Why Britain can’t shake off its snobbery

Why Britain can’t shake off its snobbery

There have been problems on the moors in advance of the Glorious Twelfth, today’s opening of the grouse-shooting season. Successive damp summers have accelerated the spread of the heather beetle, which destroys the birds’ habitat. There have been worries that the rare and beautiful bird of prey, the hen harrier, has been unsportingly killing grouse… Continue reading Why Britain can’t shake off its snobbery

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Marriage isn’t always the ideal state

It has been an excellent summer so far for the Smug Marrieds. Those grim representatives of connubial bliss, invented by Helen Fielding’s Bridget Jones during the 1990s, will have been delighted to read the various pro-matrimony reports and surveys of recent weeks. First, Iain Duncan Smith re-affirmed the Tories’ commitment to the institution of marriage,… Continue reading Marriage isn’t always the ideal state

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Matters of interest for Her Majesty

The Queen has asked a simple but pertinent question of the nation’s economists. Visiting the London School of Economics at the end of last year, she wondered out loud why no one had managed to foresee this “awful recession”. The economists did what economists do on these occasions: they set up a seminar. Its conclusions,… Continue reading Matters of interest for Her Majesty

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The mad democracy of snooping

The best way to control people, as any competent dictator will know, is to get them to police themselves. No citizen is more comprehensively cowed and disempowered than one who believes himself to be at the mercy of other ordinary people. Britain, not a totalitarian state, is nonetheless on a steep learning curve when it… Continue reading The mad democracy of snooping

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Where are the guitar riots and accordian assaults?

Chilling with the kids at the Latitude Festival this weekend, the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, Ben Bradshaw, looked extraordinarily relaxed for someone whose ministry had just dealt a hammer blow to musical expression in the UK. Participating in a packed debate about media, Bradshaw had been amiable, almost liberal, in his… Continue reading Where are the guitar riots and accordian assaults?

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The new British way of mourning

If only modern Britain were more like Wootton Bassett. That thought must have passed through many minds since the first press and TV accounts reported, a matter of weeks ago, how a small Wiltshire town has taken upon itself the sad task of honouring those killed in action when their bodies arrive home. Every time… Continue reading The new British way of mourning

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‘Thought For The Day’ has had its day

The soundtrack to our lives contains certain noises which exist primarily to reassure the more vulnerable citizens of middle Britain that old values and traditions live on. The shipping forecast, eager middle-class voices singing “Jerusalem” on the Last Night of the Proms, the Queen’s Speech: the content of all these things is unimportant beside the… Continue reading ‘Thought For The Day’ has had its day

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Does sex need to be encouraged?

The Government’s pledge to use the London Olympics as a way of encouraging lazy Britons to take exercise grows ever more ambitious. Last week, we heard that frisbee-throwing, baton-twirling and arm-wrestling would be eligible for government grants. Now a more traditional form of exercise is being promoted to teenagers. “Health promotion experts advocate five portions… Continue reading Does sex need to be encouraged?

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There’s greatness in every generation

Harry Patch, Henry Allingham: the very names of the last two survivors of the Great War have something square-shouldered, clear-eyed and honourable about them. What has been mourned over the past few days is not just the passing of two venerable servicemen but a lost age of straightforward integrity, civility and courage. Those who lived… Continue reading There’s greatness in every generation

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We should be proud of the Beckhams

It is time to celebrate a great British success story, exemplifying grace, dignity and humour when such things are in short supply. Politicians may be fleecing the system, BBC executives may be growing plump on public money, the Royal Family may be playing the property market with the help of the Crown Estates, but one… Continue reading We should be proud of the Beckhams

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