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#51
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![]() "Tom Anderson" wrote in message th.li... On Mon, 28 Sep 2009, michael adams wrote: Singling out public figures from the stage in a public theatre and subjecting them to ridicule is always off limits. Yes. No, singling out public figures and subjecting them to ridicule is always fine. In any context. That's part of what being a public figure means. You really do have some very strange ideas. So that anyone who believes they can make a positive contribution to society and may become a public figure as a result, is a fair target for public humilation and ridicule are they ? Presumably they should instead do nothing except stay at home in front of their computers in their pyjamas or underpants if they so choose where while stuffing themselves with pizza or jaffa cakes they can safely type any old rubbish they like, about anyone, even under an assumed name if they so choose. Isn't Usenet wonderful! michael adams .... tom -- If a scientist were to cut his ear off, no one would take it as evidence of heightened sensibility -- Peter Medawar |
#52
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![]() Churchill spent much of WW2 in an alcoholic haze, and so he was indeed "leading". Wilson had to have his fix to get through PMQs, and so he too was leading. Thatcher's increasing use of the bottle, especially during the difficult times domestically or when locked in negotiations with other European and World leaders, has been aired many times. It was during the period that she, too, was leading. You're rather missing the point. In the cases you cite above, alcohol positively helped those people to function effectively. In the case of Peter Cook his increasing liking for the booze prevented him from ever again doing any useful work. Spot the difference ? Remembering that Adolf Hitler was t-total. |
#53
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In message
allanbonnetracy wrote: Churchill spent much of WW2 in an alcoholic haze, and so he was indeed "leading". Wilson had to have his fix to get through PMQs, and so he too was leading. Thatcher's increasing use of the bottle, especially during the difficult times domestically or when locked in negotiations with other European and World leaders, has been aired many times. It was during the period that she, too, was leading. You're rather missing the point. In the cases you cite above, alcohol positively helped those people to function effectively. In the case of Peter Cook his increasing liking for the booze prevented him from ever again doing any useful work. Spot the difference ? Remembering that Adolf Hitler was t-total. Godwin! (and it's teetotal) -- Graeme Wall This address not read, substitute trains for rail Transport Miscellany at www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail |
#54
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On 2009-09-28 18:58:23 +0100, Tom Anderson said:
On Mon, 28 Sep 2009, michael adams wrote: Singling out public figures from the stage in a public theatre and subjecting them to ridicule is always off limits. Yes. No, singling out public figures and subjecting them to ridicule is always fine. In any context. That's part of what being a public figure means. You really do have some very strange ideas. tom Being insulting to the person is childish, boorish and ill-mannered. One may well have differences of opinion about policies, these can be debated, but being rude is not acceptable. It was not as if Macmillan had been found with his nose in the trough as some of our current crop of MPs and peers are allegedly wont to do. I remember the 'Establishment' incident as I was a 21 year old student in London at the time - even then I found the incident left a bad taste in the mouth. -- Robert |
#55
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![]() "allanbonnetracy" wrote in message ... Churchill spent much of WW2 in an alcoholic haze, and so he was indeed "leading". Wilson had to have his fix to get through PMQs, and so he too was leading. Thatcher's increasing use of the bottle, especially during the difficult times domestically or when locked in negotiations with other European and World leaders, has been aired many times. It was during the period that she, too, was leading. You're rather missing the point. In the cases you cite above, alcohol positively helped those people to function effectively. In the case of Peter Cook his increasing liking for the booze prevented him from ever again doing any useful work. Spot the difference ? Remembering that Adolf Hitler was t-total. But he chewed carpets* instead. Your point being ? michael adams *William Shirer "Rise and Fall of The Third Reich" find the page yourself. |
#56
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On Sep 28, 3:38*am, "michael adams" wrote:
As is often the case after a Govt. has been in office for so long they often look tired by comparison with a hungry opposition which also has never had the opportunity to make mistakes. Or been subject to the vicissitudes of "Events, dear boy events". Your remark has merrit. Thirteen years was a long time. IIRC labor made something of this at the time "Thirteen wasted years". The point I was making was simply that none of this was directly attributable to Harold MacMillan. OTOH, turning the corrupt Marples loose on the UK’s transportation system certainly was directly attributable to SuperMac. As was his chancellor’s poor control of the money supply. And bating the electorate was not an especially smart move. Although his statement was correct. Most working class British Subjects were living life styles undreamt of prior to WWII. If anything caused the fall of Macmillan as much as anything it was his being an easy target for mimicry starting with Peter Cook. More especially the humilation he suffered at the hands of the arsehole Cook who directly insulted him from the satge of "Beyond the Fringe". Why would anybody with a shred of self respect want to pay to hear the foul mouthed Cook? The BBC, and any other decent body that did so, should be ashamed that they ever gave Cook a platform. If lowlifes want to enjoy the right to free assembly and exchange their distasteful verbiage, so be it. But, that venue was surely far below endorsement by the presence Her Majesty's First Minister. |
#57
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On Sep 28, 10:28*am, Tom Barry wrote:
E27002 wrote: Thank you. *I agree. *It is not, primarily, about the material. Concrete can be used most effectively. *My issue is with the mentality that gave us Westway, Euston Station, and Centre Point. For what type of humans where these structure built. Westway's an interesting one - it was clearly massively destructive of an established community, but also built and designed to very high standards. *It took 30 years or so for the city to come to terms with it, but it's actually done so, and in a way that has actually strengthened the community (and notably in ways that none of the politicians, engineers and planners of the original road foresaw). http://www.westway.org/about_us/history/#a London works as a high density metropolis. It was not built for cars. Had the rest of the ringway been build London would not have been to same City. You may find that desirable. I don't. What else? *Centre Point's a fine piece of architecture let down by the base of it being designed for a car-based city rather than a pedestrian based one. *This is finally being remedied as part of the TCR station upgrade, which will arguably complete the job of integrating the building with the city properly. *There's a common thread linking CP and Westway, which is insufficient attention paid to the interface between old and new, which I grant you is a valid criticism of a lot of post war planning. IMHO, Centre Point is out of place. It lacks sympathy with its surroundings. Although the main issue, as you say, is its base. It belongs next to a Freeway exit, not a subway station. Euston we've covered - by any stretch it's a better *railway station* than the old Euston, and works as part of the city scape in a consistent and rational manner - the side down Eversholt St. is a bit of an eyesore, but the side of Kings Cross on York Way isn't much better than a blank brick wall either, and nobody criticises KX for being what it is - a functional, stripped down modern building (that happens to have been built in the mid-19th century rather than the mid-20th century). Euston is somewhat functional. I prefer, the rebuilt, Liverpool Street as an example of what can be done. King's Cross is a great historical monument. I am not convinced that it functions especially well as a railway station. :-) So I'm not sure what the point of that was. *There are plenty of bad examples of concrete use around, so why pick 2 good examples and one fifty-fifty one? Sure, there are plenty of other examples. The discussion was about the merits of rebuilding the Euston "Arch", albeit in concrete. I think that would be a good thing. It was destroyed by people with the same mentality that gave the UK so much, IMHO, bad architecture. I cited three examples of utilitarian 1960s structures that look, to me, as if they were built for robots. |
#58
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On Sep 28, 10:58*am, Tom Anderson wrote:
On Mon, 28 Sep 2009, michael adams wrote: Singling out public figures from the stage in a public theatre and subjecting them to ridicule is always off limits. Yes. No, singling out public figures and subjecting them to ridicule is always fine. In any context. That's part of what being a public figure means. You really do have some very strange ideas. Until Michael pointed it out, I had been unaware of Harold MacMillan's WWI record. That alone commands respect. It makes him a better man than me. He is certainly superior cook. But, why in the world put himself in the firing line of cook's abuse. |
#59
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On Sep 28, 11:36*am, Paul Terry wrote:
In message , Tom Barry writes Westway's an interesting one - it was clearly massively destructive of an established community, but also built and designed to very high standards. At the time (and I lived in the area then) it's real significance was as a potential prelude to the destruction of huge swathes of housing for the London motorway box. As a youngster living in West Kensington and owning a car, it first seemed wonderful - but it very quickly became obvious that the country couldn't afford schemes on that scale. What was not realised back then was that much 19th-century housing in the central area could be upgraded to very acceptable modern standards - instead there was a presumption that people would be happier in the outer suburbs - an idea that totally collapsed when rising oil and transport costs made suburban living far less economic for those with jobs in town. We can be grateful that the destruction ceased when it did. London was saved from a horrible fate. |
#60
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In message
E27002 wrote: On Sep 28, 11:36*am, Paul Terry wrote: In message , Tom Barry writes Westway's an interesting one - it was clearly massively destructive of an established community, but also built and designed to very high standards. At the time (and I lived in the area then) it's real significance was as a potential prelude to the destruction of huge swathes of housing for the London motorway box. As a youngster living in West Kensington and owning a car, it first seemed wonderful - but it very quickly became obvious that the country couldn't afford schemes on that scale. What was not realised back then was that much 19th-century housing in the central area could be upgraded to very acceptable modern standards - instead there was a presumption that people would be happier in the outer suburbs - an idea that totally collapsed when rising oil and transport costs made suburban living far less economic for those with jobs in town. We can be grateful that the destruction ceased when it did. London was saved from a horrible fate. Not applicable to you Adrian, but anyone else interested might like to hunt out a recent BBC/OU programme on iPlayer, Saving the Market. All about the campaign to save Covent Garden from demolition, has a lot about the proposed inner urban motorway box we nearly got in the centre of London. -- Graeme Wall This address not read, substitute trains for rail Transport Miscellany at www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail |
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