Part 92 – Fairy Tales

“Will the prime minister take time this Christmas to look in the mirror and ask himself if he has the trust and authority to lead this country?” (Keir Starmer)

Once Upon A Dream

Haiga – The Herald

Monday, WordPress made a mess with blue highlights but I persevered to post blogs before lunch.  Putting rubbish out, the dustbin was full of water and other nasty crap.  Cleaning it out was rather disgusting!  Too late for yoga, I rested in bed and warmed up.  During a fractious night-time sleep, I dreamt of the house with all the rooms again.  This time, there were new bits including a staircase in an annex.  What did it mean?

Omicron spread across the UK claiming its first death.  The 10 hospital cases were aged 18- 85, mostly double-vaccinated.  Goblin Saj said they were ‘throwing everything at’ the booster programme and The Bumbler, at a vax centre in Paddington, added it was at ‘warp speed’.  He didn’t rule out tighter measures.  No LFTs available on the official website, Boris insisted there were loads ‘in the shops’.  Wes Streeting called it a ‘shambles’.  Contrary to my expectations, commuter traffic fell by up to 40% and rail station footfall by 20%, signalling office-workers stayed home.  Responding to Boris’ Sunday night statement, Keir supported the government’s plan because boosters gave the best chance of protecting against Omicron and advised we use the Christmas break to get 12-16 year olds jabbed and come forward if we’d not yet had any.  Criticising them for not stepping up sooner, he said “time and again the public have stepped up and done the right thing,” measures really helped to prevent infection and stop the NHS being overwhelmed, and “your efforts will save lives.”  He thanked the NHS for their ‘dedication, skill and sheer hard work’.  It sounded a tad more sincere than Witless’ tweet.  South Africa taking Omicron ‘in their stride’, the death rate during the fourth wave was much lower than in previous ones but the president was infected.  Nat West bank were fined for laundering money from Fowler Oldfield jewellers in Bradford who allegedly recycled gold.

In a dream week for labour, Jess Philips hosted HIGNFY.  Watching the repeat, we had a good laugh at the Italian false arm story and excuses for not restoring power in the North East after Storm Arwen – the wrong type of wind blew in the wrong direction apparently!

Hearing a knock at the door Tuesday morning, I suspected it was the awaited parcel.  Phil got there before me and I shouted down instructions not to read it.  I typed up a plethora of news notes and went to the Post Office, miraculously almost queue-less and quick, then to the co-op.  A cluster of ditherers crowded round the seasonal shelf so I had to circle round to buy treats.  In the afternoon, we fetched boxes of decorations from the attic and decorated the Christmas trees.  He had a siesta but I eschewed mine to continue.

UKHSA predicted a million Omicron cases a day by the middle of next week and Witless warned of rising hospitalisations.  The infected could now take daily LFTs again instead of isolating if fully vaccinated; if they could get hold of them.  LFT issues persisted and PCR slots weren’t available in walk-ins or drive-throughs across England.  The red list to be abandoned Monday, testing rules remained.  Amid criticism of the booster programme for lack of warning or preparation, the NHS booking site crashed, 6 hour queues formed at walk-ins and people were turned away from vax centres.  With confusion about whether the latest proclamation meant boosters would be given or just offered by 31st December, pledges were made to be open 12 hours a day ‘as standard’ including Christmas Day if needed and the 15 minute post-jab wait was scrapped.

Several MPs reportedly self-isolating, the commons voted on Plan B including mandatory jabs for health staff.  Marcus Fish was among 100 tory backbenchers defying the government, saying it wasn’t Nazi Germany: ‘papers please’.  Sturgeon announced Scotland’s winter plan, involving social-distancing in shops, more contact-tracing in hospitality, working from home, minimising social mixing to a maximum 3 households, and taking LFTs but allowing Christmas parties.  Tory MSPs berated her for only just bringing in mass vax centres.

Mirror, Mirror

Christmas Tree

Waking a smidge before 8 Wednesday, I stopped the alarm going off.  Phil was sniffly.  Deciding I’d go to the deceased friend’s funeral service but not chance the wake, he joshed he wasn’t coming to the chapel but would go to the club later to spread his germs around!  Obviously he didn’t.  As I left the house very early for me, at least it was sunny after a grey start to the week.  I nodded to people I vaguely recognised in front of the chapel and spoke to a few fellow old pub mates.  We carefully filed in to find every other pew roped off.  Slightly squashed between German Friend and bald men, I kept my eyes front and mask on, even when singing.  Back outside, I cautiously evaded hugs, agreed with the deceased friend’s daughter the flowers were impressive (sourcing sunflowers was quite a feat at this time of year) and reminisced with Painting Friend about the escapade when the deceased friend’s sister came to our house after the pub, headed home and got lost in the crags.  Phil later remined me she knocked her teeth out which could explain why she looked much older!  I walked Painting Friend as far as the corner pub to catch up – she’d had 4 jabs including flu and was really busy with work, due to the DIY craze and last years’ hiatus.  Back home, I finished decorating the living room.  Phil ate ancient mint sweets.  The first one okay, he put a second in his gob, pulled a face and rushed to spit it out.  “Serves you right!” I laughed.  Exhausted, I lay down to rest.  My eyes were shutting but inevitably I failed to sleep.

78,500 daily cases, a record since the start of the pandemic, Omicron infections more than doubled every day nationwide.  At a press briefing, Witless called it a really serious threat and warned ‘don’t mix’.  Boris stuck to his guns on Plan B.  Pubs clamouring for more money, Rishi was on a jaunt in California.  During PMQs, Keir pointed out Plan B wouldn’t have passed if it wasn’t for labour votes.  Saying “We cannot go on with a PM who is too weak to lead,” he asked if he’d use the Christmas break to look in the mirror and ask himself if he had the trust and authority to lead?  Boris retorted he understood colleagues’ anxieties about restrictions on liberty but believed ‘the approach we are taking is balanced and proportionate’.  Problems getting tests into a third day, Jenny Harries denied there were insufficient LFTs but an astounding number of requests caused ‘some temporary pressure.’  Scotland was the first UK nation to boost 50% of adults.  The Daily Mirror revealed yet another tory revel.  Shaun Bailey and his campaign mates posed next to a sumptuous buffet at the tory party HQ.  He was forced to resign from the London Assembly crime panel – ha. Ha!  Lady Hallett was announced as chair of the inquiry into government’s handling of the pandemic to start early 2022.  Bereaved families said fine, but it should have come much sooner.  Due to ‘severe and increasing difficulties’ in the sector, the Migration Advisory Committee’s annual report advised care workers be put on the shortage of occupation list (SOL).  Bragging they were the only supermarket to give staff paid breaks, Aldi announced a pay rise to £10.10 an hour from February 2022.  In Dresden, an anti-lockdown, anti-vax Telegram group planned to assassinate Saxon president Michael kretschmer, leading to police raids.

Required to shut the laptop down the previous evening, I waited impatiently for it to restart Thursday morning so I could get to work.  I prepared remaining cards to mail including one for Phil’s sister, asked him to post them on his way to the station and went to the market.  The owner of next door sat on the bench on the new bridge, after visiting the dentist.  I’d not had my teeth checked out for 2 years but 2 hospital visits convinced me clinical settings were probably the safest places in a pandemic!  At the fish van, the woman in front of me ordered items for next week and asked what time they opened.  “We start serving at 7,” the fishmonger replied.  “I’ll be here at 7 then.”  His wife laughed, “He’s been telling everyone that. If you come first thing there’ll be a huge queue!”  None on the stalls, I went to the new veg shop on the hunt for chestnuts.  No luck but I did get giant mushrooms and pomegranates.  As I walked back, the carrier bag painfully collided with my leg.  Stupid pomegranates!  Phil came towards me and confirmed he’d got the cards for posting.  Knackered, I dumped the bags, made a hasty lunch, and cleaned the bedroom.  A long time since I’d done so without Phil’s help, I managed okay.  Phil rang early evening from his studio.  He’d sent me photos on Insta of some of his prints.  Never having used the messaging feature, I faffed to view them and suggested which to bring home.  Making charity donations online, one site required an additional ‘donation’ even though there was no platform fee – what was that about?  I’d just finished my dinner when Phil returned.  Cold, knackered, and with sore feet after walking over 15,000 steps round a deserted city in actual shoes, he cheered up watching Netflix – the end of Money Heist didn’t disappoint.

Boris was accused of ‘lockdown by stealth’ with scientific advisers running the show – about time, if true.  Boris later played down a split with ‘experts’, saying he and Witless were on the same page.   Witless told the health & social care committee Omicron hospitalisations were likely higher than the 15 confirmed.  He didn’t want to dictate what people did but advised they prioritise and it’d be better in future when vaccines and anti-viral drugs did the ‘heavy lifting’ against mutants.  Wes Streeting wanted ‘a deal to help hospitality’.   Gillian Keegan insisted there was.  The Queen cancelled her traditional pre-Christmas family party as it put too many people’s plans at risk.  Eurostar already sold out, UK tourist and business travellers were banned from France.  From Saturday, you needed ‘compelling reasons’ to go and evidence of 2 negative tests with 2 days’ isolation in-between.  Inflation at 5.1% in November, the highest for a decade, fuel, energy, food and clothes prices were to blame.  The BOE raised the interest rate to 0.25%.  Hitting mortgage-payers and not passed onto savers, it was a lose-lose!  Tory since 1832, Lib Dems won the North Shropshire byelection.  While new MP Helen Morgan celebrated in Oswestry, the 1922 committee put Boris ‘on notice’.

The QT panel were asked if lockdown was inevitable.  Lisa Nandy said we must do everything we can and the  government weren’t doing their bit.  Chris Hopson of NHS Providers told us we didn’t know enough about Omicron yet, the NHS was the busiest it’d ever been, and although vaccines had ‘changed the rules of the game’, staff would go off sick as infections rose and we needed clear and consistent messaging.  Tory boy Chris Philp denied ‘mixed messages’ and blathered about numbers.  Stewart Hosie, SNP, complained with the ‘one rule for them and another for everyone else’, mixed messages ‘couldn’t be more stark’.  Olivia Utley of the Torygraph, thought there was too much messaging, we should manage our own risk and the vulnerable should stay indoors.  Not that again!  On if we’d  gone from ‘world-beating’ to chaotic shambles, Hopson said the vulnerable must be prioritised and the NHS was trying hard to ramp up capacity.  Tory Boy promised the sooner we all got vaccinated, the sooner the economy would go back to normal.  Nandy claimed the government were more interested in bluster than detail, and accused Rishi of being MIA.  Discussing investment in Stoke, which had more than the national average of deprived areas, Tory Boy reeled off more figures.  Nandy berated him for arrogance, saying local people, not Westminster, knew what northern towns needed.  The questioner applauded: ‘you’re bang on the money tonight, love!’  Others agreed ‘levelling up’ stopped at Watford Gap and she was the only one who’d connected with them.

Cobblers

London Demo

Foggy with frost on the hills, the poor crows squatted on aerials all puffed up waiting for their brekkie Friday morning.  It brightened later only to go dark again mid-afternoon.  Struggling with fatigue, I rallied after a few exercises, headed to the tat market for a couple of items and rushed back to the co-op, remarkably well-stocked apart from turkeys.  Phil caught up with me in the aisles, carried bags home and commented on loose cobbles on the street below – just waiting for an accident and subsequent legal action!  Indoors, the house was as freezing as outdoors.

Over 93,000 cases, Omicron was now the dominant strain in Scotland.  Also rising across Europe (including France), Ursula Von Hitler said it was growing at a ‘ferocious rate’.  Boosters were found to cut the risk of serious illness by 85%.  New measures for Wales entailed taking an LFT a day before meeting up, outside if possible.   Further restrictions would follow on Boxing Day for nightclubs and hospitality (with money to help those affected) as they would in Northern Ireland and Scotland where financial talks were due.  Rishi cut short his California trip to meet business leaders.  Another alleged Whitehall party on 15th May 2020 involved wine and pizza, unbelievably to thank aides for work during lockdown!  Metro said the first person to die of Omicron was a conspiracy theorist anti-vaxxer.  But the Telly Doctor on Jeremy Vine said it was a 70 plus recluse and a mystery how he caught it.  Which version was cobblers?  Food banks reported a ‘sudden and worrying’ increase in demand in the runup to Christmas thanks to removal of the Universal Credit uplift, and soaring food and energy costs.  Clement Bonehead sought EU legal action over French licenses in the month-long fish war.

The fog didn’t lift at all during the weekend.  Saturday brekkie was made stressful by a cluttered kitchen.  As I slid on a slippery patch on the floor, my slipper flew off and vanished under the cooker.  I Panicked before managing to retrieve it.  I worked on the journal, cleaned and put more Christmas stuff up.  Phil went into a packed town centre.  “People are egg-nogging the shit out of it!” “I’m not surprised if they think there’s going to be a lockdown next week!”  in the evening, he cooked his signature burgers leaving the grill pan full of fat.

Sunday, I hurried to the market – not too busy with al fresco drinkers in the freezing conditions!  I got a selection of dirty veg (everything but the chestnuts), popped in the convenience store and headed home to dispose of a pile of recycling, flopped on the sofa to recover and wrote a haiga based on a knitted angel on the town’s tree.  Making the Christmas cake, I’d spent an hour on prep before Phil eventually came to help.  Waiting for it to bake, we watched catch-up to be interrupted by a knock at the door.  A woman wearing a lanyard barked: “Number 37. Do we know this lady?”  Wondering who ‘we’ were, I eyed her blankly, then deduced she meant Elderly Neighbour – they had her name down wrong.  She asked if anyone else lived there. “Yes, her husband.”  I stepped out to investigate.  The Student leaned out of her landing window, we concurred that if nobody was home, they must be at the hospital and she messaged him.

90,000 new cases and 12 deaths from Omicron, leaked sage minutes predicted 3,000 hospitalisations per day by January and advised extra measures now.  Neil Ferguson called it ‘precarious’.  A worried Khan  declared a state of emergency in London.  Thousands of anti-vaxxers took no notice.  At a ‘freedom rally’, masked cops with batons faced unmasked protestors moving from Parliament Square to Downing Street.  Vaccine minister Maggie Throup went to Derby to pose in a Post Office vest and pretend to deliver tests.  All 4 UK national leaders met urgently, without Boris.  Simon Case resigned after hilariously discovering he was at his own party on 17th December.  Sue Gray took over his investigations.  After his original plan to go in January was leaked to the Daily Mail, Lord Frosty wrote Boris his immediate resignation, citing covid measures.  A spat on a WhatsApp group led to Nads Doris being chucked off.  Rayner said the tories were ‘in chaos’.  On the last ever Marr show, Goblin Saj fawned that Frosty was an ‘outstanding public servant’.  Liz Truss would take over with European minister Chris Heaton-Harris as deputy.  A month-long lockdown began in Holland.  Most premier league matches called off Saturday, 25% of players were unvaccinated.  Phil reckoned they listened to their wives who lived on social media and believed all the Facebook tales.  Leeds versus Arsenal the only game on, the rule that if they had a squad of 14 they played, seemed a load of cobblers.  Fans chanting ‘Boris Johnson is a c*nt!’ went viral.

Reference:

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