Part 103 – Ship Of Fools

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

April Fools

Haiga – Threshold

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

No Joke

Haiga – The Artist

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Bridge of Sighs

Haiga – Inner Voice

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

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

Spring Blooms Card

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Sinking Ships

Crossings Exhibit – Installation

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

Crossings Exhibit – Blackpool Print

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Haiga – Impressions

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

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

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

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

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

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

Barrels of Fun

Unappreciated Dandelions

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

References:

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

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

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

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

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

Part 99 – Culture Club

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

Lovely Jubbly!

Platinum Jubbly

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

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

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

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

Cancel Culture

Pass the Salt!

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

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

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

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

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

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

Menagerie

Haiga – Up in the Air

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Reference:

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

Part 98 – This Page Intentionally Blank

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

Dirty Dozens

Haiga – A Moment of Calm

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Dancing In The Gaslight

Savile and Thatcher

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Mixing It Up

Pink Winter Blossom

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

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

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

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

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

Shaun Bailey’s Lavish Buffet

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

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

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

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

References:

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

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

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

Part 94 – Troubled Waters

“Prime minister, how’s it going? Are you okay?” (Angela Rayner)

Riding The Wave

Haiga – Troubled Waters i

Sleeping later than planned on another bank holiday Monday, I reasoned I was still recovering from debilitation.  Using up bacon for breakfast butties, I noted we’d disgustingly been cheated out of a rasher.  Grey at first, it brightened up.  Unseasonably warm, small birds sang and southerners reported swallows failing to migrate.  I meant to get out of the house in the false spring but almost dark by the time I’d posted blogs, watched a film instead.

An average 170,000 new cases per day in the past week, hospitalisations rose 70% to 14,000.  On a ‘war footing’, 6 NHS Trusts declared a state of emergency, and Nightingale hubs were planned in hospital grounds including St. James’s, Leeds.  Boris said it was folly not to expect more inpatients and vital to stick with Plan B (i.e., get boosted).  Meanwhile, Israelis got jab number 4.  Would it ever end?  Nads Zahawi refuted critical LFT shortages, telling people to refresh their browsers.  Anti-lockdown demos in Amsterdam into a third day, 30 were arrested.  Having put the fire out once, flames freakily re-assailed the South African parliament.  The shooting of wild birds, including corvids, was legalised to protect game birds, now classed as livestock.  As if you could own grouse!  The parliament of crows might have something to say about that.

Achiness and fatigue returning to normal levels Tuesday, I forced myself to exercise.  After a cold night, melted frost coated the inside of the bedroom window.  I sketched a punky face with my finger against the crisp, sunny outlook.  Phil struggling, I made porridge.  He then announced he was cutting his hair and cleaning the bathroom and cheekily asked: “are you getting up today?” “I’m drinking my tea!”  I retorted, listed all the tasks I had lined up, got dressed, took the tray down and cleared the kitchen.  My mind-wandering over coffee was disturbed by scraping sounds.  Workmen disconnected the telegraph wires before uprooting the entire pole on the street below, explaining no internet.  It was a good job I mistakenly sent Welsh Friend’s birthday greetings a day early!  In line with my new journal-writing regime, I edited diary and news notes before disposing of recycling, almost getting frostbite in the process.  I donned extra layers before going to the co-op.  A large woman came up right behind me twice.  On the second occasion, I testily asked could she not wait 2 minutes?  She then pointedly spent several minutes staring at cheese.  I paid at the kiosk and searched for a receptacle for the old batteries I’d brought but there was none.  Unable to cope with the hustle and bustle, I fled out the back door and spoke to the engineers on the way back.  Realising it wasn’t their fault as subcontractors, did it not occur to anyone to let people know there’d be internet, especially on the first full workday after the Christmas break?  One man barked: ‘there’s nowt we can do’.  The rotting pole dangerous, they’d replace another tomorrow.  I thanked his more amenable colleague for the gen.  By lunchtime, the sun had gone.  I fixed a pair of boots and Phil framed the old map for me.

As hospitals faced a ‘challenging winter’, Prof Fergie said rates in London were plateauing and other regions would follow within 3 weeks, but it was “just too difficult to interpret current mixing trends and what the effect of opening schools again will be.”  Matthew Taylor of the NHS Confederation disagreed, saying admissions rose across Britain.  At a press conference, Boris pronounced priority testing for critical workers and said ‘the utmost caution’ gave a good chance of riding the Omicron wave without more restrictions.  A million new cases were recorded in America and in China, Yuzhou became the second city after Xi’an to go into lockdown as 3 asymptomatic cases were found.   A surge in chicken farms led to outrageous sewage levels in the Wye Valley.  Pop star and keen fisher Feargal Sharkey was incensed.  While ministers consulted business on extortionate energy prices, Martin Lewis complained they didn’t ask consumer groups.  A total 28,300 crossed the channel in small boats 2021, triple the number in 2020.  Warner Music paid a bargainous £185 million for David Bowie’s back catalogue.

Wintry Rainbows

Wintry Rainbows

Wednesday morning, I lay abed as dawn broke.  Was it 6, 7?  No, it was gone 8.  I forced myself up and opened curtains to roof frost and yellow light in the east presaging sunshine which became patchy later.  I managed a full exercise routine for the first time in weeks, bathed and tidied the bedroom, spotting an engineer fiddling anew with wires in the street below (but the internet stayed on).  A notice subsequently attached, explained how to object to the new telegraphy pole.  I prepared for a walk early afternoon then waited impatiently for Phil.  During earlier exchanges with Walking Friend, we declined an invite to go up the pike in the freezing conditions and suggested a meet at the canalside pub.  When she texted their ETA, we settled on a short stroll.  Still some light in the sky, sun on the water created wintry rainbows.  As we neared the pub, Walking Friend and The Poet approached from the opposite direction – excellent timing!  We secured the best table and supped pints.  Following a washout birthday, she seemed pleased with our gifts, particularly Phil’s abstract prints.  We had a lovely time eating tasty dinners, humming to retro music, laughing and conversing.  She was sceptical of my suspicion the likes of Bezos and Musk would piss off in rockets after they’d monetised climate action and wrecked the planet.  Phil thought their plan was to own the entire earth so we’d be in hock to them.  Scary stuff!  The Poet went for a taxi and we walked via dark backstreets, gazing up at a slivery crescent moon and a plethora of stars,  On the main road, she proceeded town-ward.  “Are you getting a bus?” “There isn’t one due so I’m going for a wander till there is.” “I wonder where?”  She chuckled a cheerio.  While Phil made coffee, I switched on all the Christmas lights for a final time.  A mixture of a mind whirring after socialising and late caffeine-drinking, led to hardly any sleep.  Using the meditation soundtrack, I briefly dropped off but was still awake when the tape ran out.

20 hospitals in a ‘state of emergency’, a review of covid restrictions involved a change in test rules.  You didn’t need a PCR If an LFT proved positive, pre-departure tests before re-entry to the UK were scrapped and the isolation requirement was reduced to 5 days.  John Edmunds said it made a lot of sense. Gillian Keegan claimed LFTs were very accurate and they’d trebled capacity.  More likely, it was a trick to cover up shortages, exacerbated by the sole government supplier unbelievably taking a 4-day Christmas break.  Scotland followed suit, ahead of a ‘revised strategic framework’.  Supermarkets made £11.7 billion in December, £62 million on mince pies.  ‘The Colston 4’ were found not guilty of criminal damage when they uprooted the Bristol statue in May’s BLM demos.  During a French parliamentary debate about Covid Passes, Micron said he wanted to ‘emmerder’ (piss off) the unvaccinated.

Twelfth Night began very cold and frosty.  Warming up slightly, sleet fell and promptly melted into a slushy mess.  After a terrible night, I forced myself up for exercise and small chores before settling down with coffee to watch PMQs on iPlayer.  Phil unresponsive to my repeated calls, he eventually joined me, saying he hadn’t heard.  Keir isolating again, Rayner thanked the NHS for their hard work and Sue Gray for investigating Partygate. Her first question posited that with inflation at 6%, people paid the price for an incompetent government.  Boris quoted a pile of figures and said labour couldn’t be trusted on Brexit or the economy.  “How’s it going?” Angela smirked, going on to call the situation ‘an iceberg’: “will he finally change course or plough on to what will be a disaster for thousands of families?…He gives with one hand, takes away with another…Incompetence is taking our country backwards.”  The Bumbler blustered that labour had “wrecked the country time and again.”  The C**t queried health staff issues to get another load of lying stats from his boss.

Disassembling Christmas inevitably filled the rest of the day.  Clearing the kitchen, a scraping noise near the window had me wondering was it workmen or the window cleaner?  No.  It was the wind, but not the predicted yellow thundersnow.  Phil took the trees out and hoovered.  I threw scraps out for the birds as Elderly Neighbour came by with the pooch.  I asked how things were to be told The Wife was slowly improving.  Back aching, I lay on the bed.  I got no rest but incredibly slept 7 hours straight that night for the first time since my mental health issues surfaced.

Boris ‘called out’ anti-vaxxers while Novax Djokovic was refused entry and held in quarantine before the Australian Open.  His family claimed he was kept prisoner without a change of clothes.  Authorities said he could leave anytime.  An ONS survey found 1:50 self-reported long covid in the 4 weeks to 6th December, before the Omicron wave.  ½ million of the 1.3 million had the virus a year ago.  Rishi Rich refused to ditch the National Insurance hike but penalties for late tax returns were waived for a month.  Boris apologised to Lord Geidt that he’d not seen WhatsApp communiqués with Lord Brownnose.  Later revealed in the Electoral Commission inquiry, the donor wrote: “approval is a doddle as it’s only me and I know where the £ will come from.”  Steve Reed demanded a probe over paying for access to ministers.  In what started as protests against doubling fuel costs, demonstrators in Kazakhstan attacked government buildings and Almaty airport.  Security forces boasted they’d killed ‘dozens’ and the Russian military arrived.  Kazakh president Tokayev subsequently ordered lethal force to be used against the so-called ‘terrorists’.

Clean Sweep

Pegged Out

Friday brought a dusting of snow, hail and sleet.  Amazed I hadn’t woken during the night, I felt great for a few minutes before fatigue returned.  Phil suffering from painful arms, I suggested he use Hotspur balm.  Writing interrupted by his jabbering, I headed out to discover dog shit on my boots.  Nowhere to sit in the wet, I struggled on the doorstep as a car careened past making me shout sweary words.  Perturbed by my anger, Phil offered to scour them for me.  Re-shod, I hurried to the co-op, finding gaps on veg and bread shelves.  I dithered near the trolley park then decided to proceed home alone.  Phil stood on the threshold and apologised for tardiness.  I was just pleased he’d done the unpleasant task.  Equipped with rubber gloves, a yard brush and buckets of water, I swilled and swept the dog shit down the drain.  First noticed at the top of the steps Tuesday, we’d hoped for natural cleansing during wintry showers.  Instead, it smeared all over the pavement.  I made a mental note to expunge it immediately next time.

24 Trusts now on a ‘war footing’, staff absence rose 40.1% in a week and army troops were sent to hospitals.  Alan Gosling (no kidding) was the first human to catch H5NI from a flock of Muscovy ducks he cared for.  He was fine, the fowl were culled.  A rise for Sainsburys and Argos staff would take their pay above the living wage.  The wonderful trail-blazing Sidney Poitier died.

The weekend cold with leaden skies and dismal rain, we stayed in.  Saturday, I worked on the journal, sorted Christmas cards and wrapping paper for storage and wrote to an old work friend who’d lost her husband to covid. Cooking paella, modifications made out of necessity proved successful and it tasted even better than usual.  At bedtime, I slept well despite a EHS episode.  Phil appeared stunned Sunday after a long kip which he put down to the small amount of beer we’d drunk.   Depressed by a lack of light and fresh air, I cheered up slightly with an attempt at rocky road.  Requiring far too much chocolate, I settled on a sort of tiffin cake which proved rather moreish!

146,390 new coronavirus cases and 313 reported deaths brought the death toll to over 150,000.  UKHSA said there was no need for a fourth jab as data showed older adults had 90% protection 3 months after a booster.  Nads Zahawi claimed we were over the peak but as it was revealed 1/5 of cases were in kids, Prof. Pagel warned a new school wave would prolong Omicron for everyone. 300,000 new cases Friday, protesters marched in French cities to piss off Micron.  Amid a state of emergency and nationwide curfew, 6,000 Kazaks were arrested and at least 164 killed.  Ahead of more talks, Liz Truss promised to invoke article 16 if there was no progress with the EU.

In the latest of a series of weird, rambling dreams, I conjured images of loaves of bread and mouldy oranges.  Was it a message about post-Brexit food shortages?

Reference:

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

Part 93 – Ominous

”We’re in the most difficult, most uncertain time, perhaps of the whole pandemic, certainly since March 2020” (Jeremy Farrar)

Haiga – Enchanted

The laptop irritatingly noisy since Sunday evening, I delayed a restart until I’d posted blogs.  Opening mail, we giggled at auntie’s lovely Christmas card of Jesus and the holy virgin Mary.  I took recycling out, to be assailed by a keen icy wind then turned the laptop back on to work on the journal but as the racket returned, I fumed, developed head fug, wrapped Phil’s presents and rested.  He later sorted the issue, giving instructions for next time it happened.

Ravi Gupta called 12,000 Omicron cases a ‘really critical situation’.  On BBC Breakfast, Stephen Reicher cited polls showing 60% thought nightclubs should shut and while awaiting government action, curbed Christmas parties.  He advised not gathering before festive dinners: “The more we wait, the more we’ll have to do.”  The queen cancelled Christmas at Sandringham.  At a (not) emergency cabinet meeting, Witless and Vallance briefed ministers.  They considered options from limiting contact to curfews to full lockdown but imposed none.  A spokesperson said there was a balance between lives and livelihoods and Boris promised he wouldn’t hesitate if required.  “You already are!” I ranted  Some predicted lockdown #4 from 25th December.  The wuss wouldn’t dare do it at Christmas.  Rishi Rich not keen, Keir wanted plans to keep schools open and help hospitality businesses who demanded immediate support.  As images emerged of a Downing Street ‘garden party’ 15th May 2020, Rabid Raab insisted, it wasn’t a party as they wore suits; only a bit of cheese and wine ‘after a long day’.  Others declared it a work meeting and the garden a workplace.  Rachel Reeves called it unacceptable and Jo Goodman of Bereaved Families railed the ‘constant, flagrant disregard’ was exhausting,  Germany imposed a 2-week quarantine for UK travellers.  Utopia 56 brought a law suit against French and British coastguards for allowing 27 people to drown in a dinghy.  Allegedly not answering distress calls, police later watched more flimsy boats sail into the channel.  XR locked themselves together at the home office in Glasgow demanding an end to the ‘hostile environment policy towards migrants’.  New Chilean president Gabriel Bolic vowed to tackle poverty, inequality and climate change.

Tiny Yellow Plant

The winter solstice portentously fell on 21.12.21.  I went to the co-op for a sizeable shop so I didn’t have to go back later in the week.  Everything but chestnuts, I crossed to the organic shop for just enough of the extortionate things for actual Christmas dinner.  Getting head fug again in the afternoon, I abandoned writing, finalised the secret card (see ‘Snow Crows’ below) and selected images to adorn gifts.  Printing was hampered when the laptop declared the printer offline, the desktop was excruciatingly slow, and the colour ink already low!  I actually slept for a ½ half in the afternoon, woke groggy and rallied with coffee.  I’d just gone to the loo when there was a quiet rap at the door.  At a second one, I shouted and clattered down  the stairs so they didn’t disappear.  A young man from Community Carers bore gifts.  “I already got one. A card with wildflower seeds.” “Have another.”  The Festive bag contained a tiny yellow plant, crackers, mince pies, 2 small wrapped gifts and a card made by kids.  It really brightened an otherwise tedious day!

Transmission of Omicron ‘eye-wateringly high’, Jeremy Farrar of the Wellcome Foundation warned it was the most difficult and uncertain time of the whole pandemic.  But Paul Hunter said as people changed behaviour and workplaces ‘broke up’ (sic) for Christmas, the increase slowed, predictions of 10 million cases by New Year were unlikely, there was no need for lockdown and further restrictions would only delay illness and prolong impact on health services and wellbeing.  The highest number in Lambeth, 20 year olds were blamed.  Refusing to rule out extra measures before Christmas, Rishi announced more money for hospitality – £1bn included cash grants of up to £6,000 per premises, help with sick pay for SMEs and a £30m culture recovery fund for theatres and cinemas.  £150m would go to devolved administrations.  Later, Boris proclaimed we could go ahead with Christmas.  Prof. Reicher called the decision ‘unhinged’.  Rail operators cancelled trains because of staff sickness and isolation.  Problems were expected to last until 3rd January.  Wales banned spectators from sporting events.  This would also be the case in Scotland from Boxing Day where Hogmanay was off.  Extra money went to Yorkshire cities to ramp up the booster prog.  John Apter, chair of the Police Federation who spoke out against the ‘canteen culture’ of misogyny in the force, was suspended amidst sexual harassment claims.

Warning Signs

Red Dawn

Bitingly cold and grey, I awoke to an ominous red dawn Wednesday.  Unrested after a crap night, I managed a few exercises, fetched brekkie and worked on the journal before calling on Elderly Neighbours.  The Husband said they were delayed returning from hospital due to traffic Sunday evening, explaining the mystery of carers getting no reply.  They were with The Wife right now.  Glad she was home for Christmas, I asked him to convey our regards.  I hacked at greenery to bring in while Phil went mystery shopping.

Over 100,000 new cases, Boris was urged to outline a post-Christmas covid strategy.  Health minister Gillian Keegan banally said “we can’t predict what the data is going to tell us before we’ve got the data.”  Jon Ashworth responded: “People need to know where they stand. Businesses have got to make decisions about what stock to get in in the runup to new year’s eve…we’ve still got confusion.”  Tony Blair attacked the government for gambling and the unvaccinated for irresponsibility.  The requirement to self-isolate was reduced from 10 to 7 days with a proviso of negative LFTs on days 6 & 7.  Dr. Simon Clarke told Jeremy Vine cases fell because testing capacity was at saturation point rather than because they’d past the peak.  5-12 year olds could get a 1/3 dose of vaccine while 16-17 year olds could get boosted.  The WHO called for prioritisation of boosters to the vulnerable worldwide to address inequities.  On Channel 4 news, Catherine Smallwood said richer countries needed to stop buying them all up and do more to roll vaccines out globally.  the emergence of Omicron proved it was in their interests to do so.  Jonathan Chew who accosted Witless in June, appeared in court via video link wearing a dressing gown and claiming he had covid.  The judge called him cavalier to which Chew replied, ‘what does that mean?’  Was he thick or having a laugh?

A break in metro news from Thursday, I did the free puzzles and spent the rest of the day cleaning, posting cards to neighbours, sending greetings to Facebook friends and baking.  The puff pastry acted really weird. I used what I could to make sausage rolls then made mince pies, panicking when they stuck to the oven shelf.  Phil had popped to the shops again.  He returned to help free the pies, manipulate leftover pastry into cute stars and decorate the cake (see Yummy Cake below).

119,789 new cases, 2/3 of people in hospital hadn’t been vaccinated.  Covidiots begged for the jab when it was too late!  Based on early real-world data, UKHSA confirmed Omicron caused milder illness than Delta and boosters gave extra protection, but waned after 10 weeks.  Were we in for endless top-ups?  Homelessness Prevention Grants of £316 million were made available to local authorities.  Andy Bunman came on BBC breakfast to say the scheme in Manchester really helped the homeless and the government made the right decision not going into lockdown at Christmas.  I wasn’t sure his boss agreed.  Wholesale gas prices reached another record high, meaning domestic customers could pay 50% more next year.  Yikes!

Slightly iffy Friday, I perked up with echinacea.  After breakfast with apple stars, we prepped the bedroom for Phil to do my hair; a bit cramped but warmer than the South Pole.  I then hung a few final decorations, pre-cooked veg and took a pile of rubbish out.  Phil went secret shopping for a final time and wrapped my pressies, while I painted my nails, watched posh carols from Kings, and listened to Dvorak symphony no. 9 in E minor (the one with the Hovis song).  In the evening, we drank wine, watched films including the traditional Nightmare Before Christmas and marked midnight by munching celebrations.

A record 122,186 new cases, 1:35 Brits and 1:20 Londoners were infected.  But a mini-wave of first and second jabs was reported 15-21 December.  Lad Baby’s single achieved an historic 4th successive Yuletide number in the pop charts.

Blustery all night, Christmas Day started windy and grey. Our day began in customary fashion with more posh music, a delicious breakfast and gift-giving.  The Queen talked of a difficult year losing those close, the importance of celebrating the season, valuing what we had and looking forward to her platinum jubilee year.  The photo-montage studiously avoided snaps of Andrew, Harry & Megan.  Dinner a lot of effort despite the prep, I timed it for after Mary Poppins Returns.  Of course it wasn’t.  Gone 6 by the time the Lidl duck was cooked, it was very tasty.  We followed it with Prosecco, trifle, chocolates and Irish coffee.  Snow magically fell at 11.55, so sort of a white Christmas.  A shame it wasn’t the night before like on the telly!

Yummy Cake

The snow stuck but very grey, foggy and freezing, we stayed in Boxing Day.  I edited the journal and took photos of wintry scenes through the window.  Prettily fronted by money plant blooms, it provided haiga materiali .  Late afternoon, I felt really weird and almost fell asleep despite the coffee and yummy cake.  Tackling the duck carcass difficult, Phil came to the rescue.  I rested on the sofa and improved slightly to make stock.

Sitting down for dinner, Phil found his seat soaking wet. As he hurried off to change, I realised I’d spilt stock on the table and it’d dripped onto the chair. Afterwards he seemed cold with shock.  Apologising for the trauma, I cheered him up with tangerine faces on the trifle.

Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland all brought in new restrictions for hospitality and leisure, with limits on numbers and social-distancing.  Prominent deaths included Janice Long (Christmas day) and Desmond Tutu (Boxing Day).  A week of mourning for the Archbishop entailed bell-tolling and table mountain lit up in purple.  The EFL had decided to keep all premier league fixtures but no weekend Leeds game as 5 players tested positive for covid, Phil cried “Hurrah!”

Bank holiday Monday (confusingly also called Boxing Day), was foggy and cold after the snowmelt.  I switched on the bedroom telly for the 1954 version of A Star Is Born which predictably roused Phil.  Both feeling peculiar, we doubted it was the small amount of whiskey we’d drunk.  After posting blogs, I disposed of rubbish, giving me chance to nosey at new people in the house below.  Also visible through the kitchen window, net curtains were soon drawn but not before I eyed the heavy archaic furniture.  Were they family heirlooms?  Stunned from the excessively rich weekend food, I used the stock to make healthy soup adding leftover stuffing balls which I called ‘crumplings’.  I slept well for a few hours that night, only to wake early Tuesday with a sore throat and snotty nose.  I should have heeded the warning signs of the preceding days.

Boris met scientific advisers to go over the stats and decide on extra measures.  Subsequently ruling them out before the end of the year, Goblin Saj said they ‘wouldn’t hesitate’ (again!) and told us to celebrate NYE outdoors.  Labour demanded sight of the data informing the decision.  All over 12’s In New York had to be vaccinated to access indoor entertainment.

Prophet of Doom

Snow Crows

Definitely afflicted by classic sinusitis Tuesday, It didn’t bode well for the end of 2021.  Phil made porridge with water to conserve depleted milk supplies.  The glue-like softness eased my throat.  After bathing, I put PJs back on, made coffee and fetched the laptop.  Depressed and annoyed at being bedridden, especially as the temperature rose and it would have been nice to get outside, I killed time writing, compiled ‘Top Films 2021’ ii and slept briefly late afternoon.  Phil went to the co-op for basic supplies and catered.  At least the weather was crap Wednesday so we wouldn’t have gone to the carousel in Halifax anyway.  Warning his mushroom pasta dish might be different to mine, Phil’s version was decidedly more roux-ified.  He just couldn’t help channelling the great man.

Consequences of Christmas mixing not yet seen, new covid cases didn’t rise as much as last week.  Evidence emerged that Omicron led to less hospitalisations with ICU bed-occupancy well ‘below threshold’.  Even so, 10,500 hospital cases was an increase of 2,000 on the previous day with 1,300 daily admissions compared to 900 last week.  Doctors and chemists warned of a lack of tests due to increased demand.  The shortages threatened to render ‘key workers’ unable to work in hospitals and schools   Staff isolation impacting, Hopson said NHS providers redeployed staff to compensate.  Government continued to keep a ‘close eye’ on the data.  The Chinese space station twice avoided collision with Elon Musk’s junk.  A good job they had their eyes on!

Thursday, I was glad of Phil’s help changing sheets so I could rest in a clean bed.  It took me the rest of the day to finish cleaning the bedroom in small chunks and put old postcards he got me round the mirror.  Phil went shopping.  The butchers shut all week (who knew?) he bought a rather large lump of lamb from the co-op for the weekend.  In the evening, I tried to stay up to watch a telly film but had to go back upstairs halfway through.  I woke several times during the night, freaked out by weird curtain shadows.

Both disorientated by the darkness Friday morning, I had improved slightly and ditched the PJs for floppy clothes, but stayed mainly abed working on the laptop.  In anticipation of not being well enough to meet on her birthday, Phil framed prints for Walking Friend and I wrapped the gifts before lunch in bed.  We took turns prepping dinner in the afternoon but predictably it was me who ended up putting the joint in the oven meaning a long spell out of bed that evening.  Of course, the lamb took miles longer to cook than indicated and he managed to burn cabbage in the microwave but it was edible with lashings of gravy and mint sauce.  We drank pink cava, ate pudding and watched films, pausing when we heard fireworks to look out the window and see some above chimneys.  We switched to BBC 1 for the big bongs and Thames display entailing too much VR and an awful music melange.  Why couldn’t they put a nice symphony on instead of that ADHD stuff?   Very tired, we pathetically failed to even finish the wine before retiring.

40% of NHS staff off sick, 1:30 Brits were infected the week before Christmas.  On the warmest NYE on record, Trafalgar Square was cordoned off and Northern Ireland banned dancing.  “What’s new?” Guffawed Phil.  The Scots and Welsh were warned not to travel to England.  Able to walk across borders in some places, they probably wouldn’t be affected by the Cross Country trains strike.

Nostradamus’ predictions for 2022 included increasing food prices, droughts and floods, the rise of AI and cryptocurrency.  The corvids would have a laugh at that, unlike the end of November when they huddled in trees perturbed by the snow!

Still ailing on NYD, the top of my leg really hurt.  Over coffee in the living room, we tried to decipher an old map Phil got me.  18th century sat-nav was very hard to decipher!  I went back to bed, worked on the laptop and texted Walking Friend saying we might not be well enough to meet for her birthday and offered to take her out another time.  Not the most exciting start to 2022, we reminisced about new years of ages past.  I remembered one involving drugs, lots of whiskey, staying up until 6.00 a.m., rising at 4.00 p.m. and eating only a piece of bread.  He recalled another where we sat opposite the marina as it was getting light.  “I don’t remember that. But I’m not surprised; I must have drunk gallons if we were still out at that time!”

Cheers!

Later, we watched Death to 2022.  Not containing as many laughs as the prequel, it would have been funnier if it was focused on Britain rather than the USA.  Mind you, it was hard to satirise the years’ events.   On the eve of the grace period ending, there was absolutely no mention of it on mainstream media, civil servants were banned from using ‘the B word’ and The Bumbler omitted any mention of Northern Ireland and red tape, boasting of crown stamps on pint glasses.  Cheers!

Achiness persisting, at least my legs were less painful Sunday.  Sunny and warm first thing, Phil quizzed me on seeing Walking Friend.  Feeling harangued, I texted birthday greetings and suggested meeting for a drink later.  She predicted rain (correctly as it turned out) and wasn’t sure they’d be out long.  I invited her to call round for her gifts.  Almost on cue, a fine drizzle descended.  I brought the laptop down which was progress from staying abed.  I edited the journal and as I reminisced on the one short break of 2021, used an evocative photo of Ulverston Canal rolling bridge for a haiga.  We listened to the new Stranglers record I got Phil (good but old-mannish in places).  Thinking I heard a door knock, I saw no one and Phil said it was a crackle on the vinyl.  Then I noticed 2 missed texts off Walking Friend.  I rang to be told she’d knocked and gone home.  Truly sorry I missed her, I offered to take gifts up but she said come out Wednesday instead.

The Omicron wave over its peak in South Africa, a fire caused extensive damage to the parliament building.  Cyril called it devastating, but at least he was out of isolation.  The mutant expected to disrupt UK supply chains (nowt to do with Brexit!), ministers instructed the public sector to prepare for staff absences of up to 25%.  As secondary pupils were told to wear face-masks, teachers demanded more such as air cleaning units and help with testing to stop the cancellation of exams for a third year running.

Snowy Panorama

References:

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

ii. Top films 2021: https://maryc1000.blogspot.com

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

Part 88 –Off The Rails

“This was the first test of ‘levelling up’ and the government has completely failed and let down everybody in the north” (Keir Starmer)

Hitting The Buffers

Haiga – Sitting Pretty

No way I could do anything Monday morning, I crawled back in bed.  Frustrated at hitting the buffers again, I kept occupied posting blogs and writing, until the inevitable head fug set in. Phil’s crafty homemade bread looked hefty.  Very tasty, it got eaten before becoming a Midsomer murders weapon!  After dinner, we watched part of the World Cup qualifier.  England slaughtered San Marino 10-0 in a ridiculous match.  Why were the tiny team even in the running?

16-17 year olds to get a second dose, Goblin Saj said he’d take advice on boosters for the under 40’s.  Boris repeated “storm clouds were gathering over Europe” and Oliver Dowdy said it was up to us to prevent a lockdown Christmas.  But festive dinners were back on the menu as thousands of foreign workers were recruited.  Only half the available visas taken up before the deadline, it was judged enough to kill turkeys.  Labour called for publication of papers on Owen Paterson’s advocacy for Randox and details of government contracts awarded.  They also planned to investigate time spent on second jobs and force a vote to ban MPs from paid consultancies or directorships.  Boris later copied them.  Keir hailed it as a victory.  A PM spokesman called Belarus forcing a migrant crisis and trying to undermine the EU ‘abhorrent’ and vowed to hold the Lukashenko regime accountable.  After a taxi exploded outside Liverpool women’s hospital Sunday, cobra raised the terror threat level to severe.  The passenger asked to be driven to the hospital just before 11 a.m., when remembrance services took place.  Later named as Emad Al Swealmeen, he blew himself up.  Driver David Perry escaped uninjured. Anti-terror officers questioned 4 people and conducted forensic searches.  It emerged the bomb contained ball bearings which could have inflicted serious injury.

I slept deeply well into Tuesday morning until roused by Phil.  “Is it late?” “Yes. Shall I open the budgie curtains?” “No, I can do it. You shouldn’t really wake me when I’m ill. “Sorry; just making sure you’re alright.”  Less fatigued but sneezy, I worked on the journal all morning.  While Phil went to the co-op, I took washing out the of machine, struggled taking the basket upstairs and collapsed on the bed to read the nature trail booklet I got in the charity shop last week, when the phone rang.  A very nice Dr. Jekyll arranged for a self-test kit to be left at the surgery reception for me.  Quiet time wasn’t quiet at all as the chainsaws predictably started up at dusk.  It was also a struggle to sleep at night-time.

ONS reported 995 deaths w/e 5th November, the highest since w/e 12th March.  Jeremy Vine said 94% of Singaporeans were vaccinated and estimated 5 million refuseniks in the UK.  Where did he get that from?  The Tesco Christmas ad garnered 3,000 complaints as Santa brandished a Covid Pass. Politico revealed 47 companies got PPE contracts via the ‘VIP lane’ as recommendations from ministers and top civil servants were seen as ‘more credible’.  Russia blew up a satellite, ISS astronauts had to shelter and the USA said they were weaponising space.  Unemployment down to 4.3%, employment and vacancies were up.  How come?  Were they made up jobs?  The Nord Stream 2 Pipeline was held up by a need to be registered as a German company.  Recalling Phil’s experience of trying to navigate their complicated system, I exclaimed: “Mein got! Good luck with that!”  Phil chuckled: “You must go to the post office in Stuttgart…”

The Great Train Robbery

The Great Train Robbery

Forced up after hardly any sleep Wednesday, I felt really crap.  Phil half asleep, I fetched brekkie from a freezing kitchen, got back in bed, wrote ‘Autumn Medley’ for Cool Placesi and watched PMQs.

The tory MPs who bothered to turn up, appeared in masks.  Keir asked had Boris broken his promise on Crossrail for the North?  Boris replied: ‘wait and see’, as the IRP* signalled ‘the biggest programme of investment in rail for a century’ and levelling up across the UK.  Turning to another broken promise, Keir asked the PM to confirm scrapping the eastern leg of HS2.  Boris blathered that northern people would benefit massively.  Keir noted he’d still not said yes.  Going onto Owen Paterson, he advised the PM to do the decent thing and say sorry for giving the green light to corruption.  Boris reiterated the need for a cross-party approach to ensure nobody exploited their position and asked Kier how he earned money from law firm Mishcon de Reya before becoming leader.  Lindsay Hoyle admonished, it was for him to answer, not ask questions.  Keir called him “a coward, not a leader.”  Spending weeks defending sleaze, “waving one white flag won’t be enough to restore trust.” (he subsequently retracted ‘coward’ as unparliamentary language).  Boris went on about working together, addressing the appeals process and accused Keir of trying to prosecute others for actions he’d taken himself.  Hoyle waded in again: “We play by the rules, don’t we?” and Keir added: “Upholding standards didn’t last long…when someone in my party breaks the rules, I kick them out. He tries to get them off the hook.”  A full independent investigation was the only way to get to the bottom of how Paterson helped Randox get £600 million in contracts.  Boris later told the commons liaison committee it was a mistake to try to save Paterson and suggested he was misled by colleagues.

Unable to get to shops, I placed an Ocado order, adding some Christmas stuff, and bought a couple of things from evil Amazon.  The café owner texted asking Phil to take his pictures down.  “Maybe you’re not the best artist in town after all!” I jibed.  Actually, it was to make space for tinsel.  He also received an invite for a  booster.  Where was mine?  Had it failed to come because my phone was updating all day?  I looked on the NHS central system but the local health centre not an option, I left it.

Due to energy, fuel, food and hospitality costs, inflation reached 2% in October, twice the BOE target and the highest in a decade.  Lidl to increase wages by 6% from March, they’d be the best-paying supermarket.  BBC news went to Belfast where Lord Frosty Gammon was after an agreement to alter the protocol.  If that wasn’t possible, he’d use article 16 to suspend the parts he didn’t like.  Acknowledging difficulties, the EU had already come up with a ‘reasonable package’ but Frosty wanted more radical change.  Nasty Patel said a ‘dysfunctional asylum system’ allowed the likes of Al Swealmeen to remain and carry out terror attacks.  That’s your fault!  As Thangam Debonnaire pointed out, tories had been in charge for 11 years!

Still crap Thursday, I became exhausted after bathing, changing sheets and fetching coffee and dossed in bed before working on the takeover blog for The Researcher.  It looked better than I remembered since leaving it when overtaken by life events last month.  Phi went to the co-op and noticed the front door had been washed.  From the landing window I saw the window cleaner’s van and advised Phil to be ready for the knock.  He went to the kitchen but sure enough, the window cleaner rapped on the door.  I shouted down, to be answered by the window cleaner.  Eventually Phil heard me, paid and went back to making lunch.  Getting afternoon coffee, I noted Phil had scrubbed the washing up bowl to blinding effect.

Saj promised the NHS Federation they’d get what they needed.  The Environment Agency were investigating 2,000 sewage treatment works with findings possibly leading to prosecution and fines.  Shats announced the IRP aka The Great Train Robbery.  As expected, he scrapped HS2 to Leeds and Northern Powerhouse Rail (NPR).  Instead, there’d be £96bn to upgrade the East Coast mainline and improve existing track (£42bn of which was already committed to HS2 between London and Birmingham).  Tracy Brabin at Leeds station said it wasn’t what was promised.  Anger from the Northern Research Group and in the commons, Keir said Boris had ripped up promises and failed the north: “You can’t believe a word the PM says.”  Idiotically dressed up in orange at a Network Rail logistics hub near Selby, Boris retorted that was ‘total rubbish’: “Those extra high-speed lines take decades, and they don’t deliver the commuter benefits…we will eventually do them.”  Money for Leeds super-tram was confirmed and Khan asked for another £1.9 bn for TfL.

On Question Time, Stephen Flynn, SNP labelled the debacle just another broken promise to add to a long list: ‘just look at the record’.  Tory Mims Davies insisted they’d been honest.  Stella Creasey guffawed, her own backbenchers were red-faced with shame.  Creasey criticised Nasty Patel’s’ divisive immigration language and said we didn’t know if those arriving on boats were ‘illegal’.  As 125,000 asylum-seekers awaited decisions, they always looked for someone else to blame.  Mims asked Steve why Scotland didn’t take refugees.  He snapped back, because they didn’t get any money to pay for it, adding the swell of refugees was our fault for warring in the Middle East and we had a duty to look after them.  Discussing MPs second jobs, lawyer Nazi Afzal suggested they pick fruit and stack shelves.  Good idea!  I’d add clean toilets!  A brainless Canadian psychologist said only 3% of the population were psychopathic and being corrupt was counter-productive.  An audience member shouted: “why are the 3% in charge then?” creating much mirth.

Laura K interviewed Irish PM Micheal Martin for Newscast.  He blamed all the problems on Brexit.  The agreement signed in good faith, there weren’t ‘an abundance of checks’ at the border and the EU sincerely wanted to engage and get a solution; possible with goodwill on both sides.  Previously saying it’d be ‘reckless’ to trigger article 16, he was encouraged by dialogue between Frosty and Maros Sefcovic and diplomatically pleaded: ‘don’t make it another nightmare Christmas!’

Backtracking

Yellow Trees

Very bright early Friday morning, I peeped through the curtains to view a bright dawn with blue sky and arty clouds, but the sun didn’t last long.  Feeling slightly better but still fatigued, it took a while to come round.  I worked on blogs and spotted a message saying the amazon package would arrive later.  I told Phil not to answer the door.  “Why? Is it a nutter?”  It came when he was at the co-op, disturbing my quiet time.  I stuck a hoodie to stand at the bottom of the stairs while a young man handed me the parcel.  I faffed with packaging, hid the contents, lay back down again, then Phil returned, rousing me again.  In the evening, we drank wine moderately, watched films and the first episode of the big new Prime release.  We spent the first half hour of Wheel of Time laughing at hammy acting but it was suitable viewing after a few glasses.

Keir came on BBC Breakfast to complain the betrayal of the north proved ‘levelling up’ was just words.  Re-announcing NPR 60 times, everything was a mess under this government.  Holyrood was to crack down on mask-wearing while a plethora of measures continued to be implemented across Europe.  Over 65,000 covid cases reported in a day, Germany banned communal working for those without antibodies and Belgians had to work at home 4 days a week.  Upper Austria and Salzburg imposed lockdowns, followed Monday by the whole country for 20 days.  Vaccinations would be compulsory from February.  Chancellor Schallenberg called it ‘very painful’. Doctors welcomed the move.  A demo against proposed mandatory vaccines and a ban on New Year fireworks turned into a riot in Rotterdam.  Protestors threw rocks and fireworks and set cop cars on fire.  Seven were injured including at least 2 shot by police.  The Czechia and Slovakia locked down the unvaccinated.  National news asked: was the UK on a different track?  1:65 infected, the trend was down on the previous week. Lukashenko admitted troops were helping migrants to the Polish border and refused to stop the flow.  He didn’t give a shit!  New culture sec Nads Doris said social media was hijacked by left-wing snowflakes.

I’d hoped to be better by the weekend but alas, I not much.  After a mediocre night, I failed to lie in Saturday.  Really bright again, the first frost of the season amplified brilliant sunlight.  I went down for  brekkie then returned to bed and worked on the laptop until head fug set in.

Breakfast a palaver Sunday, I got stressed, and a series of niggles led to harsh words and foul moods.  When Phil asked if I wanted to go for a walk, I yelled “I’m not well!” and stomped off back to bed.  Upset and fed up still being stuck indoors, I wanted to simultaneously cry and scream but forced myself to write.  He came to make amends, apologised for rowing and managed to make me laugh.  He then stood at the foot of the bed in distracting fashion.  I told him to go out.   I read the winter issue of Valley Life Magazine, took photos through the window of yellow trees across the valley, wrote a haiga using a photo of a late hawkweedii, and worked on the Christmas card.  Bad feelings gradually waned but I was still depressed.  Phil went in search of inspiration and came back with bargain mincemeat.  The town centre was rammed of course, as I’d guessed from parked cars snaking up the road opposite.  Loads of Christmas markets cancelled, I joked: “That’s because they’re all here!”  Phil agreed: “It’s already like one out there!”

Boris caught mask-less on trains again, Mick Lynch of RMT said he sent ‘all the wrong signals’.  Riots in Brussels, Vienna and across Holland led to injuries, 3 bullet wounds and 51 arrests in Rotterdam.  WHO worried about the situation in Europe.  Prof Pollard told Marr it was unlikely we’d see the same sharp rise as UK rates had been climbing since summer and boosters would reduce transmission.  But as people in poorer countries still weren’t vaccinated, it remained a ‘major global public health problem’.  Goblin Saj spouted a load of numbers, including claims protection increased from 50-90% with boosters; the key to us not going the way of Europe.  Extended to 40-49 year olds in the coming week, I still didn’t have my invite.  Maros Sefcovic said the EU was trying to help curb spiralling infections by encouraging vaccine take-up and thought hesitancy was caused by problems at the start of year, followed by a better picture in summer, leading to a sense of complacency.  On Brexit, he felt some progress was made but not on process.  While implying urgency, Lord Frosty made no counter-proposals to the ones from the EU in June.

Tesla drivers were locked out of their own cars and as the wheels came off Manchester United, Phil laughed at yet another heavy defeat.  A sacked Ole Gunnar Solskjaer gave the ‘we’ve let ourselves down’ speech.

* IRP – Integrated Rail Plan

Reference:

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

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

Part 86 – Blah, Blah, Blah

“This devastating milestone reminds us that we are failing much of the world” (Antonio Guterres)

Talking Shop

Mushroom on Mushroom

I slept fitfully through a pouring night until the alarm forced me up on Monday.  Guessing a missed call concerned the appointment, the landline rang later.  As anticipated by the dream, the slot in Tod wasn’t available due to staff sickness and they directed me to immediately go to Halifax.  I negotiated for 3.00 p.m. then stuck an anorak over my head, took garbage out, and found a whole melon in the food bin.  Nowt wrong with it apart from being rock hard, I brought it in and washed it thrice to be safe.  Were people made of money?  Making lunch, the kettle did that weird thing of mentally spewing froth – probably because of the copious rain.  I panicked as Phil ineffectually wiped round.  It took three boils to expunge the foam.  The rain had eased off as we went to the bus stop round the corner.  We sat on the top deck to enjoy scenic views of canal reflections and pavements carpeted with leaves.  The bus station shut for refurb, we hurried round the corner and just caught the connection.  Slightly early, we lingered in the grounds examining chewed conkers and a peculiar mushroom on a mushroom among undergrowth.  Again, Phil patiently waited for me while I underwent a slightly less ghastly procedure than the previous week.  We went straight home but too late for a siesta, I recovered slightly from the ordeal with coffee and snacks.  Phil had to take over chopping veg for dinner when I sliced my thumb.  Knackered by bedtime, it took ages to sleep.

Covid deaths reached 5 million world-wide, half in the UK, EU, USA and Brazil even though they represented only 1/8 of the world population.  Antonio Guterres called it ‘a global shame’.  Walk-in boosters were announced with everyone within 10 miles of a centre.  That’s a long walk!  Contradicting Boris, Mini Macron said the ball was in the UK’s court and threatened to implement fishing restrictions from Tuesday. Trussed-Up  Liz retorted they wouldn’t ‘roll over’ and cave in to French demands.  Jersey licensing ‘entirely in accordance with Brexit agreements’ she may trigger dispute resolution measures.  Lord Frosty Gammon accused the EU of ‘overly strict enforcement of the Northern Ireland protocol, without regard to the huge political, economic and identity sensitivities’.   Loyalists hijacked and torched a bus.  52 private jets flew in celebs to COP26, including Gates and Bezos.  The latter lauded his Earth Fund and upped his donation to £1.4 billion.  It then emerged CO2 emitted during a single space flight by the greenwashing hypocrite equated to the amount produced by one of the world’s poorest in a lifetime!   Greta Thunberg was mobbed outside Glasgow rail station and spoke at a rally opposite SSE where 25,000 delegates went ‘blah, blah, blah’.  Activists from the most affected countries sailed into port on Greenpeace’s Rainbow Warrior.  Justin Welby said leaders would be cursed if this didn’t prove to be the moment they saved the planet.  “That’s some powerful juju!” laughed Phil.  On Newsnight, a drug-addled Allegra Stratton, now apparently PM spokesperson on COP26, insisted Nodi’s promise to reduce emissions by 2070 was great, even though it was 20 years too late, and domestic flights were a ‘personal choice’.

COOP Shop

COOP 26

Waking in a cold, bright dawn Tuesday, I felt discombobulated, fatigued and nauseous and griped about my travails.  About to clean the kitchen, Phil had made a start and I decided to leave the rest ‘til later.  Actually, I didn’t feel up to it.  I made an effort to work on the journal and went to the co-op for lunch supplies.  They’d got with the zeitgeist displaying ‘COOP 26’ posters.  Gaps on shelves meant hardly any British cheese, but bizarrely loads of continental stuff.  I paid my mate at the kiosk, hefted bags home and struggled to the kitchen, swallowing annoyance at a lack of help.  After lunch, I was falling asleep and struggling to see in bright sunlight, whinged and sympathised with Phil who had migraine.  I got a WhatsApp alert, read ‘family group’ in a message, then the app bombed.  I rang my brother who provided an update on mum’s headstone and complained everything was still slow and shit.  Sharing health notes, he said he’d had covid recently even with 2 jabs, and we had a laugh at the expense of anti-vaxxers.  Phil tutted impatiently so I went upstairs to continue the chat.  My nephew now at Leeds University, I said he’d have to come and see us.  “Does he?” “Well, he doesn’t HAVE to!” My brother chortled at that.  I lay down to rest to be disturbed by nasty chainsaws – they loved massacring those trees!

Meanwhile, at COP26, Biden said Chinese and Russian leaders made a ‘big mistake’ not coming.  110 countries covering 85% of earth’s forests, pledged to reverse deforestation which Boris called ‘the great chainsaw massacre’.  No way did he come up with that himself.  FOE said proof would be in action not words and de-funding by big finance.  Half the world’s top methane producers pledged to cut emissions by 30%, seen as a significant short-term contribution.  XR went to JP Morgan and Scottish Power offices in Glasgow.  Four more energy companies tanked.  Goblin Saj said he was ‘leaning towards’ mandatory vaccines for the NHS.  Chris Hopkins advised he wait until April or they’d lose staff over a ‘very difficult winter’.  France suspended punitive action on fishing boats while negotiations continued.  Frosty Gammon later met Clemet Bone-Head.  No breakthrough, he’d meet Maros Sefcovic.  “He’ll probably say ‘go away and stop being silly It’s only fish!’” predicted Phil.  North Yorkshire cops began a campaign against bad driving which had worsened since the pandemic.  Bereaved families protested smart motorways, the transport select committee counselled a halt to the rollout but Sh**ts said bringing hard shoulders back was less safe – WTF!

Money Talks

Beer Shop

A difficult start to Wednesday, I persevered and sent my submission to Valley Life magazine for the next issue before preparing for a walk.  Hitherto sunny, the skies went dark indicating rain.  Phil declared he was making lunch instead.  Only going out of the house for shops and appointments for 1½ weeks, I’d looked forward to a leisure outing and got depressed.  I kept busy changing profile pics and passwords.  A message in the junk folder implied an unexpected Facebook log-in.  I doubted its authenticity but thought it wise to alter details anyway.  At dinnertime, I ripped the skin off the sore thumb rinsing a margarine tub.  “Should I sue?“ “Yes!” said Phil. “If it was you, you’d use superglue!” “Yes!”  I applied a plaster instead.

As a sage bod resigned, Prof Van Dam came on the BBC to evade questions on government not ‘following the science’ and repeat the party lines of caution and getting jabs (1.6 million had boosters in the past week).  He said we were ‘running hot’ with high case numbers and the pandemic wasn’t over but prevaricated on face-coverings, refusing to say Rees-Moggy was wrong that MPs didn’t need them in the commons as they all knew each other.  Lindsay Hoyle directed them to be worn in both chambers but was largely ignored by tories.  MPs narrowly voted for an amendment so Owen Paterson’ suspension for lobbying was put on hold until the rules were reviewed to include a right of appeal.  Calling it an ‘absolute disgrace’, Labour, along with the Lib Dems and SNP, spurned the new committee thus it would consist of tory members only.  Keir still off with covid, Rayner stood in at PMQs to say: “this is about playing by the rules…when they break the rules Mr Speaker, they just re-make the rules.”  Even if you accepted the accused should have a right of appeal, how on earth could you apply that retrospectively, I wondered.  Phil remarked Patterson didn’t even think he’d done anything wrong; getting bungs was an everyday part of life as a tory.

The day at COP26 was all about the money.  Rishi Rich said developed nations would send the promised £73bn to developing countries in 2023, 3 years behind target, but they also needed private sector dosh.  450 financial institutions signed up to the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (Gfanz). Led by Mark Carney, money had to be matched with net zero projects.  The Loch Ness debt monster was blocked from being set afloat as it breached ‘maritime restrictions’.  XR protested greenwashing.  Hundreds marched, chanted and banged drums, some sat down outside SSE, cops were sprayed with paint and 2 activists were arrested.  Bony Prince Charlie and Leo Crapio met Stella McCartney showing off her sustainable fashion including mushroom-grown leather bags and vegan football boots. I bet they were cheap, not!  ‘Calling out’ the fashion industry, she said: “We’re one of the most harmful industries in the world to the environment” and “I’m trying to provide sustainable solutions and technologies and a better way of doing things.”  After chanting ‘stick it up your arse’, Greta declared net zero on swearing – each time she used a bad word, she’d compensate by saying something nice.

Thursday, we spent the morning cleaning and working on laptops.  I approved the proof from Valley Life before setting off in early afternoon sun on the walk we’d planned the previous day, calling in at the co-op for pastries.  Heading up to a favoured copper beech woodland, the trees weren’t as red as usual but leaves already fell.  “That’s that then!” laughed Phil.  We squatted near an old gatepost to eat pastries then continued up a horrid stony path.  Turning right, we proceeded on tarmac almost missing an overgrown stile across fields.  Put off by huge sheep, Phil started up a ‘desire path’.  I followed to struggle inelegantly over a metal gate.  In the village, we looked at a new ‘beer shop’ – actually a TV filming location complete with distressed props.  Returning via a different section of the wood, strong sun highlighted autumn golds.  “That’s better!” Phil declared.  “What are you on about? It’s all been lovely. It’s more yellow and orange this year but you already knew that.”  Very warm atop the ridge, by the time we got home, I had backache, fatigue and felt overheated.  (For a fuller description of the walk, see Cool Placesi)

MHRA approved Molnupiravir to treat covid in patients with at least 1 risk factor.  It prevented the virus multiplying so halved the risk of serious illness or death if taken within 5 days of a positive test.  Trials of Pfizer’s Paxlovid found similar results (89% effective at reducing serious infection if taken as soon as symptoms appeared by those at high risk).  Dr. Kluge of Who said 1.8 million cases across Europe last week due to relaxed measures and low vaccine take-up were of ‘grave concern’.  Indians celebrated Diwali as reported cases were a mere 12,000 a day.  Surely that was due to low testing rates?  Inflation forecast to reach 5% by spring, BOE left interest rates low but said a hike to around 1% would come within months.  John Lewis and M&S launched Christmas ads to get us spending.  An ethics adviser told Boris yesterday’s vote was a ‘very serious and damaging moment for parliament’.  Forced into a U-turn by the opposition’s refusal to join the new committee, Rees-Moggy said he’d now seek cross-party changes to the rules which wouldn’t be applied retrospectively.  Saying ‘corrupt’ was the only word for it, Keir still refused to take part.  Owen Paterson found out about the latest shenanigans while shopping in Waitrose and resigned meaning a by-election.  Would the good folk of North Shropshire vote out sleaze?

At COP26, 23 countries committed to phase out coal power and 46 signed up to transition to clean energy.  Jennifer Morgan of Greenpeace International said it was only one nail in the coffin for coal: “without the USA, Australia, China and India, there’s still a very real danger that the end won’t come soon enough.”

War of Words

Late Peonies

No sun to temper the chill Friday, the ground looked wet.  As it became misty, Phil thought it was thawing frost.  The thermometer dropping, we shivered even with extra layers and had to put the heating on advance for the first time of the season.  Putting washing in the machine, the detergent compartment was blocked and I called Phil to assist.  Irked at the forced work break, I assured him I wouldn’t ask if I could manage unaided.  Anyway, he needed a comfort break.  In the co-op, I piled the trolley with bargains including a fab freezer deal.  I queued at the only open till but when Phil arrived, another one opened.  The young cashier extremely efficient, Phil observed: “She’s a bit keen. I bet she worked at Lidl”  We celebrated bonfire night with copious helpings of parkin, cinder toffee and wine.

Weekly ONS stats showed stable covid rates except in Northern Ireland where they were up slightly.  Greta told young activists in Glasgow COP26 was “a global north greenwash festival, a 2-week-long celebration of business as usual.” The ‘blah, blah, blah’ wasn’t what we needed after 25 years of ‘blah, blah, blah.’  Climate protests in 200 cities across the globe the next day, 50,000 marched in Glasgow.

Breakfast easier on Sunday, I’d done by the time Phil came down.  I left him to clear up, worked on the journal and went to town, dodging tourists taking selfies on the old bridge.  Busy with coffee-cuppers, I waited ages behind a posh couple on the market for knobbly veg.  The stall-holders looked bemused when asked which squash was best for cake.  I suggested orange.  Cold and grey until then, the sun appeared, so I visited the park.  Admiring autumn growth, I suddenly realised my purse was missing, feared I’d been pick-pocketed then spotted it in a flowerbed.  Phew!  I walked along the towpath in waning sun, washed the filthy veg including a rainbow of heritage carrots and collapsed on the sofa with backache and fatigue.  Editing photos, I used one from Thursday for a haigaii and one of late-flowering park peonies to wish my niece a happy birthday.

Saying parliament wasn’t the government’s plaything, John Major labelled the attempt to save Owen Paterson shameful and wrong, said it damaged parliament’s image and the pattern of behaviour was unconservative and odious: they had broken the law, broken treaties, and broken their word on numerous occasions.  On the Marr, Keir repeated the tories actions were “corrupt, contemptible and not a one-off” and trashed “the reputation of our democracy and our country.”  George Useless said the mistake had been ‘put to bed’ whatever that meant.  Marr suggested Rayner could be sued for slander. What was he on about?  Boris would lose!  As The Sunday Times revealed 15 of 16 top tory donors were in the House of Lords, Keir insisted it was time for reform.  Susan Hopkins told us the jabbed elderly were now dying of covid and needed boosters.  £248 m would be used to reform NHS diagnostic services.  A good idea, I thought…

Haiga – Red Carpet Treatment

References:

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

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

Part 83 – Truth Washing

“What a surprise: a committee led by the previous health secretary and which exclusively spoke to his friends in government, found that the deaths of 150,000 people were ‘redeemed’ by the vaccine roll-out” (Hannah Brady)

No Surprises

Haiga – Altered Carbon

Unrested after a bitty night, I forced myself up Monday and got through the routine chores with remarkable efficiency.  I then started putting decorating stuff back in the coal hole when a tin of white paint leaked all over, creating more work, backache and ill humour.  After posting blogs, I hung sheets on the line.  Although the sun didn’t reach that side of the house, a warm breeze dried them quickly and made them less smelly.  For dinner we made use of discounted hot dogs and spare lentils to make a casserole.  Phil said it was no surprise it was a triumph!

The Welsh Covid Pass was introduced for access to events and clubs.  Other places such as care homes could follow.  Damian Hinds said Boris’ holiday was important for the country; he needed time to relax and unwind but not too much as he was constantly in touch, being briefed and still in charge.  Shadow minister Pat McFadden retorted he didn’t care where The Bumbler was as it was just as chaotic when he was here: “What I want is grip from the government and we haven’t got that at the moment.”  A spokesman insisted government departments were working together on how to support business through the energy crisis.  A freedom of information request revealed that of 750 cops accused of sexual misconduct in the past 5 years (excluding The Met), only 34 were dismissed.  The Draconid meteor shower lit up Northumberland skies and Airbus tested Zephyr.  The solar-powered aircraft intended to bring internet to unconnected areas, flew for 18 days in the stratosphere.  Meanwhile, scientists got excited that radio waves from distant stars detected by the LOFAR telescope, could lead to the discovery of habitable planets in the goldilocks zone.

Midweek turned grey and I turned ropey.  Tuesday, I persevered with housework, writing and shopping.  As meandering high school kids cluttered up the co-op, I scarpered out the back door.  Skirting two white vans blocking the street below on the way back, I was about to swear when a delivery man politely asked did I live there.  The other van belonged to the window cleaner.  His son smiled at me from the passenger seat while his dad nattered with Poet Neighbour.  After sorting the load, I attempted more writing but got sharp pains in my head and had a lie down.

AZD7442 antibody shots was found to halve the risk of severe covid in people who couldn’t take vaccine.  As Brian Madderson of the Petrol Retailers Association said there were still shortages due to tankers not being in the right place, CF Industries found a longer-term solution to the crisis that halted production last month.  Gareth Stace of UK Steel called the expected help for other power-hungry industries in the form of taxpayer-backed loans, a sticking plaster.  ONS reported workers on payroll rose to a record 29.2 million August-September but vacancies rose to 1.2 million.  In a bid to restore public trust, all police forces would review alleged violence against women, incidents of indecent exposure and vetting practices.  Maggie Blyth would lead the NPCC’s work and co-ordinate action across England and Wales.  Swampy and fellow eco-warriors planned to stay in tunnels under the path of HS2 at Aylesbury until Christmas.

A report by the S&T and H&SC committees into government’s handling of the pandemic said nothing we didn’t already know or that I hadn’t been saying since March 2020.  It labelled the early response ‘one of the most important public health failures the UK has ever experienced’ but said the situation improved with vaccine development and treatments.  Doing the media rounds, minister Stephen Barclay refused to acknowledge mistakes or apologise to bereaved families, reiterating the idiotic mantras about learning lessons and knowing things now that we didn’t then.  Hannah Brady of Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice called the report ‘laughable’ and wryly observed it was no surprise that they found 150,000 deaths were ‘redeemed’ by the vaccine, adding: “this is an attempt to ignore and gaslight bereaved families.”  Fellow campaigner Fran Hall came on Newsnight to ask Aaron Bell what lessons had been learnt?  The Bell-end blathered about being prepared for flu (which they weren’t), following official scientific advice and criticism being all very well with the benefit of hindsight.  Rory Stewart revealed he was accused of populism by Jenny Harries for suggesting simple measures such as masks early on.  Fran wanted someone to take responsibility.  Bell-end admitted the PM was ultimately accountable but said it wasn’t about pointing fingers; systems needed to be interrogated.  Rory retorted it wasn’t enough and should be a massive wake up call for a “smug, closed government that doesn’t accept any external challenge.”

Trust Issues

An Emotional Captain Kirk

Sleep mediocre, it was again an effort to rise Wednesday.  I posted ‘Wonders of Ulverston’ on Cool Places 2i and tried to draft a guest blog for The Researcher.  Looking at other contributions, I was fairly sure a friend had written two of them (an artist, TV star and writer to boot!)  Slowness and glitching presaged a software update while a glitch on the NHS app caused chaos for travellers unable to get a QR code.

Two more unheard-off energy companies went bust and rail freighters reverted to diesel because electric was too expensive.  Amid HGV driver shortages, containers backed up at Felixstowe and Maersk re-directed ships to European ports.  Port bosses and toy retailers told consumers to stock up on Christmas tat, but Rishi Rich and Tim Morris of UK Major Ports Group said don’t panic buy.  After Lord Frosty Gammon complained the Northern Ireland protocol wasn’t working and had to change, the EU proposed to significantly reduce red tape, address looming bans on products like sausages and give Westminster a more consultative role.  Refusing to extricate the European Court of Justice, Maros Sefcovic said their role was essential for the province to retain single-market access.  A new round of talks was expected in the coming weeks.  While Lord Frosty insisted everyone in government knew what they were signing, The Scumbag unsurprisingly said Boris didn’t, Jenny Chapman claimed they were using a spat with Brussels to distract from their own failures and Leo Varadkar said it showed you couldn’t trust the Brits.  11 EU countries backed France in calling on the UK to abide by the agreement for continuity of fishing round Jersey.  Hate crime up 9% in the year to March 2021, 12% for racially-motivated crime, The Home Office cited ‘trigger events’ such as BLM protests but campaigners blamed misinformation and conspiracy theories linked to the pandemic.  Will Shatner aka Captain Kirk, went to the edge of space in Bezos’ New Shepard rocket. After spending 10 minutes going to 350,000 feet, the oldest man to leave earth became emotional.  Prince Wills criticised space tourism, saying we should make this planet better rather than blasting off elsewhere.

After a fretful night,Istole myself Thursday to read information for an appointment the next day, sorted logistics and chatted through anxieties with Phil.  Despite reassurances, I couldn’t concentrate on writing.  About to go shopping, Phil asked should he come?  It was a good job he did; even with gaps on shelves, I loaded a trolley thanks to reduced items and practically the last ‘5 for a fiver’ deal from an almost-empty cabinet.  Attempts to compartmentalise a failure, I took a mild valerian to calm my brain and tried to rest.  My body relaxed but I couldn’t stop my thoughts wandering.  A similar story at bedtime, I had a truly dreadful night – neither the chill pill nor the meditation soundtrack aided sleep.

Up 13% in a week, 45,606 new daily covid cases was the highest since July.  With 7,024 hospitalised, Witless said it’d be a tricky winter and GPs were instructed to see people face-to-face to ease pressure on A&E.  More money was pledged for locums who didn’t exist and ‘league tables’ would show up those who didn’t.  Many countered that patients liked zoom consultations and The C**T said it wouldn’t turn the tide.  Obviously expecting a grilling from doctors, Goblin Saj missed the RCGP conference*, saying he was clearing his diary to fight for the NHS.  While doing a round of media interviews, he apparently didn’t have time to read the damning report – obviously 150 pages was too much for him.  Pig farmers and processors welcomed help with storage and temporary 6-month visas for butchers but warned it needed to happen quickly to be any use.   Customer’s bills to go up another £45 because of bombed companies, National Express had enough fuel until 2023 but not enough drivers.  Wednesday, Insulate Britain blocked roads, got dragged off by motorists and unglued and arrested by police.  They then suspended protests until 25th October to hand-deliver a letter to Number 10.  After staff allegations and a vote of no confidence, North Yorkshire PCC Philip Allott said he wouldn’t resign and hoped to rebuild trust.  By evening, he’d stepped down, saying it was the honourable thing.  Well, it would have been if he’d gone straight away!

On Question Time, Prof Rob Winston said scientists shouldn’t be blamed for failures during the early stages of the pandemic and none of the evidence presented to the Lords S&T committee was made public.  Criticising the last 2 health minister, he told us the Lords asked The Cock questions every day and got no answers and The C**t left the department in a mess ‘with no remorse’.  Tory Penny Mordaunt maintained people did their best at the time, but the report flagged up important lessons which needed to be learnt as we weren’t through it yet.  Labour’s Alison McGovern lamented a lack of cross-party discussions and former aide Sam Kusumo admitted government was accountable and should have included local and international leaders in decision-making.  Economist Anne McElvoy wanted Saj to apologise for not reading the short, clear report: “mistakes in England were on a scale that is not acceptable.”  She trusted a public inquiry would reveal  the trade-offs made between public health and the economy.  Moving on to the fudge over an ‘oven-ready’ Brexit, she called the Northern Ireland protocol a bodge but hoped ‘tweaks’ would make it work.  Penny insisted the agreement was signed in good faith, wasn’t meant to impact negatively on the people of Northern Ireland and the EU now realised change was needed to eliminate trade friction.

Sportswashing

Buzzing Fuchsia

Hardly sleeping all night, there was no way I could go anywhere Friday.  Exhausted and distressed, I lay dozing until Phil made moves.  I fetched tea and opened the curtains to view the colourful pre-dawn sky adorned with a bright star (or was it a planet?)  We again discussed my worries before I phoned to cancel the appointment.  Phil left me to rest but it was futile as streaming sunlight replaced darkness.  Giving up, I ventured down for coffee and a short spell on the laptop.  Head drooping after lunch, I went back to bed, alternately reading and trying to sleep; impossible with an ultra-bright sun and whirring mind.  Slightly less fatigued by evening, we indulged in pizza, wine and escapist films.

43,000 incorrect PCR results 8th September-12th October, halted test analysis at the Immensa Health Clinic Ltd. Lab in Wolverhampton.  Jenny Harries of UKHSA trusted only a few thousand were infectious.  Travellers returning from red list countries would only need a LFT from 24th October and the fully-vaccinated could go to the USA from 8th November.  Shats announced the limit on the number of deliveries foreign lorry drivers could make while in the UK would be lifted for up to 6 months.  Popular Southend MP David Amess was stabbed to death at his surgery in Leigh-on-Sea.  25 year old Ali Harbi Ali was arrested.  Another success for the ‘prevent’ agenda – not!  I predicted calls for protection for MPs out in the community would finally be acted on because he was a tory, albeit a nice one.

Extreme tiredness led to improved sleep over the weekend but insufficient to make up the deficit, I stayed home.  Saturday, I cleared overgrowth near the garden.  Phil went to the shop and reported the corner pub heaving with punters wedged like sardines.  Sunday, I installed the Halloween tree, wrote a haiga using a picture from last week’s visit to the cloughii and took photos of our fuchsia – still blooming and buzzing with bees.

As anticipated, Patel came on Marr to say there would be measures to protect MPs in their constituencies, after a review overseen by Lindsay Hoyle.  Ambassador Andrei Kelin told him Russia could do more to help with the gas crisis if their Nord Stream 2 pipeline was approved.  He didn’t mention that with only 29% vaccinated, Russia experienced a record number of covid cases and around 1,000 deaths per day over the weekend.  At Newcastle United’s first game since a Saudi take-over earlier in the month, human rights activists parked a van displaying murdered Jamal Khashoggi outside St. James’ Park. Toon fans may have thought anyone was better than Rick Astley, but others saw it as sports-washing.

*RCGP – Royal College of General Practitioners, not the Revolutionary Communist Party (if they’re still a thing)

References:

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

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

Part 80 – The Muppet Show

“I think in the short-term that will be a dead end…EU workers we speak to will not go to the UK for a short-term visa to help the UK out of the shit they created themselves” (Edwin Atema)

The Clown, The Bozo and The Bonzo

Haiga – Seeds of Change

The week began sunny and bright, as did I.  After chores and posting a haiga Monday, I realised I’d forgot coffee at the weekend.  I found plenty of fruit and veg in the co-op, but no berries.  The hipster cashier thought the shortages were random but I concluded seasonal British produce was less affected by the CO2 shortage.  Maybe it would change people’s buying habits for the good.  While editing holiday photos in the evening, Phil showed me how to create panoramas in Photoshop.  Relatively easy, perhaps it was time to ditch the infuriating Microsoft ICE.  I could hardly keep my eyes open at bedtime but it took a while to drop off and hot flushes woke me in the night.

The Bumbler went to America with newly-promoted Trussed-up Liz.  He chaired a UN meeting on the COP26 agenda, and met Uncle Joe to discuss climate change, the pandemic and the Aukus submarine deal with Australia, which upset the French so much Liz’s counterpart Le Drian said the UK was run by Monty Python.  The muppets, more like!  As a sop to European critics, Joe announced double-vaccinated travellers could go to the US from November.  Gordy Brown sent the government an Airfinity report saying it was a scandal 100 million vaccine doses would expire by December if not sent to poor countries. After the RCN rejected the 3% NHS pay offer, 4/5 Unison members and 9/10 GMB health & care workers did likewise.  The government held emergency talks with suppliers and said there’d be no bail-out for small energy companies who went bust but state-backed loans for bigger ones to take on their customers.  Martin Lewis warned consumers would have to choose between heating and eating.  Denying a crisis, Kwasi Kwarteng assured us there was “no question of the lights going out.”

On a warm, hazy last day of summer, I took time out from housework and writing, firstly to marvel at how much I missed Grange, with its awesome seascape colours.  Usually appreciating where we live on returning home, I guessed it was because it was our only trip to the seaside in over a year.  Secondly, for a spell outdoors in the afternoon sun.  Phil needed the shop in town.  Hardly seeing a soul for days, I was struck by how busy it was.  Feeling tired, we went to the park, sat on a bench, drank pop, watched rooks swank about on the football pitch and noted autumnal changes, then walked back along the canal where a heron surveyed for prey above the aqueduct (see below).  After a siesta, I settled down with a coffee when the landline rang.  Getting up to answer a robot, I suddenly remembered promising the Christmas cake recipe to Elderly Neighbour.  Retrieving the old Word file, OneDrive said it couldn’t save changes and I spent ages re-editing before sending.  According to local weather, September was warmer than June or August and the warmest since records began in 1659.  Nevertheless, clouds descended in the early hours, obscuring the full harvest moon until the following night, auspiciously on the autumn equinox.

Jeff Bozo refused to commit Amazon paying more UK tax, telling The Bumbler it was government’s job to come up with appropriate frameworks.  Boris met Bonzonaro separately.  It would truly have been a muppet show if they’d all met together!  After shaking Boris’ hand, the Brazilian health minister tested positive for covid.  Did he share his boss’ anti-vax views?  Kwarteng claimed he was focussed on helping the ‘fuel poor’ as he struck a deal with CF Industries to re-start CO2 production in Cheshire and Teesside.  Richard Walker of Iceland said “a 3 week deal won’t save Christmas” while a festive tree shortage was foreseen because of Brexit.  But Boris still insisted “Christmas is on” and stuck to the line of creating jobs rather than not cutting Universal Credit.  Labour called the end of the £20 uplift, rising fuel costs and the National Insurance hike a ‘triple whammy’.  Furlough also due to end, likely leading to more unemployment, there was no sign of Rishi Rich.

The Romper Room

Surveying Heron

Wednesday, Phil felt unwell but his cough eased with Covonia, so probably not covid.  I started to feel ill after breakfast.  The usual sinus lark likely caused by fighting fatigue since our trip, I fetched coffee and the laptop and stayed abed the rest of the week.  Working on the journal, I drew curtains to block out the early autumn sun’s glare and tried hard to not be depressed at being stuck indoors.  Phil characteristically continued working downstairs, not hearing a feint knock on the door, or me shouting him.  He eventually answered for the woman from next-door-but-one to place 2 large bottles of milk on the doorstep.  My worries about them fitting in our tiny fridge and what on earth we’d would do with it all, proved unfounded.  Phil managed to wedge them in and they had a long sell-by date.  I placed an Ocado order, unexpectedly getting a delivery slot for the following evening.  Phil said it was a good job as if he went out, he might get attacked by people fearful of infection.  “If it is covid, I blame the trains!” “How would we know if it was a mild case now we’re double-jabbed?” “You could get a covid test.” “I’ll think about it.”  After dinner, I stayed up to watch Prime and got a sudden sharp twinge in my left foot when I went back upstairs.  Strangely on the opposite side to the sprain, a massage helped slightly but the pain returned every time I turned over during the night.

Chris Witless said most infections were in the young, ½ of kids had had covid and the other ½ would catch it if not vaccinated.  Oxford Vax hero Sarah Gilbert found it hard getting money to develop other vaccines including for MERS.  The Good Law Project brought action against DOHSC for awarding £80 million ‘secret’ covid antibody test contracts to Abingdon Health and the ONS predicted £20.9 million of covid loan cash wouldn’t be repaid.  In the continuing energy crisis, 7 unheard-of suppliers collapsed.   No trade deal with the US anytime soon, Boris laughably lauded the ban on British beef and lamb being lifted.  At the UN, Uncle Joe pledged doubling climate aid funding for poor countries to a total of $11.4 billion.  China promised not to build more coal-powered plants.  After blocking the M25 five times in a week, Insulate Britain carried on protesting, despite 270 arrests and a High Court injunction.  Pret were opening 200 new coffee shops.

The PM stateside, PMQs pitted demoted deputy Rabid Raab against Angela Rayner.  She asked: “how many days does a worker on minimum wage have to work to afford a night in a luxury hotel on Crete?”  As he waffled, she told him: “ An extra 50 days. Even more if the sea was open.”  She went onto to ask, in the same week they were cutting Universal Credit and energy bills rose, could he “guarantee no one will be pushed into fuel poverty this winter?”  Raab retorted: “Let me remind her of her words: ‘working people don’t want a handout, they want opportunities’. We’re giving them that.”  Rayner maintained the government’s failures paved the way for the crisis, which they were warned about and had a choice to make working people’s lives harder or easier.  Would they cancel the UC cut?”  Raab blathered about plans for the NHS and the economy, saying with vacancies and wages up, it was working.  Kirsten Oswald, SNP, found his answers perplexing. predicted a ‘cost of living tsunami’ and declared: “you can’t level up by making people poorer.”  A smug Raab accused her of scaremongering and referred to British armed forces helping the Scottish NHS.  On Newsnight, Barry Gardiner said the government was “lurching from one crisis to another.”

Thursday morning, Phil coughed less while I felt worse.  Putting the bed-changing off until after lunch, it proved a slow and knackering chore.  After a rest, I got dressed for the Ocado delivery, which arrived early.  I dumped bags on the stone floor and left sorting groceries until dinner.  Bad idea – the fish-fingers partially defrosted.  They still tasted okay though.  I went back to bed early and Phil used some of the surplus milk to bring me a huge cup of hot chocolate.

1/3 of tenant evictions were due to the covid holiday ending.  HGV driver shortages led to councils cancelling bin collections, BP rationing fuel and Esso closing some Tesco pumps. Food industry bodies wrote to implore Boris to ‘save Christmas’, experts called for Covid Recovery Visas for critical staff and the BOE warned of a 4% inflation rise.  Still denying there were problems, small business minister Paul Scuzz-bag said “This isn’t a 1970’s thing.”  Biden pledged another 5000 million doses of vaccines, still 5 billion short of what was needed.  Failing to get a US trade deal, Trussed-up Liz headed to Mexico to try and join CPTPP.  A friend disclosed she called Raab hanging onto Chevening ‘ridiculous’ while he got dressed up for his inauguration as Lord Chancellor.  The La Palma eruption predicted to last 84 days, on the other side of the world, earthquakes and anti-lockdown protests hit Victoria.

On a live Question Time, Shiny turd Shats listed initiatives when quizzed on the Universal Credit cut.  Richard Walker told him they weren’t working, the cut was coming at a time of food and energy inflation and there were more food banks than branches of McDonalds.  Pointing out not everyone could work more hours to make up the shortfall and would also be hit by a National Insurance hike, Lib Dem Munira Wilson called the tories “cruel and callous.”  Iceland staff to get Boxing Day off, I got a bit of a crush on possibly the nicest capitalist in the country (but it didn’t last long).  Newscast showed a clip of Boris referencing Kermit the Frog.  Preaching to the UN it was ‘easy going green’ and: “the world…is not some indestructible toy, some bouncy plastic romper room against which we can hurl ourselves to our heart’s content,” The Bumbler went onto ramble about Sophocles.  Was he drunk?  John McDonnell said Keir’s 11,000 word essay for the Fabian Society was like a “sermon on the mount written by focus groups.”

Captain Pugwash

Kingfishers Were Here

Still working on the journal Friday, I rued combining 2 weeks’ worth.  At least I managed to finalise holiday photos.  The cough gone, Phil masked up to brave an unexpectedly well-stocked co-op for weekend essentials.

Drivers told not to panic as there was no fuel shortage, queues predictably formed at forecourts.  Shats looked at options to solve the HGV crisis, including using the army even though they were already drafted to help NHS Scotland and Wales and hinted at a U-turn on ‘essential occupations’ as a short-term solution.  An IT failure caused airport delays at e-gates across the UK.  Paralympian-turned-Extinction Rebellion protestor James Brown went to jail for supergluing himself to a plane October 2019 and the government sought another High Court injunction as Insulate Britain blocked the Port of Dover.  Californian fire-fighters tried to save General Sherman from the Windy Fire, raging for a week in the Sequoia National Forest.

Phil blamed the co-op trip for aches and pains Saturday morning.  “Yeah but we’ve got steak!”  I went down for breakfast, took coffee back to bed and posted two entries on Cool Placesi.  Awful music outside all afternoon sounded like Captain Pugwash on an endless loop.  Neither earplugs nor the telly blocking it out, it almost drove me mad!  The house a mess , I asked Phil to clean some of it.  He manically zipped round the lounge and bathroom, became knackered and needed a rest before cooking the steak dinner.

Sunday starting super-bright, I battled with fatigue and foot pain – now in my instep.  A few stretches and a bath helped enough to manage the day out of bed.  Taking recycling out, Elderly Neighbour parked up.  We discussed cake-baking and his pre-cancerous skin condition.  He assured me the nasty-looking red patches on his face were caused by an aggressive chemo-therapy cream which would hopefully clear it by next month.  “Fingers crossed for you!”  Clouds returned late afternoon.  Fearing rain, we changed plans to go to the nearby clough to do the rounds of charity shops.  In the large one, we got them to unlock a camera cabinet, mulled over a couple of models, but bought nowt.  The centre crowded, I hovered outside the sweet shop while a fat family bought ice-cream and nipped in for cough sweets.  We then sat on a quieter riverside stretch.  Seeing a flash of orange and blue, I exclaimed: “kingfishers!”  Of course, they’d flown off by the time I got my camera out.  On the way home, I exchanged cheery greetings with an erstwhile art teacher.  No doubt preparing for another Open Studios weekend, it didn’t seem 5 minutes since the last one.  Noticing the Christmas tree outside the house looked rather battered due to inconsiderate parking and sported yellow needles, Phil insisted we feed it despite impending rain.  I edited kingfisher-free photos and composed a haigaii.  Making a frugal roast dinner, Phil re-branded it Brexit Roast.

As expected, temp visas allowed 5,000 HGV drivers (and poultry workers) to come and work in the UK up to 24th December.  Suspension of competition laws let petrol stations share info and target deliveries, letters asked ex-drivers to return and more tests were promised.  Drafting in troops still possible, Shats blamed the RHA for the crisis and Useless George blamed motorists panic-buying.  But Rachel Reeves indicated the government had ignored warnings from hauliers of what was coming down the road ‘since last year’.  Keir told Marr the ‘absolute crisis’ was caused by lack of government planning.  Doubting if anyone’d come and work here post-Brexit, Edwin Atema of Dutch union FNV agreed, saying EU workers wouldn’t help us out of our own shit.  Other countries also having problems, what was the wider strategy?  At the labour party conference in Brighton, Keir was forced to modify plans to give MPs more say in leader elections. The NEC passed the diluted motion leaving Leftists furious.  Referring to the tories at a reception for activists, Rayner spluttered: “we cannot get any worse than a bunch of scum, homophobic, racist, misogynistic, absolute vile…banana republic, vile, nasty, Etonian…piece of scum…”  Quizzed on her choice of words, she said anger at The Bumbler’s history of derogatory comments, prompted the use of ‘street language’ common in working class Ashton.  She later tweeted ‘I’d be happy to sit down with Boris. If he withdraws his comments and apologises I’m happy to apologise to him’.

The murder of young schoolteacher Sabina Nessa in Kidbrooke a week ago Friday, prompted a vigil, a book of condolence and three arrests over the weekend.  The third ‘significant arrest’ Sunday saw Koci Selamaj later charged with the crime.  Six months after the Sarah Everard tragedy, surveys showed almost all women remained fearful.  On Politics North, deputy PCC Alison Lowe said it was ‘not okay’: “toxic masculinity pervades our schools, employment arenas (and) we need to be calling that out.”

References:

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

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