I expect vitriolic abuse for saying this, but by the standard laid down by Chris Patten, the last governor of Hong Kong, Britain is no longer a civilised country.
I heard Patten speak at an ICMA conference a number of years back, so many years back that I can't recall where it took place. London, maybe, or Stockholm.
He stated that unless a country enforces the rule of law, it cannot be regarded as civilised. A country in which the police force can act as judge, jury and executioner, and then be praised for their professionalism rather than called to account, is not enforcing the rule of law.
I am not saying whether this is a good thing or a bad thing. I'm a reporter rather than a commentator. I'm just pointing it out.
At the height of the IRA war against Britain, the late former prime minister Margaret Thatcher used to set great store (at least in her public utterances) by observing certain standards of behaviour. Shooting to kill terrorists meant that we would cede the moral high ground, and in effect be no better than them.
The shooting has begun.
Raging Bull: what was all the fuss about?
I finally got round to finishing watching Raging Bull last night. What on earth was all the fuss about? It easily ranks as one of the worst films I have ever seen.
Continue reading "Raging Bull: what was all the fuss about?" »
Posted at 10:53 AM in News & Comment | Permalink | Comments (0)