‘I was sitting out there the
other night looking at the stars. It was cloudless and clear as crystal with
the stars and planets filling the sky, and a full moon casting its ethereal
light over the world. And as I looked out at the wonders of the universe and
the beauty of the night sky, I thought to myself ‘It really is time that I
fixed the roof on this lavatory’.
And so, Dave, it’s time you
fixed the roof.
The ‘troubles’ must have
gladdened the hearts of the media in what is usually a slow news month. But the
quality of reporting was abysmal. The Sunday Times has yet to cover the story
at all. The other papers and TV news services were very short on facts and very
long on opinion. We were not told who was rioting and looting for days after it
all started.
They said it was triggered by
the woodentops terminating a Mr Duggan who shot at a cop but didn’t. We are
told nothing about him but it is insinuated that he is not the ‘good family
man’ claimed by his relatives and by others a gangsta who left Manchester
either because it was too hot or because there were richer pickings in the Big
Outhouse (he could have been both, of course, and kind to his old mother and
stray cats). It was said that he was under surveillance for planning an armed
robbery. It is said that his gun was found nearby. It is said that the bullet
that supposedly came from his gun (that was never fired) was police issue –
lucky old cops, that their ammo is bespoke.
They never said at the outset
who was involved in the violence.
In fact, no facts.
Then came the opinions. It
was all the actions of alienated black male yoof without jobs or prospects or
education. The Dr Heinz Kiosks were out in force. It was a symptom of a
vanished community. We were all guilty (well, not me, maties).
So let’s try to make sense of
it all.
Here are the stats from the Beeb:
69% aged under 25, 29% between 25 and 35, 7% between 35 and 45 based on the
first 59 cases brought to court. We may expect those proportions to change when
the Bill gets round to charging more of the non-violent offenders.
Despite criticism of policing
methods, over 1500 have already been charged with many more to come. The DT
reported that the head cop at the Yard had criticised the courts for leniency;
he did not. He expressed a wish that the courts would hand down condign
sentences. With the sentencing of a student to 6 months for looting a £3.50
case of mineral water it looks as if they need no bidding. It will be
interesting to see what happens to the middle-class, wealthy female undergraduate
who has been remanded to the Crown Court where the sentencing powers are fairly
draconian on 5 charges of burglary.
One of the most newsworthy
scenes was covered at length by Sky News. It was the address to the crowd by
the father of two of the three young Muslim men murdered when trying to protect
the family filling station. No boo-hoos, no begging for sympathy, no emoting.
Just a tough, calm, dignified speech telling the angry crowd gathered at the
scene –all races, colours, ages, faiths – not to fight, to go home, and to remember
that they are a community. Neither the BBC TV News not the DT next day thought
this worthy of coverage to any degree.
As for ‘no community’ tell
that to the Turks, Kurds, and Sikhs who saw off the mob in short order. But
inevitably the statutory moron was trundled out to accuse the police of being ‘too
aggressive’!
And since Cameron has had the
temerity to criticise the police, perhaps he will now do a u-turn on his police
budget cuts.
Now that he has promised to
clean up Britain maybe he could start near to home by getting rid of those in
his government who were involved in expenses fiddles but not prosecuted (but he
was one with his £600 bill for removing a shrub in his garden). He could deal
with the bigger looters like Phillip Green who legitimately rob the people
through tax dodges. Perhaps he could appoint a Cabinet that had the same characteristic
as the England Test cricket team – tough, determined, efficient, professional,
ruthless, and all team-players.
He could start by sending Kittenheels
May off to be Minister of Meal-on-Wheels and Basket Weaving and appointing
David Davies as Home Secretary.
1 comment:
What a poetic way to see a broken roof! Hehehe. You're such a good writer. Was Dave able to fix the roof, btw?
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