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transmissionofflame
1 year ago

“it is sad Michael Gove wasn’t given another big department to transform”

Not for me it isn’t. Despicable Covid fanatic.

NeilParkin
1 year ago

Fiddled with and ruined Health, ruined Education. No enduring positive effect on either of them. Gove 0-2 Blob…

transmissionofflame
1 year ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

I don’t know much about what he did in those two roles. I was a school governor for part of his tenure, and I do remember being astonished by the volume of “no shit Sherlock” initiatives that the senior leadership team were meant to read up on and implement. My recollection is hazy so I can’t say much about the exact nature of these initiatives, which ministers were responsible and who produced the most, but I do remember thinking none of it seemed very worthwhile and we’d all have been better off if schools had been left alone to teach stuff – but to be fair the school I was a governor of had an exceptionally motivated and competent team working in it and I accept not all schools are like that. I don’t know what the answer is but I do think the “look busy at all costs” tendency of political leaders (and probably senior civil servants for that matter) is not the ideal way to run things.

ellie-em
1 year ago

The lying, cheating, total waste of space will most probably end up as Sir Michael or Lord Gove of Shittingham as a reward for services rendered.

Monro
1 year ago

He is, apparently, a hypochondriac but that is, of course, no excuse.

Nevertheless, he was an outstanding Education Minister, as the results of his reforms are now demonstrating:

The UK’s position remains strong, with significantly above average scores in all three subjects. And while UK scores fell, they fell less than the OECD average. What’s more, the UK trends were (unusually) upwards in reading and stable in maths.

This may sound a bit underwhelming, but it is an excellent performance relative to some obvious comparator countries. Germany, for example, recorded its lowest ever scores, including only OECD-average maths scores and a low score for fairness of the education system.

France experienced a record drop in performance, and also has a highly inequitable education system. Results from the United States show particularly poor scores in maths, trailing many other countries, while in the Netherlands, immigrant pupils’ score were particularly low.

In fact, the UK has the best combination of average performance and fairness metric in maths of any European country.’

https://www.economicsobservatory.com/what-can-the-uk-learn-from-the-latest-global-data-on-pupil-performance

transmissionofflame
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

Why on earth would OECD country scores be falling?

As for being a hypochondriac, so am I. It didn’t stop Gove dancing the night away during the “deadly pandemic”: Michael Gove hits the dancefloor in Aberdeen, telling nightclub boss: ‘I love to dance’ | Politics News | Sky News

Monro
1 year ago

OECD scores fell ‘due to structural factors’ – code for struggling immigrant pupils.

Those who know Gove suggest that his hypochondria may have contributed greatly to the panic in Cabinet at the time:

‘It comes as no surprise that Michael Gove has been the chief proponent of lockdown. Ever since I first met Michael two decades ago, he has gleamed with fanaticism and has a lacuna where common sense is concerned. For a cause in which he believes, he becomes like one of the late Eugène Terre’Blanche’s Dobermans, baring his teeth and foaming at the mouth. He is, moreover, an incurable hypochondriac, and every ache and pain feels to him like the bite of a tiger.’

Petronella Wyatt

transmissionofflame
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

Regarding the educational achievement, that would be my strong suspicion too.

Regarding Gove’s hypochondria, it seems weaker than his desire to get off his face and get laid, but that doesn’t mean he’s not a sufferer. As someone who has suffered with this in the past, I have little sympathy for his desire to impose his manias on others.

Monro
1 year ago

Putin wants a ceasefire in Ukraine ‘because the war costs too much

What’s really going on?

Maybe ‘the war costs too much’ in diverse ways, potentially?

“The bribery [charges] are for the public. They don’t want to talk publicly about treason right now — it’s a big scandal. It’s the deputy defense minister, after all……Everyone there [in the Kremlin] knew about this for a long time……Putin gave the order after being convinced that the case was specifically about treason” and that “nobody would have arrested [Ivanov] for corruption…….Ivanov is “Shoigu’s man”

iStories

Treason? You mean the ‘Ooops, another private jet exploded’ kind of thing?

Dark days in the Kremlin……Andrey Belousov sounds a bit like ‘Spreadsheet Phil’ and we all know how that turned out:

‘Ou est le masse de manoeuvre?’

‘Aucune!’

SJR
SJR
1 year ago

Gove is largely responsible for the mess we’re in. Stabbed Boris in the back during the post Cameron Tory leadership election leading to Brexit being delayed by years, and being not being properly done. Then was the architect behind draconian COVID lockdowns and restrictions. Good riddance!

DHJ
DHJ
1 year ago

The “Nova” film does not offer any real insight into the attack. For anyone concerned about the content, there aren’t any graphic images and it’s mainly shaky footage recorded by people running, hiding and driving and quite a lot of rave clips.

The X comment related to IDF Apaches is a distraction as there is nothing in the film that would prove or disprove that such an event took place.

For a fist full of roubles

I see Sunak’s response to Starmers “votes for 16 year olds” is “National Service for all 18 year olds”.

ellie-em
1 year ago

Phoney democratic governments need cannon fodder for phoney wars. Gotta keep the armaments dealers happy. BigPharma drug lords have already – and continue to do so – made a killing. So many shysters to please…

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago

How about no vote until you’ve done your National Service? (only half joking).

Alternatively we could have votes for 16 year olds provided they pass a basic citizenship test. You know, something like: “Do you intend to vote Labour?”

ellie-em
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

Or correctly answer the simple question – ‘what is a woman’.

DHJ
DHJ
1 year ago

“there are forces trying to divide our society in this increasingly uncertain world”

The Prime Minister summarising the actions of successive UK governments and their allies.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cpddxy9r4mdo

Heretic
Heretic
1 year ago

Voters know they will regret supporting Labour, but they’re going to do it anyway

Daniel Hannan is stating the disheartening truth. Here are a couple of comments from the public:

—“Just look at the polls. The public whinge about how terrible everything is, about how immigration is ruining their communities and how tax is too high and how young people can’t get housing, but Labour is on 40+% and the Conservatives, that allowed 130,000 random men on boats to come in, on top of the highest net migration in history, are still on 20+%. The public don’t want change or “reform”, they just want to continue whinging until it’s too late.”

—“The British will do the same thing they have always done, a cycle of labour to Tory, to Labour to Tory and so on. The Brits don’t want change. They want to watch themselves erased and replaced. They want high taxes, high immigration, no chance for youngsters to get a home. They want to hand their entire country over, in collective suicide.”

Dinger64
1 year ago
Reply to  Heretic

Very sad, but true👍

pamela preedy
pamela preedy
1 year ago
Reply to  Heretic

It seems you’re right, otherwise more people would support and vote for patriotic nationalist parties such as Britain First instead of watching the changing of the old socialist guard after every election.

They must like traitors to be in charge and busily ruining their children’s future.

Heretic
Heretic
1 year ago

‘Stalinist’ Sunak threatened with legal action for blocking pro-Boris candidates

Sunak the Smarmy is revealing his true cutthroat tactics, clinging to power despite the fact that nobody voted for him, his claws grasping the door handle of No.10 while the whole country wants him dragged away.

Dinger64
1 year ago

“Labour could allow 16 year-olds to vote in first year of government”

Oh just dandy, 1.5 million more greta thunbergs idealisticly voting to ruin their own futures!
Voting age should be raised to 21

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  Dinger64

A very dangerous move. They won’t have finished their indoctrination by then.

pamela preedy
pamela preedy
1 year ago
Reply to  Dinger64

Yes, as it used to be until a cynical Labour government lowered it from 21 to 18 in the 1960s. They knew that younger people, being inexperienced and idealistic rather than realistic, would vote for them.

Starmer and his rabble are even more cynical.

One thing’s for sure: those Labour predators really do like them young. Much like their client voter group.

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago

In yesterday’s Daily Telegraph article Covid Inquiry criticised for ignoring study on lockdown harms we find a link to a much earlier article Covid lockdown ‘prevented only 0.2pc of deaths in first wave’ from 2 Feb 2022. Within that earlier article we find a chart which compares the stringency of lockdowns and other non-pharmaceutical interventions like masking against deaths attributed to Covid. The excellent NPI stringency index was put together by the Blavatnik School of Government at University of Oxford and compared daily Covid related restrictions on people’s lives in various countries around the world. The Stringency Index is accessible though Our World in Data (OWID) . Its most obvious limitation is that it is an index of restrictions and we don’t have a baseline of how ‘free’ the people of each country were before anyone had even heard of Covid. A simple comparison of the stringency index against Covid mortality as shown in the above chart is almost meaningless. Government analysts are quite capable of projecting an epidemic curve forwards to foretell what will happen to mortality in a week or so. It is therefore no surprise that governments imposed more stringent controls a bit before increases in death… Read more »