Cringe-inducing
Posted: Fri 11 November, 2005 Filed under: News, Thoughts, Weirdness Leave a comment »Is it me, or is placing an advert to find a partner for your daughter just a bit plain weird? Particularly when said daughter is 24, and – one assumes – perfectly capable of finding someone for herself should she want to?
I know I’ve a dodgy sense of humour, but I’d love it if the daughter were to turn round and say
Thanks for the thought, Mum, but actually I’m a lesbian and not interested in any of ’em.
24 Little Hours
Posted: Wed 2 November, 2005 Filed under: News, Thoughts 4 Comments »“What a difference a day makes”, indeed.
Yesterday : “I am not resigning, says Blunkett”
Today : “Blunkett resigns from Cabinet“.
Nothing like a good healthy political U-Turn. Still, I don’t suppose you can say he saw it coming…
Fuckwit
Posted: Tue 1 November, 2005 Filed under: News, Thoughts, Weirdness 2 Comments »Sometimes you read a story, and wonder if you’re even the same species as some other people.
This story is an example of that. I defy people to not go “Why?” when they read it…
Reaping
Posted: Tue 18 October, 2005 Filed under: News, Thoughts, Travel 4 Comments »Fantastic news in the Guardian today, that the government has announced a reshuffle that will mean Virgin fucking Trains losing their franchise for the cross-country from 2007.
And it’s about fucking time too – they’ve been running the service so badly over the last couple of years, they deserve to lose it.
Bias
Posted: Thu 13 October, 2005 Filed under: Customer Services, News 1 Comment »Some companies just don’t seem to learn from their mistakes, do they?
A case in point – good old RyanAir. Not content with having had to go to court about their failure to provide free wheelchairs for their disabled passengers, they’ve now refused to allow a group of blind- and partially-sighted people to fly.
Supposedly it’s because “Ryanair has imposed a limit of four disabled passengers per flight”. Brilliant…
Airguns
Posted: Thu 13 October, 2005 Filed under: News, Thoughts, Weirdness Leave a comment »I notice today that the Government is thinking of restricting the sale of air rifles to ‘licensed firearms dealers’ only. This is primarily in reaction to the death of Andrew Morton, the 2 year old boy who got shot in the head by an airgun pellet fired by a fuckwit.
Will this reduce the number of air rifles? Possibly, in the long-term. But for now, no, it won’t – people will still own them, and unless the rifles are over a certain power (12 ft lbs at the muzzle, if memory serves – that’s the energy required to lift a pound weight 12 feet.) they don’t have to be registered at all. So no-one will know who has one, and whether or not they’re the kind of fuckwit who thinks it’s “fun” to shoot them at people.
The last firearms legislation came about in 1996 as a result of the Dunblane shootings where Thomas Hamilton (43) walked into Dunblane Primary School armed with 4 legally held weapons. In the space of 3 minutes he shot 3 staff and 28 pupils, of which 1 staff member died and 16 children were killed. Because of this, it became illegal to own any handgun in the UK, and anyone who owned a handgun was supposed to surrender it to the police/government, and receive in return compensation for their guns that amounted to about 10% of their value.
Since then, the number of gun-related crimes has increased exponentially. The import of illegal weapons has increased too, and in fact illegal handguns are now far, far easier to obtain than they ever were before the legislation came into place. In short, the legislation didn’t work.
Personally, I’m not an advocate of shooting. I used to shoot competitively, but had given it up before the events in Dunblane. But I do think that the knee-jerk response to the shootings helped to pave the way for the huge increase in the market for guns in the UK – partly because the compensation offer from the government was so poor, an irate gun owner was better off selling their gun to someone privately (and illegally) rather than handing it in. And of course the people buying those guns were likely to either be criminals themselves, or have contacts with criminals. It would have been better to have insisted that people kept their guns at the local gun club, and could only shoot them on the premises, or at competitions. To make it illegal to store a firearm at home, to make them harder to access easily would have been a far more sensible legislation.
This new air-rifle legislation looks like it’ll go the same way. Great, it’ll be harder to buy one. So instead they’ll go from one person to another, sold or given without any checks, without having to go and buy one from a retailer who at least has some idea what to look for in a person, and can refuse to sell to someone.
And all the time, it’s still possible to buy bows and crossbows with no legislation or registration at all. OK, a longbow is harder to use “quietly” or “unseen” – they’re not the most subtle of things. But a crossbow? That’s a different picture altogether. And let’s face it, crossbows were originally designed to go through chainmail at half a mile – far more dangerous than any air rifle…
Figurehead
Posted: Tue 11 October, 2005 Filed under: News, Thoughts 1 Comment »There aren’t all that many CEOs and Managing Directors that I generally feel are worth the money they’re paid, but one of the exceptions to that rule seems to be Stuart Rose, the MD of Marks and Spencers. I’ve seen him on the TV Business programmes/sections a couple of times now, and he always manages to get his point across, and seems to stand up and say what he thinks.
Today’s instance of this was regarding M&S’s latest sales figures, which while still slightly down (a whole 0.2%) are doing a lot better than previous quarters. Prior to the interview, he’d brought in a rack of M&S clothes, which conveniently managed to be in-shot with the interviewer – straight away, a pretty smart move. They then talked about the sales figures, and the interviewer then came up with some comment about how their clothes were still expensive, that M&S weren’t taking on the supermarkets in their clothing pricing. Rose picked up four or five items off the rack, and told the interviewer “This one’s £15, this one’s £25, this one’s £30, and this one that you say is expensive is cashmere – yes, it’s £65, but it’s still the cheapest cashmere sweater on the market. We’re not going to compete with the supermarkets, but we want to give our customers value. That’s a combination of price, longevity, and style. Not just price.”
I can’t deny, I’m quite impressed with an MD who actually knows the prices of the stuff his shops are selling. Oh – and wears the stuff himself – the last interview I saw, he could honestly show the label of his suit jacket, and say “Yes, I’m wearing an M&S suit – what kind of MD would I be, to come here not wearing my own company’s clothing?“.
Definitely a refreshing viewpoint…