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Very British Things

  Arenig, North Wales James Dickson Innes (1887-1914) Photo Credit: Tate [CC BY-NC-ND] Baked beans, sarcasm, the lochs of Scotland and Sir David Attenborough. Each have been singled out as unmistakably British institutions that make people proud amid the political scandals and toxic controversies that can sometimes seem overwhelming. The glimmers of light were identified as the men's style magazine GQ gathered 15 celebrities - including the sportsmen Anthony Joshua and Ian Wright and the actors Brian Cox and Andrew Garfield - for a "sweet, nostalgic, silly, sublime and absurd" What's So Great About Britain special September issue. The heavyweight boxer Joshua said Britain should be as proud as other nations of its storied history. "We conquered the world," he said. "You come to Greece and they're like, 'Alexander the Great!' Be proud, innit? It's unbelievable, The whole bloody world speaks English or wants to learn English." Joshua,...

Trump Versus Democracy?

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Abraham Lincoln George Grey Barnard (1809-1865) Photo Credit: Martin Henderson [CC BY_NC]   President Donald Trump arrives on his second state visit to Britain this week and one Times reporter will be attending and supporting the "Trump Not Welcome" demonstration in London. Here are some of his reasons. ... His global vendettas include the imposition of 50 per cent tariffs on Brazil's goods in an attempt to force its government to free his friend Jair Bolsonaro, the former president now convicted of attempting a coup against his 2022 election defeat. He continues to threaten Denmark with the seizure of Greenland. He has withdrawn the US from international bodies, cancelled funding for climate change measures and eviscerated US foreign aid and soft power. But it is Trump's assaults upon American democratic institutions which should cause every respecter of freedom most alarm. The deployment of the National Guard in the Democratic city strongholds of Washington and Los...

Pope's Pop at Musk

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  St Peter's Rome William White Warren (1832-1915) Photo Credit: Victoria Art Gallery [CC BY-NC-ND] The Pope has condemned the huge salaries of top chief executives, citing Elon Musk's possible rise to trillionaire status as a concern. In his first interview since being elected in May, the pontiff also said the UN was unable to resolve the world's crises, admitted he was on a steep learning curve as a diplomat and revealed who he would support at the World Cup next year. [Peru and Italy] Since his election, the pope, who was born Robert Prevost in Chicago, has made clear his fears for the plight of low earners - taking the name Leo in honour of Leo X111, the 19th-century pontiff who campaigned for better wages and union rights for factory workers. In excerpts from his interview, given in July and published yesterday on the Catholic news website Crux, the first American leader of the world's 1.4 billion Catholics said he was worried about the world  "the value of hu...

Why the rise in cases of Autism?

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  Donald Trump's Health Secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr; is about  to release a report about the possible causes behind the rising numbers of people with autism. RFK Jr has long said the  cause may be common childhood vaccines such as the measles, mumps and rubella jab - a claim that the vast majority of scientists say is wrong. Edward Jenner Vaccinating a Boy Eugene-Ernest Hillemacher (1818-1887) Photo Credit: Wellcome Trust [Public Domain] The report will also blame other factors, including women taking paracetamol during pregnancy, and having low levels of the pre-natal vitamin folic acid, according to The Wall Street Journal. RFK Jr has also previously said that the increase  must be due to something  harmful in the environment... Most medical bodies recommend paracetamol as one of the few pain relievers it is safe to take during pregnancy. And last year a large study found such use was not linked with a higher risk of autism, ADHD or intellectual disability....

Food Glorious Food

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  All Dame Prue Leith wanted was a romantic dinner the night before a special day... "No chance of that," she said, as the pair were repeatedly interrupted by a waiter with a "lecture" accompanying each course. Leith, 85, has taken umbrage with restaurants' addiction to superfluous explanation, which she says has resulted in menus far too long to take in before ordering. During the meal, the couple were handed a map of the location of the restaurant's suppliers and were expected to read it, she wrote in The Oldie magazine... "Pandering to foodies, menu devisers now write essays on every course: 'Hand-dived Scottish king scallops, daily picked marsh samphire from the Solway Firth, Arran victory organic new potatoes' and on and on. Eva's Green Apple Otto Schade (b. 1971) Photo Credit: Fanshaw St, Hackney [CC BY-NC-ND] "Last week I was in what used to be a good pub and is now a gastro temple. I ordered 'sustainability-certified North S...

Struggling on £4.5million

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  By All Means Get Good Wages But - Mind How You Spend Them Sam Fitton (1868-1923) Photo Credit: Gallery Oldham [BY-NC-ND]  Bosses of Britain's largest listed companies have taken home record-high pay packets for the third successive year, according to a thinktank. The latest record, set in the 2024-25 financial year, means the average FTSE 100 chief executive is now paid 122 times the salary of the average full-time UK worker, analysis found. Executive pay has been on the rise for the past four years, partly as a consequence of pay cuts taken during the pandemic, at a time when many households are struggling with a cost of living crisis. The median pay of a FTSE 100 chief executive climbed to £4.58m in the past financial year, up from £4.29m a year earlier, an increase of nearly 7% the High Pay Centre said... Luke Hildyard, the director of the High Pay Centre, said: "These figures will feed a growing sense that low and middle earners don't get a fair share of the wealth t...

Pseuds Corner

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  Here  is Judith Butler's winning entry in the 1999 "Bad Writing Contest" for academics, established by the journal Philosophy and Literature. "The move from a structuralist account in which capital is understood to structure social relations in relatively homologous ways to a view of hegemony in which power relations are subject to repetition, convergence and rearticulation brought the question of temporality into the thinking of structure, and marked a shift from a form of Althusserian theory that takes structural totalities as theoretical objects to one in which the insights into the contingent possibilities of ..." (John Maier, The Observer, 2025) The move from repetition marked a shift in power, thinking and the possibilities of social insights. The Writing Lesson Robert Braithwaite Martineau (1826-1869) Photo Credit: Tate [CC BY-NC-ND] My hair is a bandmate. It's a way of expressing and flailing and raging. It's like a typewriter. It speaks on my ...