With Obama
and Romney doing their Abbott and Costello (see Wikipedia and Youtube) tribute
act, and not very well, the Polish Football Authorities failing to close the stadium
roof during torrential rain causing a crucial match with England to be
postponed, the British Government refusing to extradite a wanted man to the
USA, and yet more fiddling with the price indexes and benefits to rob the
pensioners the newsrooms are busy.
Add to that
figures suggesting that there are now more employed in the UK than ever before,
thousands of job vacancies in home caring going begging despite other figures
of high unemployment amongst the young and many other matters rich with
confusion, there were other things to think about.
One was
renewing the home insurance. Once it was
so simple, a cheerful helpful chap would knock on the front door, be greeted by
the lady of the house holding her purse, a few bob would change hands, books
marked up to date and all would be well.
Now I am
looking at more documentation than it took to move an armoured division, they
are filled with options and complexities that need a Ph.D in something obscure,
like linguistics, to decipher and the sum involved for the annual fee would
have bought me a decent terraced house in a prosperous town sixty years ago.
Luckily,
the insurance company I deal with is relatively user friendly, it can be
negotiated with by telephone and one is not committed to the horrors of doing
business on the internet. There anything
can happen and does.
I kid you
not, as Costello might have said. Going
through the papers I came across the rent book for 1946. For a terrace house in a respectable
location, two beds, bathroom, hot and cold running water, electricity and gas,
close to trams and buses and work, it was just less than £1 a week, or £49 a
year.
Using the
web to search for a 2012 equivalent, same sort of terrace house, it is £6000 a
year and far less than London
prices. Were I to look there, I would
find that to buy such a house in a central location today would cost as much as
taking over a major company in 1946.
The world
has gone mad and our rulers madder than any Abbott and Costello extreme verbal
slapstick. Our retired generals, instead
of simply doing good and running their home localities as well as occasionally
writing to “The Times” are now hired hands for arms companies wanting the
government to buy bigger but not necessarily better weaponry.
The police
forces and their representative bodies having become politicised have now
become political in turn and are beginning to want a say in who may or may not
be in the government depending on whether they tick the right responsiveness
boxes. They are in company with the
Trade Unions who want to go back to the good old days of who runs the Labour
Party and why.
The big
story is the cat fight, for real, between the cat, called Freya, belonging to
George Osborne, our Chancellor of The Exchequer and the one, called Larry,
belonging to David Cameron our Prime Minister.
Freya is named after the Nordic goddess whose golden apples sustained
the Gods, no Freya, no Gods.
But
Osborne, as we know is a fan of Richard Wagner and The Ring Cycle, so is he
hoping for some sort of intervention from the ancient gods of The North to
bring the economy around or for them to find more fracking fields, preferably
in Labour or Liberal Democrat held constituencies?.
However,
Larry, more ominously, is the name of one of The Three Stooges (see Wikipedia
and Youtube) the wonderful comedy trio o the mid 20th Century. He is a rather scatter brained, impulsive and
unreliable character who you would not put in charge of anything. But who are Curly and Mo? Rebekah
Brooks and Rupert
Murdoch?
It is time
for my coffee break, but not Starbucks.
"The world has gone mad and our rulers madder than any Abbott and Costello extreme verbal slapstick."
ReplyDeleteIt has and it will get worse unless we do something about complexity. Dishonesty too, but complexity often hides dishonesty.
"just less than £1 a week, or £49 a year"
ReplyDeleteNo doubt.
Did you check what a working man's wage was in 1946?
It's not prices going up, it's paper money going down.