting on the number of bridges.  ‘Err, there are rivers, you morons!’ I muttered.  I went home to weed the garden.  The Widower walked his dog past.  Enquiring how he was coping, he replied ‘okay’.  The underlying sigh belied his brave face. Thanking him for his nice words to Valley Life, he said they weren’t ‘nice’, but true.  How lovely!  Out of breath and fatigued, I went to lie down and retired early for a bath that night.  Suffering insomnia, the meditation tape eventually sent me into unrefreshing sleep.

The Valneva vaccine was approved for UK use, making 6 in total.  A man tested covid-positive on 505 consecutive days before dying, suggesting variants could evolve in persistent cases.  Medics wanted better treatments for the vulnerable.  While Boris posed in a turban, William Wragg echoed other back-benchers sick of defending the indefensible.  A motion to refer Boris to the Privileges Committee carried without a vote.  Designs to put the investigation on hold until police inquires concluded, were scrapped.  The Met said no fines would be issued before elections 5th May because of ‘restrictions around communicating’.  Local candidates included Freedom Alliance – Stop the Great Reset.  Their concerns of a global public-private partnership had some validity but not the conspiracy view that covid was a mechanism to control us all!

Sinking Ships

Crossings Exhibit – Installation

Phil had even less shuteye so we both felt unrest Friday.  Rushing out, we barely paused to greet new people on the street or admire profusive spring flowers.  At the Crossings show preview, project workers and the workshop leader directed us to our group’s work on the outer walls of small sheds.  We acknowledged fellow participants and extricated ourselves from an over-friendly acquaintance.  Of other exhibits, children’s print work stood out.  One kid made a print of Blackpool, cos nothing says nature like Blackpool!

Crossings Exhibit – Blackpool Print

We congratulated the friendly printer responsible on training the next generation.  Outdoor displays featuring wood, natural paint and ceramics, were much easier to photograph than indoors where pictures were defaced by reflections.

Art appreciation over, we followed a sign to ‘The Crags’.  Previously unexplored, we climbed the curated curious before a protracted return route.  A flagging Phil griped of miles to go so we switched to an upper path.  I went home to unshod hot, tired feet.  He went to the shop, ran into the over-friendly acquaintance again and got yet more ½-price easter eggs (for a fuller description, see Cool Places).

Wanting a trade deal by Diwali, Boris hinted at more immigration from India into high skilled jobs in return for reduced tariffs on British machinery.  He also pledged to help them build fighter jets to lessen reliance on Russia but didn’t push Nodi on neutrality.  At the JCB plant in Gujarat, owned by tory donor Lord Bamford, he didn’t mention the destruction of Muslim’s homes by their bulldozers.

Drained after a long afternoon out, I stayed home Saturday apart from a trip to the co-op.  Very quiet for a weekend, there was hardly any veg but plenty of oil, despite reports of rationing.  Along with potatoes, cereal and chicken feed, it apparently all came from Ukraine.  Nowt to do with Brexit or P&O ferries!  Was the war also responsible for HRT shortages?  At the kiosk, my mate’s eyebrows shot up as a colleague told him his pregnant partner wanted a gender reveal party.  I observed: “but what if it doesn’t want to be that gender? ‘How very dare you assume my gender before I’m even born?’ It would say.”  An eavesdropping woman added: “Nothing surprises me anymore!”(see Tales from the Co-opv).

On Sunday Morning, the hideous Piers Morgan said firms had a dilemma balancing staff being in offices and at home.  Oliver Dowdy maintained Boris gave a ‘clear explanation’ of events leading to fines and we should balance that with other matters.  In an unfortunate analogy, he said the PM still had ‘fuel in the tank to deliver for this country’.  Asked how much more of the ‘drip, drip’ they could withstand, he blathered about focusing on the national security crisis.  What was he on about? The war was in Ukraine not the UK!

We went in search of blossom in the park.  At various stages of growth, some had already blown off and dandelions outnumbered the cherry.  Having noted the music café was rebranded ‘Charlie’s – not attracting the young hip crowd, but OAPs supping a nice cup of tea – we investigated other changes in town.  With a closed bank now a daft pub, several ice cream sellers and a pointless melts outlet, Phil remarked: “It’s full of people from out of town selling crap to people from out of town – like a northern Cotswolds!”  However, we got more bin-end wine and bargain easter eggs (the most I’d ever had, even in childhood).  Coming back, we came across German Friend and empathised on the struggles of processing the passing of friends.

Some tories told MOS that Rayner, lacking Boris’ Etonian debating skills, distracted him by crossing and uncrossing her legs at PMQs.  What tripe!  She could make mincemeat of him!  She tweeted: ‘Women in politics face sexism and misogyny every day…This is the latest dose of gutter journalism..”  She later added it was classist too.  A colleague said: “Just when you think the Conservative party can’t get any lower they outdo themselves. (They) clearly have a problem with women in public life.”  Even Boris decried the piece.  Meanwhile, 56 sex misconduct allegations included 3 cabinet ministers and 2 shadows.  As ship Albatroz sunk, 47 barrels of diesel created  a slick, threatening The Galapagos’ giant turtles.

Haiga – Impressions

Wobbly and heavy headed, I started to exercise Monday morning, when a throat niggle progressed to my ear and nose.  Annoyed at a second bout of illness that month, Phil reckoned I’d caught covid at the art show.  Feasible, seeing as the last one immediately followed the workshop, but vile phlegm implied the usual sinus lark. 

Either way, it rendered me bed-ridden for much of the week, apart from essential chores and spells on the sofa. 

After posting a haiga and Cool Places updates, I got head fug and settled down with a book when Phil noisily announced he was going for a rest.  I ask you!  I slept for 1 minute.

Idiot Epstein informed Jeremy Vine that Rishi was rich because he was good with money.  Hmm – It’s easy to be good with money when you have piles to start with!  Rees-Moggy put memos on empty Whitehall desks saying ‘I look forward to seeing you in the office soon’.  In a rare moment of not talking claptrap, Dreadful Doris called the passive-aggressive bullying ‘Dickensian’.  Life expectancy down in deprived areas over the last 3 years, covid was partly blamed.  In Kyiv, Lloyd Austin and Anthony Blinken said ‘Ukraine is succeeding’ and promised more munitions.  Following weekend attacks on the Azovstal steel plant, Russian strikes targeted fuel and rail facilities.  After Micron was re-elected president of France, cops killed 3 protestors.

Tuesday, I okayed the Valley Life proof and worked on blogs.  Suffering brain fog, I stopped writing and submitted photos to the larger arts festival exhibition.  Phil went to the co-op.  Disturbed by the door slamming on his return and loud talking on the street below, so-called ‘quiet time’ was a write-off.  As he’d bought 3 kinds of spuds, I cooked loads for dinner, getting backache and narky.

The Bumbler convened Cabinet to invent ideas to address the cost of living crisis without spending extra money.  They came up with encouraging more uptake of child and pension credits, cutting import tariffs and childcare ratios and extending MOT’s to 2 years.  The Guardian accused them of trashing health and safety.  Boris threatened to privatise DVLA and the passport office.  Delightfully-named Ian Snowball, landlord of the Showtime bar, Huddersfield, faced a £6,000 fine for allowing a punter to sip ale while standing to play beer pong during restrictions.  Talk about disproportionality!  IPPR reported 400,000 quitting work due to ill health, leading to ‘terminally low productivity’.  Elon Musk bought twitter for $44 bn.  Right-wingers thrilled by the promise of less moderation, others feared more fake news, bigotry and conspiracy drivel.  After The Insolvency Service began criminal and civil proceedings over redundancies, shit-show P&O failed to further reduce wages.  Intending to restart the Dover-Calais ferry Spirit of Britain for freight from Wednesday, The European Causeway lost power half an hour from Larne and limped back.  As more weapons were sent to Ukraine, Serge warned of ‘world war by proxy’ and again raised the prospect of nuclear attacks.  Antonio Guterres went to Moscow, incensing Vlod by not visiting Kyiv first.

Barrels of Fun

Unappreciated Dandelions

Wednesday, I fetched the coffee, for which Phil tossed me 10p.  It disappeared like a crap magic trick.  At PMQs, Keir attacked the government’s approach to the cost of living crisis.  Boris threw out figures and metaphors.  Keir quipped that was his fab debating skills we’d heard about!  He then asked ironically if being the only country to raise taxes had made things better or worse?  Ian Blackford cited Trussell Trust research that 830,000 children depended on food parcels and urged him to look for ideas beyond the cabinet, such as raising child payments like in Scotland.  He could also have cited food parcel demand (up 44% in Yorkshire), 59% of the population making lifestyle changes to cut spending and 18% having no disposable income.  Cathy Gardner and Fay Harris won a high court case against PHE and The Cock for discharging untested patients to care homes where their dads’ died of covid.  Invited by Daisy Cooper to apologise, Boris insisted they didn’t know the virus was transmitted asymptomatically.  Court evidence proved otherwise.  A PHE paper passed to Sage early 2020 concluded ‘asymptomatic transmission cannot be ruled out’, another warned ‘pre-symptomatic transmission…constituted a very substantial proportion of all transmission,’ and top medic Pat Vallance said likewise on the Today Programme, 13th March.

Fatigued by the antics, I rested.  At least external noise was more ambient this time.  At coffee time, Phil cadged from my depleting filter supplies, saying he’d buy me more if I gave him 50p.  A bargain, I said he could have the 10p back, which had turned up among the sheets.

Rayner called Lord Geidt clearing Rishi of any wrongdoing an ‘utter whitewash’.  Editor David Dillon refused to meet Lindsay Hoyle.  Carol Brexit informed Jeremy Vine that 4 tories heard the Ashton MP jest about using her legs to distract Boris.  The Chief Whip promised action against a tory caught watching porn.  After letting rumours accusing others to circulate, Neil Parish was suspended Friday, said he got onto the porn site by accident looking for tractors but re-visited it, then resigned Saturday.  Following more EU sanctions against 50 oligarchs and companies including Gazprom, Russia cut the gas off to Bulgaria and Poland.  How did you sanction a company you traded with?  Greenpeace called imports of 1.9 million oil barrels since the start of the war, ‘utterly disingenuous’ when the UK vowed less reliance on Russian supplies.  GSK reported a £9.8 billion turnover in the first quarter, thanks in part to anti-viral drug Xevudy.  Meanwhile, treatments for tremors involved zapping neurons and the first person treated for Parkinson’s with a Deep Brain Stimulation implant, declared a miracle.  York councillors divested Prince Andy of Freedom of the City.

Eyes shutting while reading, I hoped to be less fatigued Thursday.  Sadly not.  Phil went to the market for bog paper (only loose rolls available) and fishy bits.  The shrimps were from Holland.  Full import checks on European goods further delayed, supermarkets were happy, but exporters facing red tape and ports having built unnecessary infrastructure, weren’t.  The benefits of Brexit eh, Moggy?  Was that taking back control?

A tweeter thought it fun to relabel BA ‘British Wokeways’ for refusing to fly migrants to Rwanda over fears of a backlash.  Charter flights would add to an already astronomical £120 million for the scheme.  A whopping £30,000 each, Phil reckoned it’d be cheaper to give people the money to go home.  In more commons sleaze, Jamie Wallis was charged with a hit and run, Imran Khan belatedly submitted a resignation letter (after getting another full month’s pay), Liam Byrne was suspended for 2 days, and a female MP was called ‘a secret weapon’ as all the men wanted to sleep with her.  Ben Wally said they should avoid ‘toxic bars’ and Sue Braverman claimed there wasn’t a ‘pervasive culture’ of misogyny but some bad apples.  Yes, but it only took one to rot the whole barrel!  Keir said he took all allegations seriously and hoped colleagues had confidence in the complaints procedure.  On QT, Jon Ashworth agreed the cost of living was the most important issue but connected to Partygate because tories were disconnected and dismissed people’s real concerns as ‘silly’.  Mims Davies wittered about jobs and floundered trying the defend the migrant policy against accusations of being ‘pick and choose’.  After telling Iain Dale Channel 5 had thrived when it was privatised (it was never public!) an unusually sober Dreadful Doris came on Newscast to prate about impartiality and privatising Channel 4 even though 96% were against it.

Friday, Phil said he needed a haircut: “I look like I’m from a Britpop band.” “No you don’t. Mines’ worse.” “It does need colouring in.” “Thanks!” I sat abed writing until hungry and hot, considered getting lunch but he brought it to me.  Perhaps staying put was a good thing, because I felt much better on a bright Saturday.  I went to the rag market to buy haberdashery from friendly stall-holders then waited for Phil to come to an exhibition of historic photos by a local celeb.  On the way, we were waylaid by falling blossom and dandelions.  I later created a Facebook album but the dazzling yellow blooms went unappreciated.  Balking at a £5 suggested donation, we contributed by purchasing juice.  Phil’s photography mate had planned the showing for 2020.  They bemoaned work being on hold since covid and I sympathised with his travails being interviewed for a documentary.  I could talk for England but stick me in front of camera, I was dumbstruck!

550 Network Rail upgrade projects over the bank holiday weekend, cleaners and conductors’ strikes meant TPE only ran a small number of (dirty) services.  Roads were predicted to be quiet.  A good job with herds of animals on the M62 at Eccles and Brighouse.  Madelaine McTernan who worked on the covid vaccine rollout, was appointed HRT tsar.  Demand up thanks to The Davina Effect, I felt I was missing out not taking it.

References:

i. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

ii. My Cool Places blog: https://hepdenerose.wordpress.com/

iii. My Cool Places 2 blog: https://wordpress.com/posts/hepdenerose2.wordpress.com

iv. Shat’s gimmicky rail sale video:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iheo0km3xHE

v. Tales from the Co-op: Notes on life, the universe and stuff that sucks: Tales from the Co-op Vol 5 (maryc1000.blogspot.com)

Part 99 – Culture Club

“We have got a prime minister who seems to be stoking the anger that people feel in the country at the moment, and that can have real repercussions for society” (Kim Leadbeater)

Lovely Jubbly!

Platinum Jubbly

Tossing and turning not helped by beeping dumper trucks in the early hours, I felt terrible Monday and Phil’s silly pixie crab dances made me dizzy.  Half-dressed, I took the breakfast tray down, cleared a lake near the sink and took coffee up while Phil carried my laptop.  Apart from assembling rubbish for him to put out and meals, I stayed abed, posted the haigai and journal, and worked on the next episode.

Sir John Bell of Ox Vax blamed scientists and politicians who discredited Astra-Zeneca for hundreds of thousands of deaths.  Carrie Antionette issued a statement that she ‘plays no role in government’ and Boris’ ‘enemies’ targeted her in a ‘brutal briefing campaign’.  Goblin Saj called the attacks misogynistic.  In personnel changes, her special adviser mate, Henry Newman, left Downing Street as new director of communications Gutu Harri conspicuously walked in with healthy snacks, policy director Andrew Griffiths said voters wanted tories to “return rapidly to the point when we can cut taxes,” and chief of staff Steve Barclay juggled 3 jobs.  The Torygraph reported the treasury held up the NHS covid recovery plan.  In a sham show of unity, Boris and Rishi went to Maidstone Hospital, denied a rift and promised ‘tough targets’ with cancer diagnoses within 28 days.  Australia open to the vaccinated from 21st February, there’d be no Novax!

Having made bail after a court appearance last week, Piers Corbyn led a band of anti-vax acolytes to Westminster, conflating nonsense about Julian Assange and Jimmy Savile.  Keir was bundled into a cop car, 2 arrested for chucking a traffic cone and Boris still refused to apologise for the Savile slur.  The mob waved Canadian flags in support of the truckers.  Growing from a 500-strong Freedom Convoy into a wider protest, Justin Trudeau left Ottawa with a state of emergency, and a 10 day injunction on horn-blowing.  Speculating on why we never saw Jeremy and Piers Corbyn together, we invented Conspiracy Man!  A day after the queen reached 70 years on the throne, gun salutes fired across the country and Wholesale Clearance bought a bunch of misprinted commemorative Chinese crockery.  In a nice cultural reference, they encouraged us to “Become an Only Fools and Horses fan and wow your friends with your Lovely Jubbly set!”

Evening Prime viewing disrupted by internet issues, lots of fiddling ensued.  I returned to bed to watch Newsnight.  Arguments that re-starting fracking after mothballing in 2019 would help volatile energy prices were questioned in a global gas market.  Greedy bastard BP then announced record profits for 2021 of £9.5 billion.  Labour renewed calls for a windfall tax.  BP said they would invest in alternatives.  UKhospitality predicted restaurant and pub prices would rise by 11%.  Was that because pay in the sector went up 12%?

Cancel Culture

Pass the Salt!

As Chris Witless wrote to unvaccinated health staff it was their duty to have a jab, Goblin Saj belatedly presented the covid recovery plan, revealing record NHS waiting lists could reach 14 million and wouldn’t drop for 2 years.  In a mini cabinet reshuffle, Chris Heaton-Harris became chief whip, Mark Spencer moved to leader of the house despite the islamophobia investigation, and Rees-Moggy laughably became minister for Brexit opportunities and government efficiency. Heather Wheeler became parliamentary sec., Wendy Morton transport minister and George Uncleverly bafflingly switched from North American to European minister while in Washington!  Lindsay Hoyle asked The Met for a situation report on the Corbyn mob ambush and repeated rebukes to a nigh-empty commons for careless talk, saying ‘we should always be mindful’ our words have consequences.  An ‘incredibly angry and upset’ Kim Leadbeater said the PM stoked anger with ‘real repercussions for society’.  At the Convention of the North in Liverpool, The Glove-Puppet doubted the ‘trickle down’ approach helped areas outside the ‘overheated’ South East.  Yorkists decried a skinny Levelling Up document and how long it took to cross The Pennines.  Quizzed on the integrated rail plan, Glove-puppet thought it a fair point.  Mini Macron went to the Kremlin to sit at the other end of a very long table from Vlad.  Someone beat me to ‘pass the salt’ in the Metro caption competition!  Going onto Kyiv, Mini saw a way forward but Russia denied agreeing to no further escalation on the Ukrainian border.  A clip of a holocaust joke from Jimmy Carr’s Christmas special went viral causing widespread outrage.  16,000 signed a petition for Netflix to bin him and Ofgem boss Melanie Dawes welcomed ‘any chance’ to regulate the streaming giant.

The last two days warmer but very changeable with frost early Monday and rain sweeping down the valley Tuesday, I didn’t think I missed much and hoped the debilitation passed before better weather arrived.  Alas, rising on a sunny Wednesday morning, my head felt like it was still asleep.  I rose on wobbly legs, angrily brushed bits off the bed and got back in.  I tried to tactfully mention the mess.  Phil hit back, prompting a tirade about him making more work, then he conceded they likely came off his fluffy socks.  Shaking blankets out, I knocked a plant pot off the windowsill. Depressed at a relapse, I was almost in tears at yet more work.  I cleaned up the worst while he fetched coffee before PMQs.

Kier focused on the ‘buy now pay later’ energy deal, calling it ‘a dodgy scheme, not a proper plan’. The Bumbler lauded the ‘fantastic plan’ as more generous than anything labour had set out and launched into another party political broadcast.  Interrupted by heckling, Hoyle admonished the front bench.  Keir persisted on the issue of forcing people to take out loans when oil and gas companies made money every second.  Paraphrasing BP on being awash with dosh, he repeated it was ‘one big scam’.  Boris blathered about council tax, the global problem caused by a gas price spike, and labour ideas to ‘clobber’ companies with tax which would raise consumer costs.  Invoking Brexit, Boris said they’d used new freedoms to ‘do the right thing’ and harked back to Keir wanting to stay in the EMA. After The Mirror published another photo of the 15th December Christmas quiz, Fabian Hamilton asked about the PM seen with bubbly and tinsel.  Boris said he spoke ‘in error’.  Gray had discounted it as a law-breaking event but amid renewed outrage, The Met said they’d reconsider and Operation Hillman prepared e-mail questionnaires to 50 Westminster party attendees including the PM.  Hmm!  “Were you at a party?” “Yes/no.”  The Scumbag said there were way better pics than that. The Optics not looking good, financier John Armitage suspended tory donations, saying Boris had lost moral authority and should leave office.  Naz Shah asked when would the PM match action to rhetoric and give Bradford what it deserved?  He told her they invested in Yorkshire and didn’t rule out extending ‘the eastern leg’ from Birmingham.  Perplexing, as HS2 was not intended to reach Bradford.

I worked on the journal and the secret card.  Phil went to the co-op and made lunch.  Trying to analyse sleep patterns, I was unable to fathom Sunday night’s insomnia or why a great night Monday hadn’t helped much, or why I started to feel better in the evenings only for debilitation to return in the mornings.

Gillian Keegan stayed in a meeting even as she got a positive covid test.  Boris soon to rescind remaining restrictions, testing and isolation rules would go by 21st February, a month earlier than planned.  The strategy ‘to live with covid’ after ‘half-term’ (sic) may well be a crowd-pleaser, but with 200,000 new cases a day, the pandemic wasn’t over. Tim Spector of Kings College Zoe covid study called it an ‘act of irresponsibility’ and Justin Madder asked: ‘what’s the science?’  Amid claims they were the first government to restore freedoms, it was pointed out Sweden beat them. The PAC criticised government’s handling of leaving the EU; the only detectable impacts were higher costs, more paperwork and delays.  Rees-Moggy said it’d be better in 50 years – it’d take him that long to find those Brexit opportunities!  Attention-seeking foghorn Adele swept the board at the Brits.  Footage of her belting out one of her awful songs unavoidable, fans whinged she’d cancelled her Caesars Palace residency but they could probably hear her in Las Vegas!

Welbeck primary schoolkids’ letters to Nottingham South MP Lillian Greenwood concerning Partygate were shared on twitter. On Jeremy Vine, ex-teacher Geoff Norcott remarked indoctrination was a perk of the job while Nads Zahawi later said schools shouldn’t encourage kids to ‘pin colours to the political mast’.  Discussing careless talk, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown referred to ‘Dreadful Doris’(who had a ‘lovely turn of language’ according to Brandon Lewis) and Geoff to Jimmy Carr’s holocaust joke as deliberately bad taste. Meanwhile, Hate Not Hope wrote that Netflix made a ‘grave error of judgement’ not pulling the show.  Carr had ‘crossed a line’ then doubled down, portraying himself as a victim of cancel culture.

Menagerie

Haiga – Up in the Air

Still fatigued and fuggy Thursday, I managed 10 minutes stretching and opened the window to shake rugs out before Phil changed the sheets.  I bathed, got half-dressed, put washing in the machine, took coffee back to bed and worked on the journal for an hour then left the laptop to update while I finished cleaning upstairs.  After making superbly fluffy rarebit for lunch, Phil brought some laundry up, which made me realise I’d forgotten the sheets.  Putting them in the dryer later, I forgot to take them out.

Wednesday, Sadiq Khan said he needed proper plans from Caressa Dick on how she’d deal with racist, misogynistic and homophobic behaviour and restore shattered public confidence in The Met.  The Casey review into police culture taking too long, he wanted answers within ‘days and weeks’.  Refusing to resign Thursday morning, Dick said she had a whole team rooting out bad apples.  Failing to attend a 4.30 p.m. meeting with the mayor, at 6.55 p.m. she announced she was ‘stepping aside’.  John Major told the Institute for Government ‘brazen’ Partygate excuses were dreamt up day after day, the public asked to believe the unbelievable and ministers sent out to defend the indefensible, making them look gullible, foolish and shifty.  Scotland announced £208 million to help with the cost of living.  Equating to £150 per household, Kate Forbes was berated for repeating Rishis’ mistakes.  Rail travel rose 31% thanks to clean trains and the DOT clarified Boris wasn’t referring to HS2 in answering Naz Shah.  Yes, but he did mistake Bradford for Leeds!  While he went to Brussels and Poland, Trussed-Up Liz got a frosty reception in Moscow.  Sergei Lavrov likened the meeting to trying to communicate with the deaf and dumb.  She retorted she wasn’t mute.  No, but you didn’t listen, you pompous mare!  Mocking her woeful diplomacy, Russian media labelled her a centaur. With her stature it’d be My Little Centaur!  After WHU fans booed cat-kicking footballer Kurt Zouma, the RSPCA took his pets away, Adidas and Vitality withdrew sponsorship and a fine of 2 week’s wages viewed inadequate, 300,000 signed a petition to sack him.  Dagenham & Redbridge suspended his brother Youan who shot the video nasty.

Newscast treated us to cringey renditions of I will Survive (sang by Boris and Gutu Harri) and Come on Arlene.  Guest David Lammy described the febrile atmosphere among the Corbyn mob, and assured us he was fine, saying ‘you can take the boy out of Tottenham…’  He marvelled at a PM who pulled stuff from the nasty corners of the right-wing dark web and deemed him hugely guilty of stoking up ‘unsavoury and dangerous’ acts.  Getting 6 death threats a year, many with a racial element, he said it was worse for female MPs.  Labour trapped by a huge tory majority, a cynic might say they’d benefit from Boris staying, but integrity mattered more.  And besides, populists always had to be dragged from office!

Shrieking chainsaws didn’t help sleep.  Eventually dropping off with plugged ears, convoluted dreams entailed buying a teddy bear and having to hide it.  I lay in a stupor in Friday’s early hours then drifted back into a fitful doze.  Wobbliness persisting, I stayed in bed and re-started the slow, whirring laptop to wait a full infuriating hour for windows to configure.  Furious at an unproductive morning, I picked up a sketch pad but was uninspired.  Despite also feeling crap, Phil went to the co-op.  Finally able to type in the afternoon, I drafted a Valley Life article, backed up files and began sorting duplicate folders, then stopped with head fug and turned the laptop off, hoping it’d cure the sluggishness.  Unable to get the kettle to work making a brew, the stove-top method took a full 15 minutes!  I bad-temperedly cleared the draining board while waiting and stomped back upstairs.  Phil fixed a bent spring on the base but still inoperable, thought the switch was broken.  Meanwhile, I reduced stove-top boiling time to 9 minutes by measuring water.

Covid passes in Wales to be scrapped next week, shoppers would still need masks until the end of March and there were no plans to end self-isolation.   Unvaccinated kids over 12 were allowed into Spain from Monday with a negative PCR test – too late for families who’d already cancelled half-term holidays.  Although contracting in December, the ONS said the economy grew 7.5% in 2021.  Rishi welcomed the news, but economist Sam Tomb claimed the true figure for private firms was 3.4% and the UK economy continued to ‘underwhelm’ relative to G7 peers.  Liberty Steel received a winding up petition from HMRC.  While unions called it a devastating blow, Gupta hoped to find an ‘amicable agreement’.  Nasty Patel unbelievably called Khan rude and unprofessional (err, it wasn’t him that ditched the meeting) and said The Met needed strong and decisive leadership.  Is that why she didn’t sack Dick months ago?  Harvey Proctor thought it high time the Augean stables got cleaned up, but who would do the muck-raking?

I remained fatigued over a largely miserable weekend.  People wittering on the street below mitigated against sleep Friday night, even with earplugs, and a bright start forced me awake Saturday.   Cold rain replaced the sun and the hot water ran out during bathing.  To delay putting the heating on, we donned extra layers but his arthritic hands agony, Phil gave in.  No signal on the big telly, he tutted at my attempts to tweak the aerial.  I railed back and stormed upstairs.  Both TVs came back, for nothing but sport.   The laptop taking an age to spark up, shutting down at night was patently a bad idea.  Eventually, I managed to post a pic for my nephew’s birthday and type.  The evening peace was broken by raucous drunken warbling, the voluble Shed people coming home at 2 a.m., and the irksome generator.

Both feeling ropey on a grey, wet Sunday, I ate breakfast downstairs and printed the secret card before Valentine’s Day. Back in bed, I composed a haiga based on a different shot of the pink winter blossomi.  Phil braved the greyhound charity shop closing down sale.  Car-boot dealers literally ripping shelves out, he returned from the scrum with bloody knuckles, sneakers and a couple of electrical items, including a bright red kettle from the larger, quieter shop.  Catching up on the footie that evening, we noted West Ham didn’t field the cat-kicker.  Kurt Zouma in the starting line-up, were they cowed by French extradition demands?

The People’s Assembly organised cost of living demos across the UK, supported by unions.  An injunction allowed Ambassador Bridge, Ontario, to be cleared of truckers.  Even James Blunt crooning at full blast couldn’t shift anti-vax protesters outside the NZ parliament.  They just sang louder.  Uncle Joe held talks with Vlad, but Ukrainians thought it was all scaremongering.  On Sunday Morning, Brandon Lewis added to the fear, saying Russia could invade within a matter of days, possibly Wednesday.  Ben Wally said there ‘was a whiff of Munich in the air’ but the Russian ambassador to Sweden Victor Tatarintsev didn’t ‘give a shit’ about sanctions.  Brandon denied the Stormont exec was non-functioning and wanted an EU agreement on the Irish question.  Telling us Trussed-Up Liz met Maros šefčovič Friday, I found no reports on how that went.

Reference:

i. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

Part 98 – This Page Intentionally Blank

“This stinks of a cover-up by Number 10. Even Richard Nixon believed a country deserves to know whether their leader is a crook” (Ed Davey)

Dirty Dozens

Haiga – A Moment of Calm

The storm moved to the east coast Monday, leaving the valley mostly calm and bright.  Posting a haigai  and the journal took most of the day, excepting lunch and essential chores.  Due to the weather, mounds of recycling littered the house. Phil helped with disposal.  One eye on the news, he précised the Sue Gray report but as the incomplete document was 12 pages (less if you ignored ‘this page intentionally blank’), I read it myself.iii

Specifics missing, Gray berated the culture at the ‘heart of government’, failure of leadership and judgement, unprofessional consumption of excessive amounts of alcohol, inappropriate use of the Number 10 garden, and concluded rules weren’t followed.  As operational structures hadn’t kept pace with expansion of the PM’s office and staff felt unable to report concerns, ‘lessons to learn’ should be addressed immediately.  The Bumbler began his commons statement with another vacuous apology, saying he understood people’s anger, and he’d fix it by reviewing codes of conduct and creating an Office of the PM with a permanent sec. – would that address the accountability vacuum?  He then blathered about government achievements.  Keir responded Gray made ‘the most damning conclusions’ with a PM under criminal investigation and making people feel like fools, although they shouldn’t as they saved lives.  Quite!  I kept saying those who stuck to rules did the right thing and should stop whinging they didn’t hug!  Phil asserted we were locked down to keep tory toffs safe.  The comment from Carrie’s party mate 13th November seemed to support that.  Keir alleged Boris wouldn’t resign because he was ‘a man without shame’.  Boris called that ‘a tissue of nonsense’ but others echoed pleas for full publication of findings.  Andrew Mitchell withdrew his support and Ian Blackford ejected himself after repeating Boris broke lockdown rules and ‘wilfully misled parliament’.

Of the 16 ‘gatherings’ in scope, The met were looking into 12 (8 in Downing Street and 4 in the cabinet office)*.  With 300 photos and 500 documents of the ‘Dirty Dozen’, they pledged to fast-track the investigation within weeks.  At an emergency meeting of tory MPs, Boris allegedly banged the table screaming he’d nearly died of Covid.  Trussed-Up Liz was spotted without a mask, later tested positive and wouldn’t accompany him to The Ukraine.  As he’d cancelled a planned call to Vlad, David Lammy said it was an example of the ‘real world consequences’ of the distraction and Layla Moran complained: “This is the man who picked pleading with his backbenchers over talking tough to Vladimir Putin.”  Meanwhile, Hong Kong politician Caspar Tsui resigned after being discovered attending a banquet.  Our leaders could learn a lesson there!  On Newsnight, small minister Paul Scuzzball contrarily argued that as Boris was at deaths door, he understood the issues!  Tory activists said with no contrition and no confidence, his days were numbered.  Journalists agreed, seeing the interim report as a ‘series of smoking guns yet to come’.  I looked forward to the adaptation of Sue Gray and the Party Detectives into a Netflix series or, more likely, a low-key Brit flick!

Two years after the first hospital admissions of covid patients in Newcastle, NHS bosses warned of frontline staff quitting if forced to have jabs.  Ministers said the policy could be ditched after consultation, including for social care.  Would the 30,000 sacked workers return?  Several areas of Beijing underwent lockdown and daily testing ahead of the Winter Olympics.  Back-to-back storms forced the Thames barrier to close, blew lorries over, hampered train services and left 45,000 homes power-less.  Winds reached 90 mph in  Stonehaven where unhappy residents whinged this was the second time since November.  In The Great Drain Robbery, thieves stole 160 cast iron drain covers in Doncaster to sell for scrap.

Cleaning out the fridge Tuesday, I found chilli jam so old mould erupted on the lid, a lump of ice in the runnel and a puddle beneath the crisper drawer.  I spent ages scrubbing a minging juicer stored on top.  The days long gone when chucking 40% of our fruit in the form of pulp was a good idea, we agreed to donate the unused item charity.  The chore was punctuated with refreshment breaks, writing and shopping.  Sunny and mild to start, a stiff breeze assailed me on the way to a quiet co-op where I discussed the price of seeds and compostable bags with my namesake at the till.  Feeling iffy, I  forced myself to write in the afternoon.  Mind blank trying to work on the novel, I composed an add-on for Cool Placesii and posted a photo of pink winter blossom for Elderly Neighbours’ birthday (See below).

9.9% of covid cases over the past year were reinfections.  Previously 2%, it showed earlier illness didn’t protect against Omicron.  The WHO recommended treatments Sotrovimab and Baricitinib. DOHSC accounting revealed £8.5 bn written off for lost, faulty or expired PPE.  The IOPC published details of racist, sexist and homophobic messages between officers at Charing Cross cop shop 2016-2018.  The 2 dismissed were not isolated ‘bad apples’.  After announcing the closure of 317 meat, fish and deli counters and Jack’s discount stores, changes to overnight working put another 1,600 Tesco jobs at risk.  Our local farm shop featured on Look North.  Open since 1974, the 81 year old owner offered a  lifeline for remote villagers in bad weather and lockdowns, delivering essential supplies.  In Grimsby ahead of unveiling the Levelling Up white paper, The Glove-Puppet said London’s elite didn’t understand the problems of overlooked communities.  His plans involved elected mayors for every part of England and a dozen ‘national missions’, with targets for the economy, housing, education, transport and culture up to 2030 in 55 areas.  20 urban regeneration projects would start with Sheffield and Wolverhampton.  Criticised for no new money and lack of ambition, Lisa Nandy called it shuffling deckchairs and Tracy Brabin suggested he prioritise early years and bringing HS2 to the young, vibrant city of Bradford.

Boris known to have attended at least 3 of the ‘Dirty Dozen’, police guidance stated identities of those issued fixed penalty notices ‘should not be released or confirmed’.  Rayner inveighed: “I can’t believe this needs saying. The public have a right to know if the PM is found to have committed an offence.”  Ed Davey added it stank of a cover-up.  Rabid Raab implied Boris still didn’t think he’d done any wrong saying: “(he) believes he acted in good faith at all times.”  Downing Street later said they’d reveal if Boris was fined.  In Kyiv to speak to president Volodymyr Zelensky before a press conference and rescheduled call to Vlad, No. 10 claimed he spearheaded the international response.  An international joke more like!  White House press aide Jen Psaki chortled at ambushing cakes in faces, Russian TV sniggered Boris was a henpecked wannabe emperor mocked even by kids, and former tory diplomat Rory Stewart sputtered: “This idea that somehow Boris…is single-handedly defending Ukraine from Russia is pure fantasy.”

Dancing In The Gaslight

Savile and Thatcher

Waking with a creaky jaw the last 2 mornings, further evidence I  was grinding my teeth while sleeping due to anxiety, emerged a few days later. Careful exercise helped ease the discomfort Wednesday.

Boris parroting the accusation from right-wing social media that Keir failed ‘to prosecute Jimmy Savile’, Nazir Afzal on BBC Breakfast said in the 3 years he worked under him as DPP, they had record child abuse convictions.  In fact, decisions were made locally, Keir apologised and commissioned an investigation which blamed Surrey prosecutors and police for the mess.  Causing ructions in the tory ranks, Tobias Ellwood was one of 3 to submit letters of no confidence and on Newsnight, David Liddington derided the ‘crude, stupid distraction tactics’ and a lack of emotional intelligence that ‘sapped trust’.  Nick Watt called the gaslighting a death sentence.  “Hmm!” mused Phil, “who’s the one who likes dressing up, visiting hospitals and says he’ll fix it…“  And let’s not forget, Savile was a tory.  A photo of the nonce posing for the Tory 2010 election campaign turned out to be fake but ones of him with Thatcher weren’t.

Lindsay Hoyle read ‘the bible’ on parliamentary language before PMQs.  If Ian Blackford had to retract calling Boris a liar, why didn’t Boris have to recant his comment on Savile? I wondered.  The Bumbler toadied to the queen and told Esther McVey mandatory jabs for the NHS would be abandoned.  Tongue in cheek, Keir queried if part of Operation Save Big Dog was being ‘tax-cutting conservatives’, why did they keep raising them for workers while protecting oil companies and banks and ’gaslight’ the British public with stealth taxes?  To Boris’ usual waffle, he responded: ‘lots of words, lots of bluster, but no answers’ and joked that wouldn’t work with the police!  He pointed out wastage and fraud during the pandemic equalled the extra taxes and asked why he wasn’t investigating that instead of squeezing people to the pips?  Boris spewed a load of figures, rubbish about record amounts of PPE and getting ventilators from footballers.  Keir repeated he needed to sharpen how he answered questions.

I was stealing myself to take the redundant juicer to the charity shop in the drizzle when Phil offered to go.  Relieved, I did some admin and messaging, setting a record 3 social engagements for the month (lunch with Walking Friend and AN Other Friday, an exhibition with Manchester Friend and a drink with The Researcher late Feb).  The so-called wine rack stuffed with miscellaneous items, Phil returned as I began sorting them to reclaim mechanical whisks and a mixing bowl, then left me to evict spiders, scour utensils, start another charity bag and make room in cupboards.

Hospital cases down, more deaths were recorded than for almost a year.  Figures excluded Scotland.  Nasty Patel told the home affairs committee the IOPC findings showed a ‘failure of leadership’ (sic) but didn’t say Dick should go.  Yvette Coop wanted action from the home office as well as The Met.  Boris made the postponed call to Vlad and tweeted the way out of hostilities was diplomacy.  So, calling the Russians hostile was diplomatic, was it?  After legal advice that SPS checks required approval from the Stormont Executive, DUP minister Edwin Poots ordered officials at Daera** to stop Irish Sea border checks from midnight.  Back doors opened at the Port of Belfast the next morning.  Saying issues could be resolved through the protocol, Sinn Fein accused him of playing party politics.  4 Insulate Britain protestors got stuck in jail after gluing themselves outside the High Court while chants of ‘Boris out’ were ignored during Westminster news broadcasts.

Lower leg cramp woke me in the early hours Thursday.  Unable to reach, I tried shaking it out but the knee agonisingly locked up.  On the verge of tears, I attempted to stand and hobbled to the bathroom.  After a bit more sleep, the pain alleviated enough to perform most of my exercise routine.  Telling Phil I‘d never known anything like it, he said he had and I worried not for the first time, if it was arthritis.  I rushed chores and writing tasks to go to town, greeting 3 lesser-spotted neighbours along the street.  The centre strangely quiet in the dull dampness, I discussed the inflationary cost of cough drops, energy price hikes and treasury plans for loans and rebates with Sweet Shop man.  Ofgem raised the cap to £1,971.  Rishi dished out £200 rebates on electricity bills from October (to be paid back from 2023, though Goldman Sachs doubted prices would drop until 2025) and £150 off council tax (the treasury gave councils £144m).  Unimpressed, labour called it ‘buy now pay later’ and asked why there was no cut in VAT or windfall tax for Shell, who made £14bn profit?  BOE simultaneously put interest up to 0.5%, predicted inflation of 7.25% by April and said it wasn’t a good time to ask for more pay.  So much for the high skills, high wage economy!  GMB’s Gary Smith retorted: “telling the hard-working people who carried this country through the pandemic they don’t deserve a pay rise is outrageous.”  Elsewhere, France put a 4% limit on fuel rises, Belgium slashed VAT and Greece increased the minimum wage by 2%.

On the market, I bantered on posh names for bog roll with Jolly Veg man and topped up supplies in convenience stores to postpone a trip to the co-op, then lugged bags home and faffed to fit mussels in a bowl until Phil came to help.  He began scrubbing a Dutch oven but desperate for lunch, I bade him leave it.

Effective against Omicron, Novavax was approved following trials in Leeds and Bradford.  A caller to Jeremy Vine called Boris a baboon and David Davis said he suffered death by a thousand cuts with the party in a state of paralysis.  As if to illustrate his point, director of communications Jack Doyle and head of policy Munira Mirza quit; she cited the Savile slur.  Stopping short of an apology, Boris insisted he was making a point about responsibility for the organisation as a whole.  What!  Like he was responsible for the antics in No. 10?  Late evening, PPS Martin Reynolds and Chief of Staff Dan Rosenfeld also left Downing Street pursued the next morning by special adviser Elena Narozanski.  At least 2 of them were at parties.  Energy minister Greg Hands said it proved the PM was ‘taking charge’.  DUP MLA Paul Givan resigned, meaning Michelle O’Neil also lost her post, power-sharing at Stormont ended and the exec couldn’t meet.  How did that square with them having authority to change import rules?  Sinn Fein said the political opportunism had catastrophic impacts ahead of May elections.  A high Court judge subsequently suspended Poot’s decision to stop import checks, until a full judicial review to avoid confusion ‘hanging over’ civil servants.

Discussing mandatory vaccines for health staff on QT, a sceptic with piles of scrappy notes disputed a vax scientist.  Robin Shattock tried to be nice but ended up saying he was talking crap.  Torygraph weirdo Tim Stanley thought it good to have the debate and mandating counter-productive.  NHS Confederation’s Victor Adebowale said with 95% staff uptake but only 89% for BME, they had rights but also responsibilities.  Crispin Blunt believed it sensible to re-assess the policy on evidence.  A nurse in the audience claimed natural immunity from having covid protected her.  Shattock informed her that varied and asked if an antibody test might persuade her?  “Maybe.”  Probed on if Boris damaged the tory party, Crispin said we were being played by The Scumbag and repeated the assertion not everyone followed the rules.  Weirdo Tim bizarrely compared Boris to a character from Oceans 11, Rosena Allin-Khan maintained the ‘consistent liar’ wasn’t fit for office, before or now, and Victor called him a moral vacuum.  Robin asked: who do you trust?

Interviewed on Newscast, Rishi said Boris was right to apologise, evaded questions on standing for leader and claimed to have seen no parties from Number 11’s window.  A day later, The Mirror reported The Met had a photo of Boris holding a can of beer at his lockdown birthday party, standing next to Rishi in the cabinet room.  Shot by Andrew Parsons (one of 3 of The Bumbler’s official tax-funded photographers) who documented the event, it proved they didn’t give a shit!

Mixing It Up

Pink Winter Blossom

So much happened in the world of politics late the previous night, trying to get a grip Friday morning was hindered by Phil rambling and Walking Friend texting to ask if I could be ready early.  To avoid rushing, I arranged to meet at the corner pub instead, hastened my notes and put a face on.   No sign of them outside, AN Other waved to me from inside the pub.  They mixed coffee and Bailey’s but I eschewed drinking during a catch-up and deciding what next.  On the way to the big charity shop, a feint rainbow provided a backdrop for a cloud of squawking corvids.  We ambled down the still oddly quiet pedestrian street.  AN Other liked the look of the wood burner in the cocktail bar.  Unsure if they served food, she asked to be given a Med café menu.  As she re-arranged the furniture to feel the heat, I wryly told the waitress: “sorry about this.”  The partnership arrangement involved staff toing and froing across the street.  Over inevitably tepid dishes, we discussed holidays, labyrinthine German tax laws and mutual acquaintances.  I expressed relief at not going to Deceased Friends’ wake after the family all got covid and learnt another old pub mate died of cancer last month.  Walking Friend fed pigeons to distract them before feeding ducks on the wavy steps.  Visiting more charity shops, we ended up at one near our street.  AN Other drove back across the moor, Walking Friend went to the co-op and I went home, agreeing it made a change mixing up our lunch-meets.  A mélange of chatter crowding my head, I couldn’t relax at all during a siesta.

ONS found risk of death from covid dropped 93% after 3 jabs.  Rishi having distanced himself from Boris’ slur, Goblin Saj said Keir should be respected for doing a good job as DDP but the PM ‘clarified remarks’ on the Savile issue and still had his support.  Nick Gibb, the latest tory MP to publicly call for Boris to go, cited constituents’ fury ‘about the double standards’ and the PM’s ‘inaccurate’ commons statements.  Meanwhile, Liam Fox waited to see what happened and in a round of drunken interviews, batty Nads Doris claimed 97% of tories backed Boris and it was all a Remoaners plot.  After taking the big plane to Blackpool to play with trams, Boris returned to rally the troops and quote ‘change is good’ from the Lion King.  “It really is The Lying King!” I laughed.  Ukrainian architects Studio Makhno designed Plan C, bagels for settlers on Mars to inhabit craters, with food grown in orbiting spherical greenhouses. Did they nick the idea from The Expanse?

A watery sun presaged grey rain Saturday.  Rather scatty, I kept drifting off, but rallied with caffeine.  Nowt on telly, we watched extras on a DVD so it could go in the charity bag.  Disposing of recycling, I found dog poo on the doorstep, angrily scrubbed it off and railed I was starting to take it personal.  Phil thought dogs simply needed a crap when they reached the top of the steps.  Heading to the main road, car lights on the gloomy roads made it appear like midwinter again.  Among gaps in the co-op, I got a cheap pineapple.  What was that about affordable fruit?  At the till, teenage girls carefully handled a carrier like it was precious.  The nice young Scottish cashier told me it was a cappuccino glass.  Pausing halfway through scanning my stuff, she apologised for having a moment.  “It’s okay, I’ve been scatty today.” “Good.” “Is it?”  “Yeah, if you can’t pause on a day like this, when can you? Have a nice evening.” “It’s not evening yet. It just looks like it.” “I don’t mind this weather.”  I stopped myself replying she was probably used to it!  I trudged back and collapsed on the sofa while Phil watched Olympic skiing, commenting on the fakery in an area of China that barely got 20cm of rain a year, let alone snow!  Working on the journal, I got mixed up with all the Westminster parties, checked the BBC news list and discovered 2 were excluded from the report, including Shaun Bailey’s lavish buffet.  “That sounds like an excellent idea!” exclaimed Phil, googled an all-you-can-eat in Blackpool and declared he now used tory antics as a kind of tarot.  Cooking the pineapple with a splash of sambuca, Phil queried why we never drank it.  “We don’t really mix drinks anymore.”

Raining all night, sheets of hail careened down the valley Sunday.  And it was so dark!  No possibility of a walk, I worked on the journal and tried cleaning kitchen chairs.  Mysterious splotches persisting, Phil’s idea of using turps to expunge them might wait ‘til we could work outside.  We also made some arrangements for Phil’s birthday weekend but were undecided on the lavish buffet. During a truly terrible night, I caught myself clenching my jaw in an early hours stupor.  I must have slept but it was in such small snatches I might as well not have even tried!

After Boris stated crime fell 14% and the Home Office admitted it excluded fraud and computer scams, the UKSA sad they were misleading.  Challenged on Sunday Morning, Kwasi Modo said they meant street crime like burglary and violence.  Tell that to Leeds people in fear of being stabbed!

Shaun Bailey’s Lavish Buffet

*Scope of inquiry:15th May 2020, garden party; 27th Nov, leaving do; 10th Dec; gathering at DoE, 15th Dec, Xmas quiz.

The Dirty Dozen: 20th May 2020, garden party;  18th June, a gathering; 19th June, Boris’ birthday party; 13th Nov, 2 gatherings; 17th Dec, 3 gatherings; 18th Dec, ‘end of term’ party; 14th Jan 2021, a gathering; 16th April, 2 gatherings.

Excluded from report: 14th Dec; Bailey’s lavish buffet, Met speaking to 2 attendees; 16th Dec, DoT party.

**(Department of agriculture, environment & rural affairs)

References:

i. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

ii. My Cool Places blog: https://hepdenerose.wordpress.com/

iii. The Sue Gray Report: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1051374/Investigation_into_alleged_gatherings_on_government_premises_during_Covid_restrictions_-_Update.pdf

Part 97 – Never-Ending Story

“He is sending an appalling message to society, that the most powerful person in the UK Government thinks it’s okay to mock people because of their bodies, race, sexual orientation and religion ” (Kirsten Oswald)

It’s My Party and I’ll Go If I Want To

Haiga – Signifier

Posting the haiga i a doddle Monday, the journal took far too long even though I’d started it Sunday, leaving little time for much else.   Watching The Expanse series 6 on Prime In the evening, I questioned if they’d properly explained why Naomi wasn’t dead.  At bedtime, I stuffed earplugs in to block out noisy diggers near the canal and finished The Gallows Pole by Benjamin Myers – coming soon to a TV near you!  A good read but lazy notes left unanswered queries on historical accuracy.

Testing was scrapped for fully vaccinated incoming travellers from 11th February, in time for half-term.  Lord Agnew resigned from government over mismanagement of covid loans, accusing the treasury of “little interest in the consequences of fraud to our society.”  Look North reported that Leeds businesses were hit hard with 39 weeks lost trade; the 10th worst in the UK.  Visiting Milton Keynes University Hospital, Boris announced a cabinet office inquiry into the sacking of Nusrat Ghani.  A Russian invasion feared imminent, diplomats were withdrawn from The Ukraine, Trussed-up Liz went to Brussels, Uncle Joe held a conference call with NATO allies, more warships and fighter jets were sent to Eastern Europe and troops put on standby.  Threats to engage unlikely to materialise, Vlad would be quaking again at the idea of sanctions – not!  The FTSE fell as did the rouble against the dollar and the pound.  Jeff Bezos recruited Hal Barron of GSK to lead Alto Labs anti-ageing company to defy death before holding us all in hock forever and zooming off in a rocket when he’d wrecked the planet!  Actor Sam Jackson was spotted filming for MCU in Leeds and Halifax.  How on earth did they make The Piece Hall look like Russia?

ITV news reported Carrie organised a surprise birthday party for Boris, 19th June 2020, during lockdown #1, involving M&S party food, cake, 30 people including Martin Reynolds, other Number 10 staff and Lulu Lytle, and a chorus of ‘Happy Birthday’.  Downing Street said Boris attended a ‘staff gathering’ for a mere 10 minutes.  Keir responded: “This is yet more evidence that we have got a PM who believes that the rules that he made don’t apply to him…(they) spend their whole time mopping up sleaze and deceit. Meanwhile, millions of people are struggling to pay their bills. We cannot afford to go on with this chaotic, rudderless government. The PM is a national distraction and he’s got to go.”

Grey, foggy and cold for the second day running, I shivered after bathing Tuesday with an inexplicably twisted towel.  Well-layered up, I went to the co-op, finding massive gaps in the fruit and veg aisle.  The woman in front of me at the till irksomely failed to put a ‘next customer’ bar on the conveyor.  I pointedly placed them in front and behind my purchases.  As she swiped her member’s card, I wondered aloud to the cashier why nobody had ever told me that was possible and she showed me how easy it was.  You learn something new every day!  In the afternoon, I added to my novel and did some research before continuing cleaning the kitchen shelves and making more space.

Less infections in all age groups except the younger, DfE estimated 1:20 kids were absent from class 20th January, the most all term.  10% of teachers off, Paul Whiteman of NAHT complained schools were ‘struggling to keep things running’.  Scotland would move to hybrid working from next Monday to help the economy while interest on UK government debt trebled.  Now aware of 19 Westminster gatherings, as a ‘result of information’ from Sue Gray’s team, the Met boss announced they would investigate those that ‘appeared to be the most serious and flagrant breach’ of coronavirus guidelines*.  Covid-19 lead Jane Connors would oversee the special inquiry team, potentially going back 2 years.  Knowing about the police probe before the morning’s cabinet meeting, Boris didn’t mention it.  Apparently as he didn’t want to pre-empt Caressa Dick, but did he fear a ministerial leak?  In defence of the parties, Tory MP Conor Burns hilariously said Boris was ‘ambushed by cake’ on his birthday, Crispin Blunt incredulously suggested rules were broken in ‘most homes’ and on Newsnight, Rees-Moggy used big words, evasion and waffle.  Answering a mystifying question on a praetorian guard, he agreed a new leader must mean a general election.  Reports followed that to celebrate the Scumbag’s departure from Downing Street 13th November 2020, Carrie sang ‘The Winner Takes It All’ and a guest told police they were the only ones allowed to party.

Let Them Eat Cake

Sue Gray And The Party Detectives Tour T-Shirt

Thankfully, it became brighter and warmer mid-week, as Phil repeatedly told me.  He helped with chores before PMQs where MPs wore purple and pink flame badges in advance of Holocaust Memorial Day.

Kate Osamor asked if The Bumbler had agreed to Rishi Rich ‘writing off £4.3bn of fraud’.  He replied, ‘No’.  Rishi was forced to tweet he wasn’t ignoring or writing off the Covid loans.  Keir questioned Boris on breaking the ministerial code by misleading parliament and resigning.  Boris repeated ‘No’ and the Captain Hindsight insult.  Keir laughed: “We’ve discovered the real Captain Hindsight,” to which a backbencher added: “with a party hat!”  The Bumbler spewed the usual hyperbole and answered Keir’s “people know he’s not up to the job” with rot about taking tough decisions and having a vision while labour had no plan.  To claims that Keir was a lawyer, not a leader, Labour MP Lloyd Russell-Moyle said he’d prefer to be led by a lawyer than a liar.  Having already threatened members with eviction from the commons, Lindsay Hoyle told him to retract the statement.  To Ian Blackford’s questions, Boris jibed it looked like he’d eaten more cake, for the SNP to accuse him of body-shaming.  Boris re-committed to placing a full copy of the Sue Gray report in the House of Commons library.  Release of the findings imminent, media reports it could be delayed until after the police probe giving Boris a longer wait to see if he went to his own party, were dismissed but fears of severe editing surfaced later in the week.

Ambushing Cake

The jokes kept coming with a sea of memes on social media, speculation the cake was Colin the Caterpillar, fitting in with the M&S party food theme, Nigella tweeting her next book would be ‘Ambushed by Cake’ and ‘Sue Gray And The Party Detectives’ tour t-shirts on sale from several outlets.  Citing media stories from around the globe, Jack Straw wasn’t amused the UK was an international laughing stock.

Making progress on the novel, I had to stop typing in the afternoon due to head fug and switched to book-based research.  Editing journal notes in the evening, I found it hard keeping on top of news and gave up to rest my aching brain.

A BBC investigation found 1 million counterfeit face-masks were sent to the NHS at the height of pandemic.  The DOH ignored red flags until a nurse contacted Polyco, the Chinese supplier, direct, to be told they were ‘faked’ by ‘bad guys’.  Papers submitted by whistle-blower Raphael Marshall to the foreign affairs committee confirmed Boris approved clearance to evacuate the Nowzad shelter from Afghanistan.  He’d scorned the accusations of prioritising animals over people as ‘complete nonsense’ at the time – doubtful, as Pen Farthing was a mate of Carrie’s.  A small boat capsized on its way to the USA from Bimini Island, raising concerns for the 39 migrants aboard.  A spooky object was spotted 4,000 light years away.  Possibly a neutron star or white dwarf, giant bursts of energy sent out radiation beams 3 times an hour.

Tummy ache prevented an early start Thursday.  I opened the bedroom window to a keen blast of fresh air and held blankets tightly to shake them out in the gusty wind.  I tidied up a higgledy-piggledy pile on the kitchen draining board, and then the morning was gone.  Editing the journal on a slow laptop, I developed brain ache and my mood darkened.  Low feelings persisting into the afternoon, I forced myself to continue cleaning kitchen shelves, disposing of a cracked bowl.

Dubbed ‘Plan A Day’, commuter numbers grew.  Masks no longer mandatory, rail operators and big shops like Sainsbury’s, John Lewis, Morrison’s and Waitrose, requested customers still wore them.  Less infections in all UK regions, as well as covid-related NHS staff absence, 52% of patients with covid were treated primarily for something else.  Goblin Saj said Omicron was retreating and ‘thanks to the progress we have made’, care home rules would relax from next Monday.  Sentencing Jonathan Chew to 8 weeks for ambushing Chris Witless last summer, the judge berated him for contempt.  Trying to hide in North Wales, Boris dismissed claims of aiding the evacuation of cats and dogs from Afghanistan as ‘total rhubarb’, even though an e-mail from Rabid Raab sought ‘a steer from No. 10 on whether’ to call Nowzad staff forward.  Ex-tory Rory Stewart said lying was Boris’ default position.  Police recorded the highest ever number of rapes and sexual assaults in the year to September 2021, with the highest ever quarterly figure July-Sept.  ONS suggested the stats reflected the impact of high-profile cases, media coverage and campaigns encouraging victims to come forward.  Look North featured kids developing Tourette Syndrome during lockdown.  “Tic tock syndrome more like!” quipped Phil.  Newscast discussed the National Insurance hike.  Claer Barrett of the FT alarmingly calculated what it actually meant, particularly for contract and gig economy workers.  Leeds funny man Barry Cryer died.  His best joke was arguably: “Picasso was burgled and did a drawing of the robbers. Police arrested a horse and two sardines.”

Party On!

Box Frame Detritus

An earlier start Friday, I battled discomfiture to sort the kitchen table and created space moving clutter to emptier shelves.  The greyness had turned to drizzle by the time I headed out to dump unwanted books at Oxfam and go to the co-op where I saw Elderly Neighbour and asked after his wife.  No better or worse, he doubted she’d ever get better.  Experiencing a similar scenario with my mum, I empathised and reiterated offers of help if needed.  Phil came to assist carting the ace freezer deal home.  After lunch, he finally finished cleaning the kitchen blind.  The week a boring parade of shopping, cleaning and writing, I hankered for creativity, and arranged interesting detritus from foreign holidays in a second-hand box frame.  The relics of now misty-eyed distant memories had been lying about for years.

Omicron BA.1 might be waning, but scientists kept a watchful eye on BA.2 – now the dominant variant in Denmark and 1,000 UK cases.  PF-07321332+ritonavir (an anti-viral pill not a phone number), would be rolled out via the NHS from 10th February.  Formerly known as Paxlovid, it was 88% effective in reducing risks of serious illness or death in the vulnerable, if given during the first 5 days of symptoms. UKHSA sent priority PCR tests to 1.3 million so they could access treatment.  Government sticks to get staff back to offices could include removing tax breaks for working at home.  Having said they didn’t want to delay the report, The Met asked Sue Gray to ‘minimally reference’ and ‘remove key details’ of events they were probing.  Their claims it would ‘avoid any prejudice to our investigation’, didn’t ring true unless, as former DPP Lord Ken Donaldson said, they considered ‘more serious conduct’.  Suspects likely to face fixed penalty fines rather than trial by jury, he considered the constraints ‘disproportionate’.  Cynics might well call it a stitch-up especially as Goblins’ kid brother Bas Javid was deputy assistant commissioner!  As the report could be heavily redacted and rendered pointless, backbench tories joined opposition MPs in calling for unabridged publication.  And as police investigations often took years, was it a never-ending story?

A One Show preview of 100th BBC anniversary celebrations included a hideous Disney musical medley.  I queried what that had to do with the Beeb?  ”It’s the Lying King!” laughed Phil.  Later, we reviewed ‘Undone’ on Prime.  Phil hated the drawings and I detested the dialogue so we switched back to Wheel of Time for another laugh at trollocks.

On its way to Denmark, Storm Malik arrived in the early hours Saturday.  I awoke to howling wind and shaking windows.  Fast-moving clouds whizzed below a blue layer of sky.  Small fluffy ones literally spun.  Corvids and gulls wheeled in the thermals.  Elsewhere, winds of 80 mph winds caused loss of power and death in Durham and Aberdeen.  One felled tree sported a coffee cup.  Was it an offering to the gods?  Meanwhile, Storm Ana killed people in Madagascar, Malawi and Mozambique.  Attempting to ignore anxious feelings, I battled a cluttered kitchen to make brekkie.  After the dazzling start, the skies darkened and the clouds became grey.  I continued framing pictures and editing the journal while watching catch-up.  Young Sheldon annoyingly vanished off All 4, we binge-watched Andy Warhol’s America on iPlayer.  Very inspiring  but those yanks didn’t half like pointing out the bleeding obvious such as ‘he was gay’.  I coined the term ‘Yanksplaining’.  The night peaceful as the storm past, I dreamt lots but only recalled snatches.

Sunday beginning bright, Storm Corrie was predicted to arrive by evening.  Becoming colder as the sun disappeared, we forced ourselves out the house in the calm between the storms, taking steep cobbles and tarmac into woodland where jays vied for territory and broken trunks lay testament to the storm’s ferocity.  Down by the riverside, brave women swam in cold waters, fairies adorned allotments and yellow catkins heralded new life.  In town, coffee-cuppers infested the square.  We ducked in the convenience store, stuffed  reduced items into my stupid tiny rucksack and headed home for an overdue feed. (See Cool Places for more walks ii).

Trussed-up Liz spouted the usual BS on Sunday Morning and the Glove-Puppet used the puppet press, aka The Daily Mail, to launch a so-called ‘red wall revolution’ to prop up the PM, but it wasn’t new Levelling Up money, according to labour.  Speculation the NI rise might be ditched faded as Boris and Rishi wrote in the Sunday Times there was no magic money tree.  Yeah, when the dosh wasn’t going to their rich tory mates!  Oxford University Hospitals trials using MRI scanners adapted to use Xenon gas on the lungs of long-covid patients, showed promising early results.  Anti-Vaxxer Lawrence Fox got covid and self-medicated with Ivermectin.  Side effects included seizures, coma and death.  We could but hope!  President Trudeau ran away from Ottawa as a convoy of trucks rolled in to protest Canada’s vaccine policy.  The Trucking Alliance denied the demo represented their members.  Changes to The Highway Code effective from Saturday, critics said they weren’t publicised enough.  I thought pedestrians already had a right of way at junctions!

*Where: those involved knew they were committing an offence; not investigating would ‘significantly undermine the legitimacy of the law’; or there was little ambiguity around a reasonable defence.

Yellow Catkins

References:

i. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

ii. My Cool Places blog: https://hepdenerose.wordpress.com/

iii. Ian Mortimer, A Time-travellers’ Guide to Elizabethan England

Part 96 – Dog’s Dinner

“You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing. In the name of god, go” (David Davies)

Dog Shit Monday

Haiga – In the Pink

On a frosty, cold Monday morning, shed boy and girl ran their van engine for 10 minutes and hollered at each other.  I shouted angrily at the window.  Phil smirked at me: “They need to defrost the windscreen.” “Yes, but they don’t have to add to the noise by yelling!”  Patchy sun insufficient to dispel the chill, Phil made tasty porridge.  As I complimented his efforts, he sceptically suggested there was a ‘but’ coming.  “No there isn’t. Stop fishing!”  Posting the journal, WordPress encountered an error.  Anxious at losing a morning’s work, I recovered most of it.  Taking the recycling out, I trod in unseen dog shit near the bins.  Irritated at having to clean my boot again, I  stood on one leg to scrub it off over the drain, dodging cars and parents with toddlers.  As I fumed on the sofa, Phil sympathised and blamed too many lockdown dogs.  I leafed through dusty books under the coffee table, finding photography self-study notes.  Untouched for 4 years, maybe I should get back to it.  After placing on-line orders for essentials, I did some yoga but got no rest.  Officially Blue Monday, I reflected that was last week for me.  Shitty Monday more like!

Cases dropping 38% in a week, Oliver Dowdy predicted an end to Plan B restrictions on 26th January.  Mike Tildesley foresaw a flu-like relationship with the virus by the end of 2022.  All teens could have a booster but ex Vaccine Taskforce chair Dr. Clive Dix thought they were needless and mass vaccinations should end.  Boosters: “stop the vulnerable and elderly” getting seriously ill and dying, “so they’re the ones we should focus on.”  Former Number 10 official Sonia Khan claimed there was a long-standing drinks culture and The Scumbag blogged he told Boris to call off the 20th May do.  Prepared to swear in court, he claimed others were willing to join him.  Meanwhile, photos emerged of Keir having a beer in the officer during the April 2021 Hartlepool by-election.  He responded that they took a break for a take-away and got back to work.  In the BBC’s 100th year, Nads Doris told MPs the licence fee would be frozen for 2 years, but back-tracked on total abolition, saying that was ‘up for discussion’.  She said the real-terms cut put “more money in the pockets of families who are struggling to make ends meet.”  Err, how about cutting VAT on fuel bills and reinstating the Universal Credit uplift?  Lucy Powell called it a vendetta and nicked our line that Operation Red Meat was “designed to stop the prime minister becoming dead meat.”  £4.3 billion worth of fraudulent covid-related payments were written off, dwarfing the licence bill.  As the navy refused to assist Nasty Patel in persecuting migrants in dinghies, Phil remarked: “Dead dog more like!”  On Jeremy Vine the next morning, James Gammon had a point that the military were used to this type of thing, although they’d rescue people, not drown them!  The House of Lords threw out the police bill clause concerning loud protests and added one on criminalising misogyny.  I predicted that would get ditched in the commons.

Porky Pies and Piggy Eyes

Dog Mess Notice

Rainbow dawn colours complimented icing-sugar roofs Tuesday, presaging a bright, chilly day.  After a decent night, I had a productive morning working on the journal and cleaning the kitchen window, before Phil tackled the blind.  Looking lovely out, we discussed a walk but as the sun waned in the valley, we declared it too cold.  I  went to a busy, raucous co-op, noting the meat products had shifted.  Was it to disguise shortages?  In the afternoon, I reviewed my novel – quite funny in places if I say so myself!  I then tried to block the din of canalside diggers with earplugs and rest.  In a series of night-time covid dreams, I debated masks with the deceased friend.

Interviewed on Sky, Boris reiterated regret for misjudgements and upset, especially to the queen, but denied anybody told him the 20th May gathering was against the rules, to which Keir said he shouldn’t need telling as he set the rules.  Scotland ‘turned the corner’ on Omicron leading to the lifting of restrictions from next Monday.  Working from home and masks would stay.  There’d be no extension of the Covid Pass but still required in nightclubs, you had to prove you’d also been boosted.  Rishi and Saj were ‘cautiously optimistic’ England would follow suit.  Inflation at 5.4% December (the highest since March 1992), real pay fell 1%, employment went up 0.6% (a 1.4% increase on pre-pandemic levels) and unemployment fell 0.1%.  The debt charity StepChange found 1/3 adults struggled to pay bills and a tweet from an infuriated Jack Monroe that the index used: ‘grossly underestimates the real cost of inflation as it happens to people with the least’, went viral.  Sick of ‘governments’ jiggery-pokery’ with figures, Sharon Graham of Unite said the RPI revealed a real cost of living increase of 7.5% and they’d appoint their own experts to produce a ‘working index of inflation’.  ONS would subsequently work on inflation calculators to better reflect real everyday prices. DG Tim Davie warned moving to a subscription service would mean a BBC no longer able to do what it did.

Phil working hard in the gig economy from bed Wednesday, even using the hairdryer didn’t shift him right away.  Wanting to speed up so we could go out in a sunnier, warmer day, a bitty living room slowed me down as did the sun blazing through the kitchen window.  I tried adjusting the blind which he’d left fully open.  Easy my arse!  Irate and exhausted, I settled down with coffee for another commons blockbuster.

In the so-called Pork Pie Plot*, red wall tories planned to oust Boris.  Defecting backbencher Christian Wakeford crossed to the labour benches just before PMQs creating uproar akin to a zoo.  Appearing with piggy eyes as though he’d been crying, The Bumbler started with platitudes and Keir started by welcoming Wakeford, and queried Boris’ serial excuses; the ’very carefully crafted responses’ sounding ‘like a lawyer wrote it’.  An evasive Boris blathered that his judgements led to ‘the fastest growing economy in the G7’ and the fab vaccine roll-out and when asked: “if the PM misleads parliament, should he resign?” he answered: “wait for the inquiry.”  Referring to a dog’s dinner, Ian Blackford called Boris’ excuses ‘pathetic’.  Instead of ‘taking the British public for fools’, he should ‘take responsibility and resign’.  No, said Boris, prating about restrictions lifting thanks to co-operation across the UK.  An unmollified Blackford told him “Nobody’s buying this anymore, he’s partying and laughing…and not fit for office.”  I got ready for our walk after the main questions so missed David Davies’ bombshell.  Citing Leopold Amery’s words to Neville Chamberlain the veteran declared: “In the name of god, go.”  And he was no red wall tory!  In the aftermath, Laura K revealed the 2019 intake were referred to as a litter of puppies.  Were they running around chasing their tails?  You may recall the Bury South MP, dubbed Wokeford by rancorous tories, was embroiled in the boozy Gibraltar trip last November.

We got pies from the bakers and headed to the park.  Too many excitable dogs for my liking, we continued to the canal.  Perturbed by a bevy of geese, Phil advised they were harmless and wouldn’t come after our food which we munched perched on a low wall before taking the towpath to the next lock, crossing to an ancient clough and exploring untrodden paths.  Phil laughed when I snapped a dog mess notice, but as he referred to a bird in the brush as ‘a lady balckbird’, I chuckled in turn (see below).  Very muddy stretches ended in a slippery descent to the green bridge, made more hazardous when a large mutt came our way.  Although not steep, I panted on the incline and remarked it was due to weeks of no actual walking.  At the farm, we veered down to the station, returned to the park and admired gnarly bark edging the mossy riverside path.  Phil nipped in the co-op and I continued home to find two tiny plants on the garden wall.  The ‘free to good home’ note didn’t excuse them treating the wall as communal.  The plants matching the one from the local charity, I took them to the doorstep and thought I’d better find out what they were now I had 3.  Struggling to shed my boots, I was just about done when Phil arrived.  Collapsing on the couch, I reflected it was nice to get some outdoor exercise, even if it was mainly in the shady valley.  Actually feeling sleepy, I was inevitably unable to do so.

Attempting to appease rebellious tories, the scrapping of Plan B was announced.  Masks in classrooms and the work from home directive ended immediately, with workers told to go in even if they felt ill!  Steve Barclay ordered civil servants back to the office.  All other restrictions were ditched from next Thursday with ‘advice’ to keep face coverings.  The need to isolate would lapse on or before 24th March, easing of travel would follow and there’d be a plan to ‘live with covid like flu’.  It didn’t go unnoticed that Goblin Saj led the press conference rather than the PM.  No contrary sage advice, the ONS Community infection Survey reported UK cases falling consistently for the first time since November, except in Northern Ireland.  But another ONS survey showed Omicron 16 times more infectious; double that for the unvaccinated.  Almost 64% of over 12’s boosted was all very well, but with thousands hospitalised and an average 266 deaths a day in the depths of winter, doctors rightly urged public caution.  On BBC Breakfast, Jason Leitch lauded the Scottish approach and referred to LFTs as sci-fi.  He meant because you could do them at home but it was grist to the mill for conspiracy theorists.  Fearful of cholera outbreaks after the tsunami, 2 New Zealand naval ships took water to a covid-free Tonga. Australia and Japan also sent aid.

A bright, frosty Thursday turned nithering when the sun went behind the hill.  Phil not daring to wake me, I overslept.  As he didn’t hear a timid door knock, I bad-temperedly answered it for the postie to hand me a tiny box from Boots.  Expecting several items, I worried the quizzical look I gave her appeared rude.  Soon after, Phil answered a second knock and accepted a larger parcel.  Why on earth did they not combine them?  As I strove to get going, a bluebottle flew in the bedroom.  It flew out when Phil opened the window.  I started dusting when the landline rang.  From the top of the stairs, I caught a garbled message from the Ocado driver, and rang back.  He wanted to deliver early but I told him it wasn’t convenient.  Annoyed at all the interruptions, Phil thankfully took the tray away enabling me to continue tidying.  The minute I turned the laptop on, the delivery arrived.  After we’d sorted that lot, it was almost noon meaning writing was foreshortened.  Later, I cleared a stack of junk e-mail, completed a survey and played Wordle.  Unaware of this social media phenomenon until Countdown Susie talked about it on telly, I guessed the word in 5 goes.  Not bad for a first try, I tweeted the results.

Pork Pie Plot MPs complained of blackmail from tory whips, with threats constituency funding could be withdrawn if they didn’t toe the party line.  William Wragg advised they report intimidation to the police to be accused of attention-seeking.  He then arranged to meet The Met next week.  The Bumbler visiting Rutherford Diagnostic Centre in Taunton, knew nothing.  Number 10 refused to investigate, citing a lack of evidence.  Zara Rutherford (no relation to the famous scientist) became the youngest woman to fly solo round the globe.  The Glove-puppet met developers to ask them to pay to replace dangerous cladding.  Newscast presenters stuffed pork pies in their gobs as they précised the plot and challenged Simon Clarke for referring to Partygate as ‘frustrating’.  Viewers ‘shouting at the telly’ might use other words for it!

Sausages and Meatloaf

Lady Blackbird

No frost on near roofs Friday morning, those a street away were encrusted.  With office fodder returning to crush hour on public transport, BBC Breakfast discussed plans to reduce loud tannoy announcements.  Voiceover artist Emma Clarke, famous for ‘mind the gap’ and no relation to the tory MP, defended what Grant Shats called a Bonfire of the Banalities.  Look who’s talking!  And what about blind people who needed to know where to get off?  Jeremy Vine featured footage of Millie the Jack Russel.  Stuck in mudflats in Hants she was rescued when a sausage was dangled from a drone.  Far too much airtime was wasted on Meat Loaf. The worst rock singer in history who refused to be ‘controlled’ by vaccine, died of covid.  At least that was one less Trump meathead on the planet!

On the way to the co-op, I saw the postie.  Glad of the opportunity, I explained the funny look I gave her Thursday.  She was very nice about it.   Lots of missing fresh fruit and veg, I found a bargain chicken.

Kwarteng said we’d have to wait until the chancellor’s spring statement in March to know if we got any help with energy bills.  Trussed-up Liz had Vlad Putin quaking in his boots (sic) as she threatened consequences if he invaded Ukraine.  Look North went to Halifax where schools complained of allowing mask-less kids in class during ‘peak week’.  Andrew Lee of Sheffield University thought it too soon.  Broadcasting from what looked like a bare white-walled cell, we wondered why he wasn’t in front of his wonky picture of Clifford’s Tower.  Was he isolating?

Fatty Tubbutt was absent from Saturday Kitchen, reportedly having his appendix removed.  His excess fat more like!  They played ‘would I pork pie to you? ‘with guest Rob Brydon.  See what they did there!  Grey and cold, we stayed indoors.  I worked on the journal, wrote a haigai and posted an entry on Cool Placesii.  Continuing the kitchen spring clean, the top corner shelves were festooned by cobwebs.  We sorted a pile of cookery books and pamphlets, put some unused ones in a charity bag and some in the bin.  The idea of a Guardianista finding the Yotam Ottolenghi supplement made us laugh “featured in this week’s recycling…” Phil went to rest his aching back, leaving me to the bulk of the dinner prep.

After inadequate sleep, I awoke Sunday absolutely parched  The first time I’d caught the new Sunday Morning programme since Marr left, WHO Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove ‘pushed back’ against calling coronavirus ‘bad flu’.  Billions still unvaccinated, the pandemic wasn’t done with us yet and variants would continue to emerge, possibly worse than Omicron.  Maybe I thought, but it wasn’t in the virus’ interests to kill all the hosts.  Alarmed by an end to self-isolation, she urged exiting ‘gracefully, carefully, slowly’ and using masks as an easy way to slow the spread.  Batting away suggestions he may be in line for Boris’ job, Rabid Raab trotted out the party lines on the great vaccine programme and ‘the fastest growing economy’.  He informed us it was up to the PM how much of Sue Gray’s report would be made public.  Expanded to include visits to number 10 by  Carrie Antionette’s friends, the inquiry could be never-ending!  Nasrat Ghani claimed she was sacked from her ministerial post for being Muslim.  Raab said she should’ve put in a formal complaint at the time.  Chief whip Mark Spencer considered her allegation of islamophobia defamatory.  See you in court!

Another grey scene, Phil reckoned it wasn’t that bad out but disposing of recycling, I declared it far too cold for visiting the dank woods.  I brought the tiny plants in for repotting and looked them up on Google.  Kalanchoe or Widow’s Thrill (tropical succulents from Madagascar), were tolerant and easy to propagate. I could grow some more for next Christmas.  I spent the rest of the day writing.

Two years since the first Wuhan lockdown, China still battled to confine cases before the Beijing Winter Olympics and hamsters in Hong Kong caught covid.  Joe Biden met Anthony Blinken and his defence team to discuss Russian aggression.  Trussed-up Liz had ‘credible evidence’ Moscow planned to install a pro-Russian leader in Ukraine.  They dismissed the reports as misinformation and ‘stupid rhetoric’.  Supposed puppet Yevhen Murayhev told The Observer it wasn’t logical.

*Pork Pie Plot – so-called after one of the ringleaders, Alicia Kearns, MP for Melton Mowbray

References:

i. My https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

ii. My Cool Places blog: https://hepdenerose.wordpress.com/

Part 95 – Moody Blues

 “This is a prime minister who has been accused of breaking a law that he himself set; it could not be more serious”(Ian Blackford)

The Waiting Game

Gloomy Church Clock

Sleeping later than planned Monday, I rushed round, took piles of rubbish out, and picked up the laptop to a flurry of e-mails.  I replied to one from the owner of Valley Life agreeing to contribute during 2022, posted a haiga (see below)i and draft-posted the journal before scoffing lunch and preparing for a dental appointment.  Too cold and damp to walk to the next village, I went for an earlier bus than necessary.  Two didn’t turn up.  I rang the surgery to explain and they agreed to see me late.  The waiting room empty, I was told the dentist was with another patient when I saw him gabbing with staff.  X-rays required after not visiting for 2 years, I inwardly laughed when they switched the machine on and ran away, leaving me to be zapped!  I eschewed a visit to Sainsbury’s, and crossed to the bus stop.  The church clock looming in the gloom attested to another lengthy wait.  Unable to use my return ticket on the first bus, a convoy of school buses sailed by, then a swarm of schoolkids infested the queue until the right bus eventually came.  Inevitably packed, I perched on the edge of a seat, silently fuming at loud-mouthed mask-less little monsters!  Unable to stand them any longer, I alighted early and hurried the back way to the co-op for a couple of items.  Moody, cold and tired, I slumped on the sofa before dragging myself upstairs to warm up.

Daily LFTs for 100,000 critical workers began.  IKEA cut sick pay for unvaccinated staff required to self-isolate, as did Next later in the week.  The UKHSA and Covid Taskfarce looked at reducing self-isolation to 5 days, like the US.  Boris said he’d follow the evidence.  The Glove-puppet thought it too soon to say the Omicron wave was abating.  After getting stuck in a lift at BBC HQ, he joked that WA1 wasn’t satire.  He planned forcing developers to pay to replace cladding on shorter tower blocks.  Nandy said he didn’t address all the safety issues.  Novax was granted a visa but his dishonesty and the toing and froing of Australian officials, created embarrassment all round.  A competition to invent a platinum pudding for the queen required something simple, elegant and flavoursome. “How about angel delight?” giggled Phil.

Tuesday, I was irked at another late start, a lost sock and Phil handwashing a jumper after putting a load in the machine.  He berated my nagging and I sulked, posted the journal and replied to a message from The Researcher; illness explaining the wait to hear from her.  She seemed delighted with my draft takeover blog.  Still grieving for a lost Monday afternoon thanks to WY Metro, I stayed in to catch up on writing while Phil kindly offered to shop.  In a week when Souter Hole in Whitburn, Sunderland, grew into a sunken beach, Digging for Britain featured a whole Ichthyosaur fossil (or sea dragon) unearthed in Rutland and an iron age village which evolved into a wealthy Roman settlement discovered under HS2 in Northants.

379 deaths, 3,000 kids and 1 in 12 teachers off school due to covid, Sturgeon said masks could be the norm in Scotland for the foreseeable future but more spectators would be allowed at outdoor sports from next week.  WHO regional director Dr, Hans Kluge said over half of Europeans would catch Omicron in the next 2 months, while his colleague Dr Nabarro said the end was in sight if we respected the virus and reacted quickly to surges (occurring every 3-4 months) and David Heymann of the London School of Tropical Medicine thought the UK could soon reach endemic status.  A leaked e-mail from Martin Reynolds invited 100 people to a BYOB Downing Street garden party 20th May 2020, the same day we were told we could meet 1 person outside.  Boris and Carrie allegedly joined 40 attendees.  Even diehard blues sick of the smirks and ‘serial lying’, there were renewed calls for the PM to resign.  Would his PPS be the fall guy? Rayner asked urgent questions in the commons.  The Bumbler unsurprisingly absent despite no appointments, paymaster general Michael Ellis took the flak, saying there was ‘absolutely no indication’ his boss knowingly misled parliament and urged MPs awaited the inquiry results.  Ian Blackford attacked ‘a PM’ accused of breaking a law that he himself set.

Ovo blogged ways to keep warm including doing star jumps, cleaning, eating porridge and cuddling pets.  I did most of them; maybe I should get a dog!  They later apologised for ‘poorly judged and unhelpful’ content, sacked ¼ of their workforce and shut 7 of 10 offices.  The Minimum hourly wage for remaining staff was upped to £12.  Putin claimed to have suppressed the ‘foreign coup’ in Kazakhstan.

Dead Man Walking

High Trees (from Takeover Blog)

Sleeping well, I enthusiastically set about hoovering the living room Wednesday, impeded by unravelled floor cushion tassel threads festooning the floor.  Partygate inevitably dominated PMQs for a second week.  Starting with a sham apology, The Bumbler admitted getting ‘somethings wrong’, although the Number 10 garden was ‘an extension of the office’.  He went out to thank staff at what he thought was a work event 20th May, but ‘with hindsight’, he should have sent them back in and found another way to say thanks.  He said sorry to those who’d lost people and directed MPs to Sue Gray’s inquiry.  Not thinking to reference his ‘captain hindsight’ moniker, Keir called Boris ‘a man whose ran out of road’, and the excuse he didn’t know it was a party pathetic (yes, especially as he got the e-mail!) and asked would he do the decent thing and resign?  In response to a load of Boris Bluster, Keir asked was he ‘so contemptuous’ he thought he could ride it out?  Boris insisted he was aware of the public’s sacrifices and understood their anger, repeated ‘bitter regret’ and awaiting the inquiry report.   Keir listed previous high-profile resignations and wondered why the PM still thought the rules didn’t apply to him?  After Boris repeated himself, Kier cried: “it’s not working!”  Boris called Keir’s facts ‘wrong’ but accepted ‘they’ did wrong, with the caveat: ‘we thought we acted within the guidance’ and suggested as a lawyer, Keir should respect the process.  Kier responded ‘a series of ridiculous denials’ meant ‘the party’s over.’  Ian Blackford echoed calls for Boris’ removal from office.  Later on, Sir Roger Gale marked his leader ‘a dead man walking’ and Douglas Ross (head of the Scottish tories) submitted a vote of no confidence letter to the 1922 committee.  On Newsnight, Rees-Moggy insisted Boris was humble and sincere, showed great leadership in getting ‘the big things right’ and dubbed Douglas Ross a ‘lightweight’.

Turning to writing projects, I replied to another e-mail from The Researcher.  Developing head fug, I failed to rest.  In a long episodic dream that night, I married a murderer, escaped and attended a weird conference involving in a laser fight with red-hooded figures.  It was probably inspired by the magical Witcher on Netflix.

Concluding a case brought by The Good Law Project and Everydoctor, The High Court ruled awarding government contracts via a ‘VIP fast lane’ unlawful.  However, it was likely Pestfix and Ayanda Capital would’ve won the bids as they offered large volumes of PPE at a critical time.  Hmm!  Weren’t the masks from Ayanda chucked as unsafe?  Ministers said the fast track would stay for possible future emergencies.  Rayner claimed it was clear the cabinet office didn’t have the resources to conduct proper due diligence.  Smart motorways were paused for 5 years to gather more safety data.  How many deaths did they need?  GoFundMe donations enabled Alan Gosling to buy more ducks.

Dead Meat

Haiga – Epiphany

Stripping the bed Thursday, I opened the window in sunshine, shook blankets out and Phil changed sheets while I bathed.  I uploaded photos via a Google drive link from The Researcher.  The takeover post looking good, I thanked her for kind words and links to my other blogs.  She later proposed meeting for a beer sometime.ii  I left a sluggish laptop updating and went to town, tarrying in the sweet shop to admire diminutive pottery houses made by a customer.  At the market, I waited at the fish van for a woman to bafflingly ask if they could get seaweed for her daughter’s school project.  A woman passing the pizza stall opposite the veg stall asked: “Coma stai?” The hipster mumbled a reply. “Non parli Italiano?” He smiled inanely.  After she’d gone, I asked did he know what she’d said.  He reckoned she was Romanian to which I remarked she spoke Italian.  He insisted he knew that but obviously didn’t understand her.  I enjoyed an informative chat in the deli on different dal varieties before struggling home where Phil belatedly offered help after I’d carted bags to the kitchen.

While covid hospitalisations rose in the north, cases fell in London and the South East.  Encouraged by UKHSA data showing 2/3 no longer infectious after 5 days, Goblin Saj reduced self-isolation requirements accordingly (with negative tests).  Reckoning people were most contagious 3-6 days after contracting covid, Prof. Reicher queried: “how is this following the science?”  Boris pulled out of visiting a jab centre, ostensibly because a family member tested positive.  Hiding more like!  Despite his approval rating sinking to 23% after his phoney apology, senior tories rallied round, urging critics to await findings of the inquiry before judging.  Scotland Yard in ‘ongoing contact’ with the cabinet office, The Times predicted no evidence of criminality would be found.  Deputy CMO Van Dam notably made no mention of  the PM when announcing he was leaving his secondment at the end of March to become pro-vice chancellor at Nottingham University.  Fans implored a streetcar in the city be named Jonathan Van-Tram.  Feargel Sharkey re-appeared on BBC Breakfast to tell us all English rivers were polluted and quote “study to be quiet.”  Sound advice!   A man on QT complained M&S renaming midget gems was ‘people sitting around thinking of ideas.’  He obviously never had an idea in his life!  On Newscast, phone-in radio hosts reported a sea of disapproval to downing it in Downing Street.  Excuses put forward by the odd defender centred on the rules being too strict.  If they were too strict for them, they were too strict for those who stuck to them.  Clamours for the reimbursement of fines ensued.

Friday, I left Phil sat on the bed doing tiny work to clean the bathroom of mysterious dross and work on the laptop.  Again a brilliant start, the sun had sunk behind the hills but it stayed pleasant as I headed to the co-op.  A nice lad assisted my hunt for products to use a member’s offer and put me in the mood for a jest with my mate at the kiosk.  I remarked the hot cross buns would be stale by Easter.  He assured me they’d be long gone by then and joked about being crucified.  By the time I thought of a come-back, the moment had passed.  Phil arrived to help at the till where I realised I had enough member’s points for a free shop.

Former Covid Taskfarce DG Kate Joseph tweeted a statement on attending drinks 17th December to mark her departure from the cabinet office.  Rage mounted with revelations of two Downing Street parties 16th April 2021.  Staff bought a suitcase-load of wine from an all-night shop.  Ex-comms aide James Slack apologised ‘for the anger and hurt caused’ by his boozy leaving do.  Number 10 expressed ‘deep regret’ it happened on the eve of Prince Philip’s funeral.  Was the queen bothered after stripping Prince Andrew of his royal and military titles?  Keir responded Boris should’ve offered HRM a resignation, not a sorry.  Instead, the dead mad drew up Operation Big Dog, a list of officials in line to tender resignations to save his own skin.  So much for relying on Sue Gray’s inquiry!  The list of booze-ups at number 10 growing daily, Phil observed: “No wonder this government’s’ a shower of shit. They’re drunk every day!”  Tobias Ellwood said he should lead or leave but Liz Truss wished we’d ‘move on’.  What to? Brexit? Cos that’s going swimmingly!  GDP recovered to pre-pandemic levels before Omicron hit in November.  Tesco kept on 13,000 Christmas staff to cover self-isolating colleagues.  32 migrants rescued from The English Channel near Berck, Calais, a Sudanese man died of hypothermia.

I’m in the Garden!

Tipsy on after-dinner wine, we laughed at Wheel of Time (it’s no Witcher) and Dmitry Kokh’s photos of polar bears living in buildings on the abandoned Soviet era meteorological station, Kolyuchin Island.  Posing in the garden without wine and cheese, I bet they didn’t need a Verisure alarm! iii

For the third day running, Saturday started dazzlingly, with hoar frost prettifying hilltop trees.  Stressed at a greasy mess on the draining board from Phil’s late washing up, I kept schtum until he fiddled with the curtains trying to block sunlight from the telly.

He answered my tirade with a promise to clear up the oil slick, which he fulfilled.  I hurried to dress as the sun waned and the scene turned grey and cold.  Not inclined to go out, Phil started spring cleaning the kitchen, making the hearth gleam.  I considered contributing but got distracted by a film, and then it was dark.  Sunday drab, we abandoned plans for a walk and continued spring cleaning the kitchen, managing to not get in each other’s way too much.  Pissed off at lack of outdoor photo opportunities, we snapped a Christmas cactus.  The belated blooms served as a haiga subject. Leeds United back on form, we were treated to a series of goals in quick succession on MOTD resulting in a win against West Ham who knocked them out of the FA cup the previous weekend. 

Following admissions of lying on forms and having meetings when infected, Australia again revoked Novax’s visa and detained him as a threat to public health until a court hearing (of law, not tennis) got him deported Sunday.  Eruptions of the tongue-twistingly named Hunga-Tonga Hunga Ha’apai volcano led to a mile-high tsunami on the tiny island nation of Tonga.  As Brits went missing, some idiots tried surfing the wave.

Hot on the heels of Operation Big Dog, a raft of policy announcements emerged over the weekend such as giving the army powers to intercept vessels in The Channel, abolishing the BBC licence fee and banning booze at Number 10.  Err, why couldn’t the PM just do that in his own house?  Referring to ‘industrial scale partying’, Keir repeated calls for The Bumbler’s resignation. Operation Red Meat a blatant distraction technique, Phil quipped: “Operation Dead Meat more like!”  Maybe we should feed him to the polar bears!

References:

i. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

ii. Takeover blog: https://www.ruraldiaryproject.uk/rituals/confined-walks

iii. Polar bears in houses: https://petapixel.com/2022/01/13/photographer-finds-polar-bears-that-took-over-abandoned-buildings/

Part 91 – Partygate

“People should be able to look forward to Christmas without having to worry about how they’ll pay for it” (Frances O’Grady)

Whine and Beer

Haiga – Round the Back

The weather on Monday was as dull as my day, consisting of nasty chores, posting blogs and a yoga session cut short by the still-sore jabbed arm.

Goblin Saj told MPs Omicron was spreading around the world and in the UK.  336 cases, not all linked to travel, the time between infection and infectiousness was shorter than earlier variants.  No room in quarantine hotels, Richard E Grant whined about his Heathrow Holiday Inn brekkie.  Kit Malthouse advised he take it up with the chefs.  Traces found on 11/12 bogs in parliament, Kit said MPs likely took cocaine and Lindsay Hoyle called the police.  With impeccable timing, Boris launched a 10-year crackdown on drugs in Liverpool, moronically dressed up as a cop.  BOE deputy governor Ben Broadbent predicted inflation would hit 5% when energy prices rose in spring 2022.  He was way off the mark, as it turned out.

Giving the Richard Dimbelby lecture, Sarah Gilbert explained how experts had led the way.  Work on developing a MERS vaccine in 2018 and ‘Platform technology’ on ‘disease x’ meant not starting from scratch and moving fast when info on the novel coronavirus came through very early January 2020.  On 11th January, the spike protein’s genetic code was released and the first small batch of vaccine was ready by April for animal trials in Brazil and SA.  Processes were accelerated so they ran in parallel with prep for human trials and the first volunteer was jabbed on 23rd April.  No money until creation of the Vaccine Taskforce, they formed a partnership with AZ and the drug was approved for emergency use 23rd December.  They got round issues of working in a pandemic by having zoom meetings, socially-distancing in labs, declaring staff as key workers so their kids could stay in school and hiring private jets to avoid flight restrictions.  Communication not previously a priority for scientists, they had learnt from failing to get messages across such as the rarity of blood clots (less of a risk than from covid itself), and that it was safe during pregnancy.  As coronavirus ‘wasn’t done with us’, work on variants started immediately.  She warned of a future ‘disease y’ which could be worse and wanted a ‘health force’ working like the army to tackle threats.  The new Pandemic Sciences Centre at Oxford could make vaccines for other diseases too.  Investment in people and labs was crucial, especially for large-scale manufacture, and in methods and facilities, particularly in Africa.

Oversleeping on Tuesday, I cleaned, wrote, and went to the co-op – fairly busy but better stocked.  In the evening,  I texted Walking Friend to arrange lunch the next day and tried to print the Christmas card.  The laptop said the printer was offline, I switched to the desktop, had to replenish ink, couldn’t open the pack and got frustrated and upset.  Phil came to the rescue.  7.45 by then, I was glad of leftovers for dinner.  Then Word went into some unfathomable view mode.  I furiously put it aside and watched telly.

Officially 101 new Omicron cases, Prof Tim Spector said they were doubling every day, and there were more in the UK than in some countries on the red list, rendering travel restrictions futile.  Cabinet ministers heard it spread 3 times faster than Delta but didn’t discuss plan B.  Boris expected to update on additional restrictions ‘within the next 2 weeks’, an Ipsos/Mori/BBC vox pop revealed 63% wanted more and 12% wanted less. ONS announced a ‘statistically significant’ rise of 18.6% in alcohol-related deaths during 2020, much higher in deprived areas.  Reasons not analysed, David Fothergill of the LGA Community Wellbeing Board said: “These stark statistics should act as a wake-up call about the impact of Covid-19 on our general health.”  Jason Beer said ‘sorry’ for not properly overseeing building regs leading to the Grenfell Tower fire.  Foreign Office whistle-blower Raphael Marshall revealed the chaotic Afghanistan evacuation entailed arbitrary selection as Rabid Raab didn’t fully understand the situation and delayed making decisions, leaving those left behind to be murdered by the Taliban.  Rabid defended wanting each case neatly presented.  Weather bomb Storm Barra brought heavy rain and 80 mph gusts to Ireland and the UK.

Bunfight

Flurry of Wings

Pitch black and cold first thing Wednesday, I eschewed chores.  Phil sorted the daft Word feature – I’d inadvertently done something funny on the view menu.  We then watched PMQs before Walking Friend arrived, who’d texted to say she’d call round after the bunfight.

As video emerged of Allegra Stratton joking about Christmas parties at Number 10, DOE admitted staff met after-hours for a ‘social gathering’ on 10th Dec 2020, against tier 3 lockdown rules.  Ant and Dec joined in the jest on ‘I’m a Celeb’.  In a predictably packed Commons, PMQs was all about the parties.  Lawyer Keir pointed out Raab’s claims that police didn’t investigate crimes retrospectively was utter rubbish.  Boris accused him of playing politics.  Ian Blackford railed: “the government have laughed in our faces. Is this the man to lead these islands when lives are at stake? If he doesn’t resign, he must be removed.”  Lindsay Hoyle repeatedly scolded MPs, saying they needed to do better.  Boris promised investigations by Simon Case with evidence handed to the Met.  The PM ‘furious’ at the fake news footage, The Stratton tearfully apologised and resigned that evening.  Who’d be next?

Phil took a break from his tiny work to come for lunch.  We went via the post-box for me to post cards to my aunty and said hello to The Poet at the corner pub.  At the Turkish café, we ensconced in a cosy corner to chat about Walking Friends’ 60th birthday plans, Christmas and the bunfight.  I was sceptical of her view it was ‘a dead cat’ to kill off the hoi polio but agreed anti-vaxxers should watch Gilbert’s persuasive lecture.  Although I was uncomfortable about testing on monkeys.  Phil headed home while I accompanied Walking Friend to the wavy steps.  She threw birdfeed to be surrounded by a flurry of duck and pigeon wings.  On the next bridge a large heron perched next to a gushing weir.  After some charity shopping, the rain turned foul.  We sheltered beneath an arch, and said goodbye before she went for groceries and I went to Oxfam for 99p jewellery.  Achy, sodden and freezing back home, I went straight upstairs to remove sodden clothes and warm up in bed.  I rose in time for the Bumbler’s evening briefing.

Much earlier than predicted and after hastily consulting cabinet, Boris announced Plan B, effective next week.  He insisted that with Omicron growing faster than previous variants, it was the ‘proportionate and responsible thing to do’, allowing time to get boosters done.  The plan re-introduced guidance to work from home from Monday if possible or use masks if not.  From Friday, face-coverings would be mandatory for most indoor settings including theatres and cinemas and a Covid Pass was needed from 15th December for nightclubs and other venues – obtainable after 2 doses of vaccine or a negative LFT.  Daily tests for contacts instead of self-isolation would minimise disruption.  He said they’d take “every step to ensure the NHS is ready for the challenges ahead,” but the best thing we could all do was get jabbed.  The new rules were due to last till 26th January 2022, subject to review 5th January with 4 criteria: efficacy of vaccines, severity of infection, speed of spread of Omicron, and rate of hospitalisations.

Nobody would take any notice after the Downing Street Christmas party debacle!  Was it indeed a dead cat?  Questions from the press asking if he was at some of the parties, echoed my thoughts on how he expected us to follow the law when he didn’t?  Boris was of course evasive.  Vallance said the rules were carefully thought through and Witless said people get angry when they think things aren’t fair but we should separate that out from reasons for the decisions.  His so-called ‘laying out the logic’ didn’t wash with livid tory backbenchers who saw it as a deflection technique.  Sir Charles Walker said measures would be seen as advisory: “I think it would be very difficult to enshrine them in law and then once again ask our poor police force to enforce them…And the events of the last 24 hours make it probably impossible now.”  Did he allude to the latest claims from The Scumbag of more alleged Whitehall parties last Christmas making a total of 7?  It didn’t escape notice that Plan B stopped short of banning private gatherings.  Loopholes aplenty, Covid Passes were needed to go clubbing but you could host a huge house party with no restrictions.  Also, singing was exempt meaning no law against taking your mask off and going round the supermarket singing Christmas songs.  And there was nothing to stop work colleagues meeting in the pub, even if they worked from home.  The NHS Covid Pass app promptly crashed.

Elsewhere, on the anniversary of the first ever covid jab, Margaret Keenan was interviewed and the booster roll-out was opened to over 40’s.  Lord Tyrie called PCR tests for travel a ‘rip-off jungle.’  Fly-tipping up 16% during the pandemic, fines fell by half.  Olaf Scholz was sworn in as Chancellor of Germany.

In Flagrante

Party Card

The Laptop behaved oddly again before I could work on the journal Thursday, but it was probably my fault for randomly pressing keys.  Skies brighter, Phil went to Leeds and I went to town in search of Christmas gifts and goodies.  I struggled home with heavy bags, stuffed food in my gob and tried to do housework.  Knackered, I managed a bit of dusting before resting.

3 of the alleged Whitehall ‘gatherings’ being investigated, it emerged communications chief Jack Doyle was at the 18th December bash.  At least 3 members of the public were fined for holding parties the very same day, making a mockery of the latest excuse for police inaction – a lack of evidence rather than the time gap.  Err, I thought that was up to the CPS!  Cynics claimed the Met weren’t prosecuting because Boris stuck by Caressa Dick amid calls for her resignation.  Jeremy Vine mainly a sob-fest the last 2 days, Angela Rayner appeared from home via zoom, with an Ashton face.  Did she get back from Westminster Wednesday night and do her eyebrows?  Recapping the litany of awful government acts, she cried: “This man shouldn’t be prime minister…(he’s) not fit to govern.”  As she evaded questions on why Keir hadn’t demanded Boris’ resignation, opinion polls showed 54% of the public thought he should.  While Carrie Antionette gave birth to his umpteenth sprog, there were further calls for the PM to quit.  The Electoral Commission fined the tory party £17,800 for not following the rules on donations from Lord Brownnose towards the Number 10 flat renovation.  The report revealed a WhatsApp message from Boris to Brownnose asking for dosh.  Rayner resurfaced to accuse him of lying when he said he didn’t know where the money came from.  Downing Street insisted he was honest ‘at all times’, it was only a ‘technical breach’ and considered appealing against the fine.  Rayner demanded fresh investigations from Lord Geidt and Kathryn Stone as Boris was ‘in flagrant breach’ of both the ministerial code and the MPs’ code of conduct.

The RSPB said HPAI* (aka bird flu), affected poultry and wild birds across the UK.  Mainly ducks, geese and swans, ½ million domestic fowl were culled and some birds of prey died.  Normal during the migration season, Useless George called it the biggest outbreak ever.  On QT, tory Rachel Mclean didn’t answer questions about confidence.  An irate man in the audience screamed: “They’re mocking us. It’s an absolute disgrace!”  Train-lover Mike Portillo considered the overall covid policy ‘pretty good’ but plan B a diversionary tactic.  Newscast guffawed at a veritable smorgasbord with something happening every hour of the day.

Friday, I felt unrested after a fractious night.  Phil seeming sleepy, I made a big effort to get the cereal, worked on the journal and went to the co-op.  Waiting for Phil’s help outside the shop, I realised I’d lost a mask bag and whizzed round the aisles again to no avail.  Seeing an ambulance in the street as I left the house, I surmised it was for Elderly Neighbours.  Phil saw The Wife being wheeled out.  When we got back, The Husband was on their doorstep and told me her kidneys had ‘gone funny’.  She’d been treated by the GP who advised getting the ambulance.  The crew spent a ½ hour persuading her to go to hospital, then she had to be blue-lighted.  “I can imagine!” said Phil.  We spent the afternoon cleaning and viewing an interminable pointless Facebook video of morons making a big mess trying to fry eggs on matches.  It reminded Phil of one wherein a woman baked a terrible unicorn cake.

58,194 daily cases was the most since January 2021.  Omicron growing faster than Delta, it pervaded all regions and scientists predicted it’d be the dominant strain within a week.  Susan Hopkins didn’t know how many hospitalisations there’d be.  Due at a cobra meeting with The Glove-puppet, Sturgeon said she expected a tsunami of infections because of its transmissibility.  But Metro reported Gove, Raab and Shats were isolating meeting infected Australian deputy PM Barnaby Joyce.  Number 10 cancelled the staff Christmas party but said there was no need for others to follow suit.  The decision was apparently nothing to do with the fiasco over last year’s shindigs but based on increased workloads to implement Plan B, and ‘the latest data we’ve got’.  ITV later reported police entered Number 10 on the night of the alleged party after an alarm went off.  Did they stay for wine and cheese?  Some wag designed a Christmas Card mocking The Stratton.  The Glove-puppet reportedly worked on Plan C to implement January 2022, entailing mandatory mask-wearing and Covid Passes in more places, and using the TIT app in hospitality.  Post-mortem results on Geronimo the alpaca failing to find the source of TB, owner Helen MacDonald decried a cover-up.

Just about to make breakfast Saturday, there was a knock at the door.  Expecting a secret delivery, I shouted up for Phil not to answer.  In fact, it was Walking Friend with something we’d talked about Wednesday.  She was off to Bradford with The Poet.  Ostensibly to view plots and decide where to put her friend’s remains, she expected to end up in a pub rather than the cemetery.  Grey, drizzly and cold, I was going nowhere.  Printing Christmas cards and recycling old envelopes took most of the day.  Leeds United were robbed as Chelsea were awarded 3 dodgy penalties.  Fans complained of being squashed getting into Stamford Bridge.

Unable to sleep in Sunday, I watched The Marr.  A video showed Boris playing a Christmas quiz with staff at number 10 last year.  Keir said he appeared to have broken the law and people were right to be furious.  Asked why there wasn’t a vote of no confidence, he replied because labour showed strong leadership supporting covid measures, which was ‘the right thing to do’.  Nads Zahawi claimed the incriminating footage was actually of Boris thanking his team on zoom.  Added to earlier reports of ‘gatherings’, who to believe?

Overnight rain led to a dull wet start but it brightened later.  I spent ages rooting out a metal bucket from the cubby hole and was about to go twig hunting, when I realised the medium-sized Christmas tree looked much greener.  Phil said he’d been caring for it which obviously paid off.  He removed the remaining brown needles while I cleared debris.  I’d noticed a few days ago that two planters had disappeared from the garden wall.  Preferring to think they’d blown away in the storm, I then spotted clumps of soil– firm evidence they’d been nicked.  Very depressing!  We brought the Christmas trees in to acclimatise, got cleaned up, ate cake and cleared a corner in the kitchen to make space for Christmas goodies.  No new photos, I used one of backstreets taken last week for a haiga i.

Spreading at an alarming rate, Omicron accounted for 34% of London cases and a number of hospitalisations.  The covid alert level rose from 3 to 4.  Susan Hopkins referred to a ‘big wave coming straight at us’.  Boris interrupted evening TV for a proclamation.  His latest madcap target was to boost all adults in England by the end of December so the NHS had to match and then exceed its ‘best day ever’.  The over 30’s could book online from Monday, all over 18’s from Wednesday, with other medical procedures postponed until the new year.  Scotland followed suit and Wales was expected to bring in more restrictions.  Northern Ireland had the highest covid rate in the UK again but only 8 confirmed Omicron cases.  Lockdown in Austria ended for the vaccinated but an 11.00 p.m. curfew remained.  Regional news reported Leeds would lose £35 million coffee-cup money due to workers not in offices.

Real wages fell 0.8% according to the TUC.  Frances O’Grady fumed that people should be looking forward to Christmas without worrying how to pay for it: “Millions are facing a cost of living storm as bills soar and real pay falls. After more than a decade of wage stagnation, this is the last thing working families need. The government can’t sit this crisis out. Ministers should get around the table with unions and employers now, and work out fair pay agreements for every industry. That’s the best way to boost living standards and ease the pressure on households.”

Tornadoes in south eastern America almost entirely wiped out the town of Mayfield, Kentucky and killed 94 people including 6 staff at an Amazon warehouse in Edwardsville, Illinois.  An investigation into safety measures was launched.  Bezos sent condolences.

*HPAI – High Pathogen Avian Influenza

Reference:

i. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com