While not riveting, nor particularly sophisticated in terms of deep content, I enjoyed watching the Leader debate last night – and watching the spinners proclaiming on Twitter every few minutes that ‘their man’ had won. The spinning started but two minutes in and continued relentlessly until the end when the face of Police, Camera, Action (who nearly appeared on his own show for drink driving some years back), Alistair Stewart, proclaimed how disappointed we all were that it had come to an end. Clegg was the first big surprise. He came over rather well. I had to telephone NHS Direct several times to check that I did not have the symptoms of Lib-Demitis. I was reassured that I was in no danger of developing the full blown ‘condition’. Brown, of course, was expected to perform badly in front of an audience of humans – however regulated, so no big disappointment then. He did have a couple of moments of involuntary YouTube rictus.
I did think that the ITV coverage was poor. PC Stewart, who promised to be a policeman if the leaders lied, barked at the leaders off camera and did little else… perhaps it was in the rules that he wasn’t allowed to? On to the next two debates…. Will Gordon and Dave be up to the mark next time?
Lawyers reject calls for Christian-sensitive judges
• Critics say hand-picked panel would set dangerous precedent
• Ex-archbishop wades into row over rights of Christians at work
The Guardian reports: “Attempts to have religious rights cases heard by hand-picked judges would set a dangerous precedent, lawyers said, amid mounting unrest about legal clashes between religious representatives and equality rights campaigners.Calls for a dedicated panel of judges with a “proven sensitivity and understanding of religious issues” today gained momentum, after a former archbishop of Canterbury gave his support to a case on discrimination in the workplace.Lord Carey of Clifton made the comments in a witness statement in an appeal brought today by Gary McFarlane, a relationship counsellor from Bristol.
I did read a report in the press yesterday that Lord Carey, the former Archbishop, was calling for ‘civil unrest’…. an idea so preposterous that it conjured up surreal images in my Rioja filled mind last night of the faithful chucking fish and bread loaves at the Downing Street gates and then morphed into images of Archbishops rioting in Trafalgar Square. I really must have a word with my Rioja dealer.
Back later with something more sensible… perhaps. Enjoy Ash from Iceland Friday
Noli me tangere: why you can’t arrest the Pope
Discussed this for a podcast with Carl Gardner the other day… his EXCELLENT article on this subject is well worth reading.
I suppose letting Christopher Hitchens off the leash to show these canting whingers what persecution really looks like is out of the question?