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