MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
In case anyone still cares ... As the United Kingdom faces this existential crisis (and its continued existence really is in doubt), Britain's political class have left it rudderless. Johnson stabbed Cameron in the back by jumping to the Leave side, and now his own Brexit ally Gove has sabotaged him -- all of it in personal bids to seize the Tory leadership and power. Meanwhile, Labour leader Corbyn has lost the support of 80% of his party's MPs but refuses to resign. And UKIP leader Farage stands up in the European Parliament to crow, "Who's laughing now?" What a sorry, sorry lot (not one of whom has said they're sorry). Poor Britain.
Comments
Johnson's withdrawal from the race is astonishing, more surprising than Cameron's resignation. I had been thinking that there would be at least one clear benefit of Brexit: getting Boris Johnson as Prime Minister. What will happen now is anyone's guess.
As usual, Reuters biases its reporting. It describes the European Union as "a "bloc that helped guarantee peace in post-war Europe." Tell it to the former Yugoslavs. The credit belongs to NATO, and its dominant member, the United States.
by Lurker on Thu, 06/30/2016 - 7:20pm
The EU didnt guarantee peace to non-members, nor many other benefits aside from a safehouse to go (as chose Slovenia and Slovakia, later Slovenia and of course all of East Europe post-wall) and a guarantee that Austria and Germany and Italy and Greece wouldnt join the armed invasion this time, so it didnt turn into the 3rd Balkan War or WWI redux as Sarajevo would like to boast. The EU provides greater recognition and rights and development funds for traditionally dsgruntled provinces like Scotland and Catalonia and Northern Ireland and Basque Country so there's less of a reason to break away. Yes, NATO is still a factor. The treatment of Ukraine was more graceful than it might have been in Charge of the Light Brigade or Bismarck times as well. It's sometimes harder to appreciate catastrophes avoided over bad effects experienced, but things could have been much much worse.
by PeraclesPlease on Fri, 07/01/2016 - 1:12am
Driftglass on disappearing 'Leave' Conservative Boris Johnson:
Turns out, pyromaniacs suck at the boring business of governance on both sides of the Atlantic.
And of course, Paul Ryan doesn't want to be Prime Minister of America either.
by NCD on Thu, 06/30/2016 - 9:30pm