Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Just a Thought


Tip of the hat to TB's favourite
evil clown
for this one.

Is this the end?

TB had a lie in this morning so missed the initial flurry over the fact the Sun obtained a transcript of Gordon's phone call to Jacqui Janes. Despite the underhand tactics, finally this story has moved onto proper attacks. Mrs Janes slammed the Prime Minister for the lack of equipment provided for troops on the front, suggesting her son would still be alive if it were not for the Treasury.

The story has now dominated the news agenda for over 24 hours. Downing St will be desperate to shut this down so expect a big announcement on something or other this afternoon. If this drags on for another news cycle is could be a "complete and utter clusterfuck", to quote Tucker, for Brown. The issue is dominating Brown's press conference and there is an air about the questioning that this could be the end. Eyelids were barely batted when hacks asked why Gordon has ignored a petition calling for his resignation. Brown has been forced to do what he hates doing more than anything - talking personally about himself. You know then that he is desperate. How long can this go on?

So Mr Milband didn't go to Europe, TB thought it could have been the making of him. Let the Labour Party destroy itself for five years and then come back, a mature international statesman and give Cameron a run for his money in 2015. Can we read anything into this?
Iain Dale
says no,
Political Betting
says ummm maybe. Miliband didn't want to be the one to make the first move but the way this week is going, the straw is piling up on the donkey's back.

Could it all come tumbling down?

A Victory for Feminism

A big TB round of applause has to go to Natalie Samuel of Greater Manchester Conservative Future. Word has reached TBHQ that this true feminist showed them all how it's done. One evening at the end of last month Natalie stood for, won and abolished the role of Women's Officer in the branch.

This throw back position born out of eighties political correctness is as insulting as it is useless. May this rallying cry ring out across those leftier CF branches that still have them and across the Student Unions of the country.

Sound stuff from Miss Samuel.

Monday, 9 November 2009

TV's TB... ish

TB had the pleasure of doing another slot on

GuyNewsTV
. He was a little hungover and really really needs to get some sun, but anyway in a matter of weeks he will be lying on the beach drinking rum. Ahhh. Laugh away:



Didn't mean to seem quite so sarcastic. Had a very enjoyable day in fact!

Times Silence Clarkson

Did you read Jeremey Clarkson's column in the Sunday Times? No? Nor did the Bear until they pulled it after some lefties sniffled. Yes it's moderately insulting to a broad range of countries but what were you expecting when you read an article by Clarkson? Come on. If you don't want to be offended, don't read offensive peoples work. It's not rocket science.

Anyway to prove a point TB decided to reproduce the article in full:

Get me a rope before Mandelson wipes us all out

Jeremy Clarkson
Sunday Times


I’ve given the matter a great deal of thought all week, and I’m afraid I’ve decided that it’s no good putting Peter Mandelson in a prison. I’m afraid he will have to be tied to the front of a van and driven round the country until he isn’t alive any more.
He announced last week that middle-class children will simply not be allowed into the country’s top universities even if they have 4,000 A-levels, because all the places will be taken by Albanians and guillemots and whatever other stupid bandwagon the conniving idiot has leapt

I hate Peter Mandelson. I hate his fondness for extremely pale blue jeans and I hate that preposterous moustache he used to sport in the days when he didn’t bother trying to cover up his left-wing fanaticism. I hate the way he quite literally lords it over us even though he’s resigned in disgrace twice, and now holds an important decision-making job for which he was not elected. Mostly, though, I hate him because his one-man war on the bright and the witty and the successful means that half my friends now seem to be taking leave of their senses.

There’s talk of emigration in the air. It’s everywhere I go. Parties. Work. In the supermarket. My daughter is working herself half to death to get good grades at GSCE and can’t see the point because she won’t be going to university, because she doesn’t have a beak or flippers or a qualification in washing windscreens at the lights. She wonders, often, why we don’t live in America.

Then you have the chaps and chapesses who can’t stand the constant raids on their wallets and their privacy. They can’t understand why they are taxed at 50% on their income and then taxed again for driving into the nation’s capital. They can’t understand what happened to the hunt for the weapons of mass destruction. They can’t understand anything. They see the Highway Wombles in those brand new 4x4s that they paid for, and they see the M4 bus lane and they see the speed cameras and the community support officers and they see the Albanians stealing their wheelbarrows and nothing can be done because it’s racist.

And they see Alistair Darling handing over £4,350 of their money to not sort out the banking crisis that he doesn’t understand because he’s a small-town solicitor, and they see the stupid war on drugs and the war on drink and the war on smoking and the war on hunting and the war on fun and the war on scientists and the obsession with the climate and the price of train fares soaring past £1,000 and the Guardian power-brokers getting uppity about one shot baboon and not uppity at all about all the dead soldiers in Afghanistan, and how they got rid of Blair only to find the lying twerp is now going to come back even more powerful than ever, and they think, “I’ve had enough of this. I’m off.”

It’s a lovely idea, to get out of this stupid, Fairtrade, Brown-stained, Mandelson-skewed, equal-opportunities, multicultural, carbon-neutral, trendily left, regionally assembled, big-government, trilingual, mosque-drenched, all-the-pigs-are-equal, property-is-theft hellhole and set up shop somewhere else. But where?

You can’t go to France because you need to complete 17 forms in triplicate every time you want to build a greenhouse, and you can’t go to Switzerland because you will be reported to your neighbours by the police and subsequently shot in the head if you don’t sweep your lawn properly, and you can’t go to Italy because you’ll soon tire of waking up in the morning to find a horse’s head in your bed because you forgot to give a man called Don a bundle of used notes for “organising” a plumber.

You can’t go to Australia because it’s full of things that will eat you, you can’t go to New Zealand because they don’t accept anyone who is more than 40 and you can’t go to Monte Carlo because they don’t accept anyone who has less than 40 mill. And you can’t go to Spain because you’re not called Del and you weren’t involved in the Walthamstow blag. And you can’t go to Germany ... because you just can’t.

The Caribbean sounds tempting, but there is no work, which means that one day, whether you like it or not, you’ll end up like all the other expats, with a nose like a burst beetroot, wondering if it’s okay to have a small sharpener at 10 in the morning. And, as I keep explaining to my daughter, we can’t go to America because if you catch a cold over there, the health system is designed in such a way that you end up without a house. Or dead.

Canada’s full of people pretending to be French, South Africa’s too risky, Russia’s worse and everywhere else is too full of snow, too full of flies or too full of people who want to cut your head off on the internet. So you can dream all you like about upping sticks and moving to a country that doesn’t help itself to half of everything you earn and then spend the money it gets on bus lanes and advertisements about the dangers of salt. But wherever you go you’ll wind up an alcoholic or dead or bored or in a cellar, in an orange jumpsuit, gently wetting yourself on the web. All of these things are worse than being persecuted for eating a sandwich at the wheel.

I see no reason to be miserable. Yes, Britain now is worse than it’s been for decades, but the lunatics who’ve made it so ghastly are on their way out. Soon, they will be back in Hackney with their South African nuclear-free peace polenta. And instead the show will be run by a bloke whose dad has a wallpaper shop and possibly, terrifyingly, a twerp in Belgium whose fruitless game of hunt-the-WMD has netted him £15m on the lecture circuit.

So actually I do see a reason to be miserable. Which is why I think it’s a good idea to tie Peter Mandelson to a van. Such an act would be cruel and barbaric and inhuman. But it would at least cheer everyone up a bit. onto in the meantime.

Why draw attention to it by pulling it?

Are we going with Letter-gate?

Busy day so late to this one. TB hates Gordon as much as the rest of the country but today's attacks have gone a little far. While yes it's no secret that Gordon Brown cannot write very well, it is because he is blind. Yes this raises interesting questions and yes he should be booted out of office for his handling of the war, but this attack is a bit below the belt. Brown's eyesight is of concern to the nation but bloody hell, there are ways of addressing this issue and today's media storm is certainly not one of them.

The spelling on the other hand is totally fair game. Given that GB must be a little prone to this sort of thing, why were none of his babysitters given the letter to proof? It's just sloppy in any business, but particularly slack given the sensitivity of these letters. Downing St is in chaos but TB didn't realise it was this bad.

That is all.

Freedom



Tory Bear was three on the 9th November 1989. He is not sure whether he really remembers it, or has just stared at that poster enough times. Either way that look of jubilation on the German people's faces as they embraced their new found freedom should never be forgotten. Leftist extremists will always try tell you that the Wall went down because the Communist regime collapsed organically. This is a lie. The world changed that day as a direct result of the policies of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher. Check out this gem from the BBC the next morning:



"You see the joy on peoples faces, and you see what freedom means to them, and it makes you realise that you can't stifle or repress peoples desire for liberty"

Kerry Digs a Hole

If you don't like stories about Twitter then look away now. You have to admit that the social network has made it when it gets dissed by Tucker in a

brilliant episode
of the Thick of It this weekend. It's also remarkable for highlighting the utter stupidity of the Labour Party and it's leaders.

Kerry McCarthy
didn't have a very good day yesterday. The self-styled Twitter Tzar of the Labour Party upgraded from desperate to delusional.
As others have reported
she firstly came out with some ridiculous ideas about how political views defined what music people can and cannot listen to. Apparently you are only allowed to like bands and artists that support your chosen political party. Apparently you cannot like Phil Collins and The Smiths at the same time. Apparently Labour Party members who like James Blunt should be expelled because he supports the Tories. It would be a joke if it wasn't funny and the almost fervent zeal in which she tweeted prolifically cannot be batted away with an "oh I was only joking" this time. Especially as she then just got plain offensive when the chat turned to Stiff Little Fingers. Ironicly she attempted to tell people who is allowed to like punk. It all backfired though.

Shane Greer
, off the telly, grew up in Northern Ireland. Listening to him speak for four seconds would tell anyone that, however far their head was buried in the sand, or the bosom of the Labour Party whips office, or anywhere else for that matter.
Kerry refused
to be lectured by anyone about music and politics, especially not Shane apparently, continuing with the rubbish music and politics line from earlier: "@wallaceme @shanegreer To use that well-worn political phrase, I'm not taking any lessons about Northern Ireland from you two. Or music."

That hit a justified nerve with young Mr Greer who replied, through
multiple tweets
:
"You have got to be joking, surely? For the record, Kerry, I was born and raised in Northern Ireland. I've had friends targeted for being in the RUC, been attacked for being in the wrong area at the wrong time, watched my mother cry as she wondered whether she'd be able to get us home safely when riots broke out, had friends beaten for being the 'wrong' religion, went to NI's first integrated school. How dare you. How absolutely dare you. Something tells me though, that an apology won't be forthcoming. What a disgrace you are."
Kerry went into auto defence mode. Refusing to see she had cause offence, refused to justify her basis of dismissal and refusing to apologise. While there is nothing binding saying someone should apologise when offence is caused, there is something out there called common decency, a willingness to accept that sometimes you get something wrong and a maturity to realise that a sorry can go a long way to resolving things. Even if she didn't know Shane was from Northern Ireland she should have accepted she was wrong with retrospect, rather than just getting aggressive. Instead she just looks like a bit of a tit. Oh well it's just another nutter online right? It's not like she has any real power or influence...

Oh wait... Bugger.

Sunday, 8 November 2009

Sir Ian Kennedy Needs to Get a Grip

News is breaking
tonight that Defender of the Pigs - Sir Ian Kennedy wants to be so down and trendy wiv da kids that he putting the restoration of trust in our Parliamentarians in the hands of a Facebook consultation. FFS.

Why the constant need to waste even more taxpayers money consulting even more people. Experts from across the spectrum gave evidence to Kelly, how much did the inquiry cost? Why the need for another?

The Kelly report should be implemented in full without delay. The three party leaders have backed it, and the majority of our elected officials have too. The web of committees and boards and unelected goons such as Kennedy are part of the reason Parliament was able to get into this mess in the first place. If Kennedy cannot back the Kelly reforms then the party leaders should let it be known to the Speaker tomorrow morning that they have lost all faith in him. Then his position should be filled by someone who hasn't got their head shoved quite so far up their own arse, someone that can see that employing your wife isn't acceptable business practice and that making hundreds of thousands by swindling the taxpayer through capital gains tax loopholes doesn't exactly endear MPs to their bosses.

Here's a thought, why can't Kelly be put in charge of implementation?

The Soldier


If I should die, think only this of me:
That there's some corner of a foreign field
That is for ever England. There shall be
In that rich earth a richer dust concealed;
A dust whom England bore, shaped, made aware,
Gave, once, her flowers to love, her ways to roam,
A body of England's, breathing English air,
Washed by the rivers, blest by suns of home.

And think, this heart, all evil shed away,
A pulse in the eternal mind, no less
Gives somewhere back the thoughts by England given;
Her sights and sounds; dreams happy as her day;
And laughter, learnt of friends; and gentleness,
In hearts at peace, under an English heaven.

- Rupert Brooke

Saturday, 7 November 2009

Quote of the Day

"Labour's sin over Lisbon is far greater than the Tories', for as the party of government, they were in a position to set in motion the referendum on the EU constitution that they promised. Everyone knows that Lisbon is the constitution by another name, as Giscard D'Estaing cheerfully admitted over two years ago, and no one - not even themselves, one imagines - was convinced by Labour ministers' fibs that it is something else entirely. To his credit, Cameron made no such pretence, and it seems likely that if he had been able to have a referendum before the Czechs' ratification made Lisbon fully operative, he would have done so. Being in opposition, however, the position he has now taken – accepting that the treaty has passed, and to try to claw powers back from Brussels instead – should strike any even-handed observer (ie one whose mind is not clouded by delirium at the prospect of Tory civil war over Europe) as a sensible and pragmatic response."

-Sholto Byrnes

Know it's a long one today but it was
from The Guardian
of all places.

The whole piece about Hannan is a must read.

Caption Contest - Real Prize

TB has a busy afternoon and evening so he thought it had been a while since there had been a caption competition. There is a copy of the new
The "Yes
Minister" Miscellany
up for grabs for the best caption left below in the comments. This hilarious little guide to all things Hacker would make a rather good Christmas present for any political geek. But to the contest...

Wee Dunky has been "cleared" of being a fiddling trougher apparently...

But do your worst:


Winner announced Monday.

Closing Time...

TB was rather sad to hear the news that his favourite lefty watering-hole is calling last orders at the bar, ringing the bell, and locking up for the last time. In these tough economic times, caused by Gordon Brown's recession, pubs are closing down at record rates. There were twenty nine pubs a week shutting down at one point this year, but TB never thought
Sadie's Tavern
would go under.

Sadie's blog was good before lefties realised they needed good bloggers. Sod Draper, Labour should have looked to her to lead any online charge. A combination of serious, well constructed argument, biting sarcasm and gin always made for riotous read. The blogosphere is also at a loss with out its top totty too.

TB wishes the landlady the best of luck in the real world.

It Was All Going So Well

TB was vaguely enthused by the Kelly recommendations and would have been happy to see them installed immediately to end the troughing. However it seems Bercow has dropped an absolute clanger in his choice of Sir Ian Kennedy as head of the new implementation body the IPSA.

Well it seems he is New Labour through and through, close friend of Campell who is obviously rattled by the Telegraph given he has gone into auto-defence mode over on appalling designed and hard to read blog.This is of less concern to what

he has said
about the Kelly report:
The seven-month review resulted in a comprehensive report encompassing 60 recommendations which Sir Christopher said should be “handed over to the new regulatory body for implementation in full”.

All of the party leaders also called on IPSA to implement the Kelly report in full.
When he unveiled his report, Sir Christopher called for the rapid implementation of all his reforms, saying: “There is a risk that, as the impact of the revulsion caused by the Daily Telegraph revelation fades with time, some may be thinking of distancing themselves from their earlier expressed determination to implement our report in full. If so, that would, in my view, be an error.”

However, in a direct riposte to Sir Christopher, Sir Ian has told Westminster insiders that the Kelly report was “only one of the bases of the conversation” into the future of MPs allowances.

He added that, according to the legislation under which IPSA was founded, there was “no obligation to implement” Kelly and it was “merely his [Sir Christopher’s] assumption” that it would be.

He is said to feel that Sir Christopher’s lengthy inquiry, which included more than 1,000 witness statements and nine public hearings, was not a “proper” consultation.
In particular, he has told officials that he is unhappy with proposed reforms which would ban MPs from employing relatives, and require those who made profits from the sale of second homes to hand it over to the taxpayer.

In another direct challenge to Kelly, Sir Ian has also said that there is “no appetite” for legislation, meaning that he does not immediately plan to adopt the Committee’s call for the setting of MPs’ pay.
It's not looking good. Oh Bercow what have
you
done.


Friday, 6 November 2009

The Bear Unmasked

TB has crept up the

Wikio rankings
again this month. He is now in seventh place and hot on the tails of the legendary Tom Harris MP. Just goes to show you how far a gossip and teddy bears can get you. Thank you for the links and traffic that these rankings are based on.

So who is this bear who has been tapping at the keys for the last eighteen months? Well, while anonymity was fun for the twenty-five minutes it lasted, the Bear's identity is hardly a secret. The only reason references to it are not allowed in the comments is due to the fact it winds lefties up so much. Simple pleasures. Anyway TB has set up a website for his alter-ego and day job existence:
Check it out
. You can find out more about the bear and more importantly keep this blog going by supporting his little
freelance consultancy
earner. TB has been doing social media tutorials one on one, blogging advice, videos on demand, event PR etc unofficially for a wee while to keep him ticking over, but decided to see what happened when he advertised his services officially. His rates are surprisingly reasonable and whatever you need, however small, can probably be sorted out very quickly. Whether you're a blogger, candidate, company, pressure group, whatever,
get in touch
. Particularly good on everything you wanted to know about internet campaigning and the blogosphere but were too embarrassed to ask.

Sounds like a book title...

i⋅ron⋅ic [ahy-ron-ik]

TB and Bono have never quite seen eye to eye but
this one
really takes the biscuit:
A U2 show marking the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall has run into controversy - after organisers built a wall around the venue.

A two metre barrier has been erected around the Brandenburg gate to keep out people without tickets for the show.
The desire for U2 and MTV to make a quick buck out of the event shows just what a hypocritical toad Bono is. If he Bono had any respect for freedom or an iota of understanding of the significance of the wall coming down and the crushing of communism he would have publicly intervened by now, but as the
BBC reports
; "Calls to representatives of U2 and MTV seeking comment have not yet been returned."

No doubt champagne will be served backstage.

Quote of the Week

Sir Ian Blair is the finest policeman this country has seen in modern times - veritably the heir to Sir Robert Peel. His support for ID cards, 42-days detention for terrorists, the DNA database, and the arrest of Damian Green speak for themselves.

-Commenter "Proud to be Labour" during TB's Live Chat last night.


Dave's quote to the National Curry Awards on Tuesday was a close second. He told the BNP to:

"Wake up and smell the curry."

Should MPs Get a Pay Rise?

TB polled his readership last night:


Seems like a pretty comprehensive no to him.

Thursday, 5 November 2009

QT Live Chat - Trigger Happy TB Edition

UPDATE: 00:01 - you snooze you lose. You had to be here, same time same place next week.

Hannan, Helmer and the Drunk Chick

You must know what TB means when he describes a drunk chick who has been thrown out of a nightclub for being an idiot and does that thing on the pavement where she screams and rants at the bouncers, blaming everyone else in the club for the fact she fell through a table. Eventually she just bursts into tears and is bundled into a cab by her more attractive friends. Well Edward McMillan-Scott is the drunk chick at the party.

He really needs to just go away somewhere, sit down, be quiet and never come back, but instead he was on the BBC earlier calling Hannan and Helmer to be expelled from the Party for disloyalty. Just as he was. But no, you pathetic moron, stop trying to drag others down with you, just because you destroyed your own career for the sake of your overinflated and frankly unwarranted ego. No one wants to hear what you have to say. Has been.

Perhaps the concept of a resignation with dignity is too much for McMillan-Scott to comprehend, he after all didn't have the balls to resign when he disagreed with Party policy, something Hannan and Helmer had the honour to do. Rather than lie to themselves and those who elected them. No McMillan-Scott was humiliated and rejected by force. The two H's do not want to cause any more trouble, hence the radio silence, but have levels of principles and integrity that McMillan-Scott can only dream of possessing.

Can someone call him a taxi please.