Thursday 29 February 2024

LEAP YEAR MANSPLAINING

 


On Facebook I saw a cartoon (above). It said that men are always right on the following dates: 29th, 30th and 31st February. Of course, these dates do not normally exist but 2024 has a 29th February, being a Leap Year. These posts go out on the last day of the month, which is 29th February this time and so I thought it might be relevant to look at the Leap year issue, which will at least be relevant to the date. It may not seem important but there is a reason for it.

To explain the Leap Year, process I have had to resort to Wikipedia, my normal source of information. You can read the full account here but it basically comes down to the differences between the Julian and Gregorian calendars. The Julian calendar was, as its name suggests, introduced by Julius Caesar in 45 BC and made a year match the movement of the sun. The Gregorian calendar came into effect in 1582 and was that bit more accurate.

 

The earth moves around the sun in 365 and a quarter days, which means that you have to elbow in an extra day every four years to make up for the quarter day. That is why we have Leap Years. However, it is not quite that simple. The exact time it takes for the earth to rotate around the sun is 365.245 days, which means that the more accurate Gregorian calendar misses out the Leap Year in dates divisible by 100 but not in those divisible by 400.

 

The Gregorian calendar was introduced in 1582 and named after – but not invented by the Pope at the time, Gregory the Thirteenth. The real inventor of the new and more accurate calendar was Aloysius Lillius and it was suggested by a German mathematician and astronomer called Christopher Clavius. Both men, however, have been largely forgotten by history and Pope Gregory is remembered simply because he gave its name to the more accurate calendar.

 

The slightly slower rotation of the earth around the sun means that 1600 and 2000 are Leap Years but 1900 and 1500 are not. Over time this in turn led to the Julian and Gregorian calendars being out of sync by eleven days and in the eighteenth century the more accurate Gregorian calendar won out over the less accurate Julian one. Britain ended up admitting defeat and aligning with the Gregorian calendar by an Act of Parliament in the year 1752.

 

This in turn led to eleven ‘lost’ days in that year as the two calendars aligned and, predictably enough, a lot of muttering about bloody foreigners stealing days from us. There is nothing new in the world. This just an early precursor of Brexit and by which we think we can solve all our problems be breaking away from countries that we had previously quite happily done business with. And that has not turned out well - in my opinion, at least.

 

I was wondering how serious the riots and objections to the ‘lost’ eleven days really were so, inevitably, I looked it up on the internet. The satirical painter William Hogarth showed an election scene in which a Tory poster is shown demanding these eleven ‘lost’ days back. The site I found this on (historic-uk.com) also says that ‘most historians now believe that these protests never happened [and were] the Georgian equivalent of an urban myth’.

 

There was probably a fair bit of grumbling about the ‘lost’ days and complaints about new-fangled ideas but most people accepted the new system and grudgingly admitted that there was a certain amount of sense in being aligned with the rest of Europe. After all, we still did a lot of business with European countries and it seemed sensible to be on the same calendar (or page) as them, even if we did not like the idea of synchronising with a European system. 

 

There was nothing imaginary about the Brexit vote, however. Those who wanted to break from Europe won that one and got their way. That surely was only the start of the process. It now behoves those who were in favour of breaking with Europe to show that the process can be successful and profitable for us as a country. If it had been left to people like me, nothing much would have happened and we would be trading with Europe as we were.

 

My partner and I went to Spain (which, incidentally, did not convert to the new calendar until 1926) before the Brexit referendum. We reached our hotel barely an hour after the plane touched down and were greeted pleasantly by the staff, who all spoke perfect English, and checked in quickly. I wondered why we considered it necessary to hate these people so much, what possible benefits could come from breaking with them and making Britain more bolshy.

 

It is apparently far harder now for people who actually make things to export them to European countries because they have to jump through a series of totally unnecessary hoops and fill in multiple forms to do so. The trade wins which were supposed to come about after Brexit seem to me to be totally imaginary. As one of my friends said when we had the original vote on the subject ‘The future for Britain has to be in Europe - surely.’

 

I see no reason to contradict him fifty years later. It is up to the Brexiteers to prove that their system of an independent Britain is going to work better than one which is integrated into Europe and there is not much sign that this is happening now. Just as the calendar was changed, despite the objections of those who considered it a popish plot and a European impertinence, so Brexit does not seem like the sensible solution to Britain’s problems.

 

Edwin Lerner


My other blog is diaryofatourist guide.blogspot.com

Tuesday 30 January 2024

PACIFISM WILL NOT DEFEAT FASCISM

Universally recognised as a symbol of Nazism,
although the Swastika has a more ancient origin

Many countries have national service in which men (sometimes women as well) have to go into uniform and, if necessary, fight for their country. Although this has never been a British tradition, it has now been suggested here. The conscripted do not have the right to make the decision to go to war. That is done for them by older politicians who rarely see any of the fighting. The soldiers in uniform just have to fight, kill and either be killed or survive until the war is over.

They may opt to be classed as conscientious objectors, sometimes abbreviated to ‘conchies’. The phrase that has a hint of contempt in it and those who choose not to fight are often looked down on as cowards by those who do put on the uniform (and their supporters). However, it takes a certain type of bravery to reject war as a means of solving problems. It is often easier, in fact, to join the crowd lining up to enlist. At least no-one will accuse you of being a coward.

 

The Jehovah’s Witnesses, who stand on street corners in all weathers and knock on doors to try and convert people are all conscientious objectors. They pay their taxes and generally obey the law but they will not fight for their country, owing allegiance to a higher power. Many of them suffered badly at the hands of powerful rulers like the Nazis, who did not have sympathy for their views and regarded them as expendable – like the Jews they sent to the gas chambers.

 

I have a certain sympathy for this point of view but I cannot back it completely. There is a phrase, which I think I heard on the radio first, that ‘the best is the enemy of the good’ and that sums up my attitude. Obviously, we should not be trying to sort out our problems by king each other. The current war in the Middle East surely demonstrates that. Hamas will never destroy Israel and Israel will never destroy Hamas so the two sides have to learn to live with each other – which they show no signs of being either willing or able to do at present.

 

Yet, this message falls on deaf ears when delivered to people who think that violence will solve their problems by destroying their enemies – Jews, blacks, Arabs or whoever. The Nazi fascists really believed they could create a lasting Reich by killing Jews. Actually, although we remember that aspect of Nazism now, the Second World War did not start because of the killing of Jews. It started because Germany had to be reined in and we need a war to do so.

 

This is also why we dropped nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and why we bombed Dresden so ruthlessly. We had to convince the fascists and fanatics who ruled these countries that the fighting was over and they had lost. Pacifism was never going to do that. It was necessary to defeat them militarily, to fight fire with fire, to talk them in the language they understood – whatever cliche you care to use – to show that resistance was doomed.

 

That argument would never convince conscientious objectors that boycotting all war was worthwhile. If you were not prepared to fight for your homeland off you went to the gas chambers. Between 1500 and 2000 Witnesses were killed in the course of the war. This number is minute when compared to the six million Jews who were gassed or shot and there is some evidence that, if they kept their heads down, Witnesses might be allowed to survive. 

 

However, although they may not have been persecuted like the Jews, who were killed automatically because of who they were, Witnesses had to learn to do the Nazi salute and pass themselves off as good Germans, to prop up fascism even if they would not fight for it. When it comes down to it, you have to make choices in life and some Witnesses chose to be complicit in Nazism. Others died or exiled themselves to avoid supporting facsism.

 

We did some fairly horrific things to the German people during the war, brutally bombing their cities from a sky which we increasingly controlled.. And to the Japanese for that matter. Japanese soldiers were not taken prisoner until the US army paid their soldiers a kind of ransom fee for bringing them in alive. To be fair, the Japanese authorities did not countenance surrender to the hated enemy either, death being preferable to the dishonour of surrender. 

 

Yet still neither country would surrender when it must have been obvious that they could not win the war. Lots of German citizens, who were suspected of being ready to surrender, were executed by their own side, their bodies left to hang from trees and lampposts, presumably to discourage those who saw them from having defeatist thoughts. If you surrendered – or even thought about surrendering – you were killed by the fascist overlords.

 

This kind of fanaticism will not be defeated by idealism or conscientious objection to war. It needed the kind of brutality that fascists inflicted on those they considered inferior to stop them in their tracks. That is why I would have fought in the Second World War and why it was right to bomb German cities like Dresden and Hamburg. Otherwise, it would have been necessary to sacrifice the lives of soldiers who were fighting their way to Berlin or Tokyo.

 

Life is about alternatives not absolutes. If you could say to the parents of those soldiers who had willingly put on army uniforms that the war could be won in a week or two by bombing but you would extend it by continuing to fight on land, inevitably at the cost of the lives of those soldiers, so that you would not be condemned by later generations for war crimes, you would be justified in opposing the atom bomb or the blanket bombing of Dresden and Hamburg.

 

I do not think I could do that, however. You cannot defeat fascism with idealism.


Edwin Lerner


My other blog is diaryofatouristguide.blogspot.com

 

 

Sunday 31 December 2023

A SOLO CHRISTMAS


A lady bishop Sarah Mulally conducted the service

I sometimes used to say that I would not mind having Christmas on my own. I was in the middle of a mild tug of love at the time, between my partner and my children and ex and felt that I would not mind being shot of the whole occasion. That happened this year, by accident not by design, and I have had the chance to reflect on it now. My children were both away with their wife or boyfriend's families and my partner was working so I was on my own for Christmas this year.

Last year I worked over Christmas and I worked on Christmas Eve was well. They did not want me on Christmas Day itself this time, so I stayed in my house in London. Everything closes down over Christmas in the Uk and I there are no buses or rube trains. I decided, however er, to go to church and so walked to Saint Paul's Cathedral and back which takes the best part of two hours each way - although I do not walk as well as I used to and gt a taxi for the final part of each trip.

It was a lovely service at St Paul's led by the lady bishop Sarah Mulally with a sermon by the (male) dean. Any temptation I may have had to convert to Catholicism would be stymied by the thought that they refuse to countenance any woman fulfilling the job of priest. The service was attended by lots of people and they made a point of welcoming those 'of all faiths and none', as the phrase nowadays has it. You can be pious or just curious and you will be welcomed there.

I would not count myself among the pious but I was a little more than curious. I self-define as a Christian but I find it very hard to believe in an afterlife - it would be a little dull apart from anything else, being stuck in Heaven for perpetuity with no physical pleasures to enjoy - yet Christianity seems a g good way to lead your life and it has stood the test of time, so I accept it even if I do not fully embrace every aspect of its theology. I take it seriously - but not literally.

After the service I walked back to Brixton. My partner said I should have driven but I needed the walk and I was not certain of finding a place to park even on Christmas Day. The police might have given me a ticket even if the traffic wardens were off duty and I did not want to risk it so a walk seemed the best option. I certainly had time to kill. After that found a Pret A Manger that was open in Brixton and had a solitary meal before watching Doctor Who (excellent by the way).  

It was a fairly uneventful day than, with telephone calls to my children and partner and a zoom with my brothers so I was not entirely isolated. My solo Christmas was an interesting experiment but not one I would necessarily want to repeat very often. It made me realise that human beings are essentially social creatures who need a degree of human contact. Christmas can be a time when those who are on their own are isolated and, therefore, most likely to feel lonely.

Edwin Lerner  

My other blog is diaryofatouristguide.blogspot.com






Thursday 30 November 2023

WHAT IS A ZIONIST?

File:Flag of Israel.svg
Israeli flag with its distinctive star six-sided star


The t-shirt I saw the man wearing was unequivocal; ‘All Zionists are racist…every single one’.  This is pretty definite when you think about it. What this very superior judgement on others made me think about, however, was ‘Who is a Zionist?’ If it stands for someone who supports what Israel does under all circumstances, then I am not a Zionist. If it stands for someone who supports the continuing existence of Israel then I am definitely one.

 

Israel was granted recognition by the United Nations in 1948, the same year that the NHS was founded. Both the organisation and the country are celebrating their seventy fifth birthday this year. Both were founded on idealism – that health care in the UK should be ‘free at the point of care’ and the Jews should have a home of their own after suffering unimaginable horrors during the holocaust. Both have struggled to live up to that idealism.

 

My brother used to run a hospital and he indicated that the NHS could never live up to what was expected of it. Inflation in medicine is higher than elsewhere in society, medical advances are making cures viable that would have not been possible when it was founded and, related to this, life expectancy has increased by thirteen years since the NHS began. Put simply, people are living longer and older ones need a lot of taking care of – for free.

 

Israel too has failed to live up to expectations. It was once considered a left-wing country with kibbutzim a good example of socialism in practice. (I should know as I spent six weeks in one.) Food, housing and child care were provided for all in return for labour and, apart from a small amount of pocket money for individual spending, everything was communal. It persuaded me that socialism could work as an opt-in system but not as an opt-out one.


This seems a long time ago now and Israel has a nasty right-wing government led by Benjamin Netanyahu who relies on some very unpleasant characters to survive. The country has been accused by some of operating an apartheid system. I am not one of these but the Israeli government seems to be trying hard to disprove this with many of its members believing that Palestinians are effectively sub-humans. The bullied soon turn into the bullies it seems.


This is a long way from the idealism that accompanied the establishment of Israel, one that was broadly welcomed by left-wing people, many of whom have short memories. It is now the Palestinians who are everybody’s favourite underdog. Israel is losing the saloon bar in Britain and around the world, being perceived as a powerful bully that stole land from people and refuses to share it with them now, relying on bigger and better guns to survive.

 

Naturally, the Palestinians do not share this viewpoint and many support Hamas, which has openly stated that it wants to destroy Israel and murder its people. This is summed up in the phrase ‘from the river to the sea’ which seems to say that Palestinians should both reclaim their land and kill those who have taken it. This in turn brings out memories of the Holocaust for Israelis who do not need much reminding of how they were slaughtered then.

 

Despite their conquests - and living in a state of more or less perpetual war - the Israelis have managed to create a democracy, still considered the only functioning one in the Middle East, and to have kept alive their left-wing traditions. However, like every country worthy of the name, they put security above justice and survival above fairness. Hence the accusations of apartheid made against them. Being anti-Zionist is now seen as punching up.

 

I have just finished reading Roddy Doyle’s novel A Star Called Henry which describes in sometimes sickening detail how the Irish republicans made British rule in their country impossible and forced a retreat from Ireland eventually. The Palestinians have learned from the Irish and are attempting to destroy Israel. The difference is that, while the British could leave Ireland to its own devices, the Israelis have nowhere to go and are staying put.

 

It is the difference between an Imperialist project and an occupying power. For what it is worth, I have long thought that the Palestinians lacked a Mahatma Gandhi or a Nelson Mandela, one who could preach the virtues of non-violence and the importance of living with your enemy. Hamas’s language of annihilation may work in the west but it has no appeal in Israel, whose citizens have nowhere to go to. To survive they must stand and fight.

 

Put simply, Israel is going nowhere and it is a hopeless pipe-dream to expect to be able to obliterate it totally and replace it with a Palestinian state. Living in a perpetual state of war is likewise impossible in the long-term for Israel. The only viable solution is a two-state one in which Palestine and Israel are uneasy neighbours. Israel needs to be shown that a Palestinian state will not simply result in their rockets moving closer to the ‘enemy’.

 

The two sides are each ranged against the other, both promising that they will destroy the other. Yet Israel cannot destroy Hamas, which feeds on anti-Israeli sentiment amongst the oppressed Palestinian people. Likewise, Hamas will never destroy Israel, which has the backing of the USA, where no-one can hope to be elected president and remain in power unless he guarantees the survival of the country. The Jewish vote there is just too strong.

 

In one sense I am a Zionist in that I believe passionately in the retention of the state of Israel. For all its faults, it is a democracy and does allow dissenting voices inside its borders. I reject the premise that this makes me a racist, as the United Nations surely would be classified as a racist organisation as it allowed the creation of Israel in the first place. And, once its enemies have destroyed Israel, who can say where they will stop next? 


Edwin Lerner My other blog is diaryofatouristguide.blogspot.com



Tuesday 31 October 2023

NOT SO KEEN ON HALLOWEEN

A Halloween pumpkin (photo from Wikimedia)

I am writing this in Ireland, where we have gone for a break and to go to the Wexford Opera Festival, which runs from late October to early November. After this we return to London so it will be in Ireland that we experience Halloween on 31st October, the same day that this post is published. I always think that is rather a grand word for putting something online in the hope that people will read it. Publishing, to me, involves second party approval, someone being prepared to put their money up to bring a book or article into print. Still, it is the word used by the people in charge of the blog site, so who am I to second guess them? 

Being a largely Catholic country, Ireland would not be expected to celebrate the salvation of a British parliament and a king brought up in the Protestant church – James the First of England and Scotland. He was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots, a woman who was executed for her support of the Catholic church. In truth, this alone would not have caused her to be executed but her persistent plotting against her cousin Elizabeth the First and her attempts to seize the throne was easily detected and led to her execution at Fotheringay in 1587.

 

Expecting the son of an inveterate and martyred Catholic to follow her mother’s example, the Catholics of England were disappointed to find that James, brought up in the fiercely anti-Catholic Presbyterian faith to hate his mother (whom he barely knew) and to reject her religion, was a grave disappointment to them. Led by Roger Catesby, they plotted to blow up parliament with James the most prominent victim. The plot, however, was discovered and, by one of those quirks of history, was named after Guy Fawkes. In the end he was caught, taken to the Tower of London where he was tortured to reveal the names of his fellow conspirators. The feebleness of the signature on his confession shows how bad this was. Catesby, the leader of the conspiracy, meanwhile has been largely forgotten by history and the man whose job was merely to light the blue touchpaper and retire is the focus of it.

 

Even people who are not particularly interested in religion will attend bonfire night gatherings. One of the most popular of these was in Lewes, the town where my late parents lived, and which had something of an anti-Catholic reputation. In these days of ecumenical friendship, that has largely been forgotten now but the Lewes parade which culminates in a huge bonfire in which effigies of unpopular politicians and public figures join Guy Fawkes to be burnt at the stake. (I particularly remember the Argentinian leader General Galtieri at the time of the Falklands war.) In my home town of Littlehampton they have a rehearsal for this parade, which we will miss this year, staying as we are in largely Catholic Southern Ireland.

 

Instead, we are surrounded by reminders of Halloween in the form of pumpkins, witches costumes and various ghostly artefacts. These have only a tenuous connection with the Christian feast on All Hallows Eve, which precedes All Hallows – or saints – Day and All Souls Day immediately following it on 1st and 2nd November which are Christian feasts of remembrance. However, like many Christian celebrations, there is an overlap with paganism and it conveniently ties in Celtic festivals like Samhain, which have Irish and Scottish roots.

 

Even trick or treating, which we have imported from the USA now, has its origins in the pre-Christian habit of going from door to door singing songs and being given food in return. This often involved having the faces of the entertainers blackened up and there was a certain element of threat in the way that, if you did not welcome the uninvited visitors, they were allowed to perform mischief on your house – hence the ‘trick or treating’ habit today in which youngsters dress up in costumes and make-up in exchange for sweets and treats.

 

We seem to be gradually moving from the communality of bonfire night and parades, which once had an anti-Catholic air about them but are now just excuses for a bit of fun, to kids dressing up in costumes and marching around to peoples’ houses with a slightly threatening hint of mischief if their otherwise harmless request for sweets is ignored or denied. You can now get signs which warn trick or treaters in advance if you are unsympathetic to their demands. This seems to be missing the point. What is a threat if you are not allowed to carry it out? However, in the name of ‘harmless fun’, all points of view must be protected so anti-Halloweeners (like me) can avoid being trick or treated in their homes on 31st October.

 

I prefer a communal parade followed by a roaring bonfire rather than tweens walking around the town where I live in costumes while I wait patiently and give them what they want. In truth, we live in an isolated cottage here and are not likely to be disturbed by trick or treaters who will have to come a long way to find us. If we have a bonfire, it will probably consist of just lighting the fire indoors and watching it burn in the grate behind a door that will be firmly locked. This will be a safe, hygienic and harmless Halloween for us in Ireland.


Edwin Lerner


My other blog is diaryofatouristguide.blogspot.com 

  

Friday 29 September 2023

PUB TALK AND PUBLIC TALK

File:The Guardian 2018.svg
It does not always practice what it preaches

A while ago I went on an organised visit to the Guardian newspaper. It was na interesting visit  to my favoured newspaper but what it reminded me most of all was when I worked for the civil service. Both organisations had a policy of only admitting those who had a pass to enter the buildings they used - temporary ones were made for us but had to be surrendered on departure -   and both liked to conduct their conversations in private without allowing the public to listen in.


We saw the room where the big decisions were made: what the paper would lead on and who would write for it, I presume. It would have been relatively simple to set up a video link which would have allowed people to listen in to these conversations but there was never any suggestion that this would take place or be a good idea. Unsurprisingly, the Guardian likes to make its decisions in private without any real input or interference from outside.

 

Yet the newspaper has also been a supporter of Julian Assange who seems to think that no-one should be able to have a conversation in private any more. He has made it his mission to reveal to the world what government agencies want to keep secret and he seems, to me at least, to feel that any conversation that is kept private inevitably results in the deception of the people on whose behalf the resulting decisions are made.

 

I had a brief and fairy inglorious career as a civil servant before I became a tourist guide and we were always told that decisions made in government should be shared with the public, who after all paid our salaries, but that these decisions should always be made in private. An old salt, who was my mentor and considerably more experienced in the workings of government than I ever became, said that just considering an option, which was later rejected, would soon be leaked to the media and presented as government policy by organisations with an axe to grind. Better to make the decision and present it as a fait accompli. You could always change your mind later if the brown stuff hit the fan and created a widespread stink. Roy Jenkins said that conversations about policy should always be held in private. It was effectively impossible to make a good decision if too many people were involved in it from the outset.

 

Like the government The Guardian, which is a champion of free speech, effectively does this by maintaining a very private world behind closed doors in its offices. They need to have conversations along the lines of: ‘That Polly Toynbee is over the hill nowadays. We need to get rid of her to allow a few new writers in.’ or ‘Giles Fraser believes in God and yet the vast majority of our readers are atheists. Why are we persevering with him.’  Judging from the contents of the paper, the first conversation had either never been had or quashed, while the second one resulted in Fraser, one of my favourite writers leaving. (He can now be read at unherd.com.)

 

The fact is that, if these conversations were held in public, then those taking part would censor themselves from going on the record and change their contributions accordingly. No-one would wish to be identified publicly as a Fraser or a Toynbee hater. The results would that the real conversations on the future of the paper would be transferred to somewhere private, which I will call the pub. In a pub conversation - probably with the help of alcohol - you can put the word to rights. In the cold light of day you need to take into account what other people want to achieve. So in a public conversation, you do so and adjust your sights accordingly.

 

The problem is that  keeping conversations private means that you allow and, indeed, encourage cover-ups. It is simpler to bury bad news than share them. People will not be harmed by stuff they do not know about so why not keep them ignorant - and happy. Thus incompetence, immorality and all manner of things we should know about are kept covered up along with simple decision making if everything is kept private – at least for sufficient time before they are released to the public, many of whom will have died before they know what was done in their name and at their expense to further a cause they may support but not with any or all methods available, many of which they may dislike and disapprove of.

 

How to square this circle? To keep decision making private but to expose immoral behaviour that could prove embarrassing to those authorising – or at least not forbidding – it. We will probably never do so satisfactorily but that does not mean that we should not try. The need to make decisions in private, without too many peering eyes on you, may be vital but so too is the necessity for exposure of cheats, liars and those who are prepared to break the law to further the aims of the people they are supposed to be protecting. For that we need a free press, a vital safeguard to help to uncover what might otherwise be the embarrassing secrets of government. We need, in fact, newspapers like the Guardian, who do not kowtow to a government's need and preference for secrecy but are always prefer to reveal what they are trying to keep secret.


Edwin Lerner


My other blog is diaryofatouristguide.blogspot.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

Wednesday 30 August 2023

MIGHT VERSUS RIGHT

Prigozhin and his (probable) killer

Russian president Vladimir Putin




















‘Well, that is a surprise!’ noted one sarcastic contributor to Facebook as news came through of the death of Yevgeny Prigozhin in a plane crash just two months after his abortive coup in Russia against Vladimir Putin. It had seemed to be that Putin might just forgive his rival who led the Wagner mercenary group and had sent his men – often to their deaths – into Ukraine.

 

How naïve that now seems in retrospect. Putin is not the sort of man to tolerate any form of independence or dissent, which he categorises as being a 'traitor’, ie someone is not totally loyal to him. It was evidently only a matter of time before Prigpzhin had to be eliminated and, if nine others died with him, who cares?  In Russia, the crew member and pilots are considered collateral damage and their deaths are ignored - or tolerated. 

 

It may seem like you are safe in the sky but you are actually very vulnerable in an aeroplane. A plane can be shot down relatively easily and your chance of survival is virtually nil. Give a man just enough time to think he is safe enough to fly and then bring down his plane and there will be no survivors and little in the way of proof that it was not an accidental event. It now seems that it was a bomb inside the plane that brought it down rather than a missile, although we will never be completely sure, such is the fog of disinformation that comes out of Russia.

 

Putin and his cronies have form in this respect. The Russian security services – surely with Putin’s at least tacit approval – sent assassins to kill Sergei Skirpal, a man they regarded as a traitor who was living in Salisbury in England. This had the element of a Keystone Cops operation and a British woman Dawn Sturgess ended up being the only (accidental) victim. Again she was collateral damage in the process, although she had nothing to do with Skirpal but, being poor, accepted as a present some perfume which was actually a deadly poison.

 

The Russians had the gall to pretend that the assassins were only going to Salisbury to look at the cathedral spire, ignoring Big Ben and the other better known sites in Britain. They were captured on camera at Heathrow but have got away with their crime and are now free (presumably) in Russia. They failed to kill their target but did send out a warning that Russia does not tolerate any form of free thinking or dissent. 

 

What angers me so much about this attitude is that Putin just laughs at the idea that they should respect Britain’s domestic laws and procedures for dealing with these matters in our quaint law-abiding country. He (or the Russian state, which is really the same thing) send their assassins anywhere in the world where there are independent thinkers - or 'traitors'.


Putin has no interest in respecting the territory of other countries or human rights, even lives. He wants to go down in history as the man who brought Ukraine back into the Russian fold and, if this means sacrificing lives, he is quite prepared for that. Thousands of Russian soldiers and Ukrainian civilians have had to be sacrificed for his vanity and ambition.

 

Sometimes we are asked who we despise most. I try not to do this – it is too easy to blame individuals when it is a collective failure that should be targeted, such as at Grenfell Tower, where the desire to lock up individuals is actually deflecting blame from what was surely a collective unwillingness to apply basic safety precautions in the name of greater economy.

 

Yet I am prepared to make an exception for Putin, whose monstrous vanity has led to so many deaths, both of Russian soldiers and Ukrainians who would prefer to head west rather than east, And who can blame them when all they have when under Russian ‘protection’ is a loss of their national identity and absorption into a country that wants to conquer them?

 

There are signs that the Russians are growing tired of Putin and tha this grip on power maybe slipping. Those who think independently are either silenced by being locked up or have given up on Russia altogether and are moving abroad (which only accentuates the problems). However, there is one thing that makes a tyrant vulnerable and that is failure.

 

If the Russians do grow tired of Putin and decide to dispose of him, I will not shed a tear. He has dealt out so much death that this is the only option for him now. He would never stay quiet as a deposed leader so any dethronement would have to end in his death. How does that old saying go? If you live by the sword, you have to die by the sword. As for us, we can only say that might does not have to triumph over right and that we should continue to support right over might.


Edwin Lerner


My other bog is diaryofatouristguide.blospot.com