Mauraice
The massacre this week of Coptic Christians in Cairo stands as a bloody corrective to the idea that the ‘Arab Spring’ was a wonderful uprising of the masses against dictators. Revolutions are not, in themselves, causes for celebration if they create a vacuum that can be filled by evil. The deliberate mowing down of dozens of peaceful demonstrators by armoured vehicles (hundreds of others were shot at point-blank range by Egyptian soldiers) is the starkest indication yet that the land of the Pharaohs is fast becoming a fundamentalist Islamic state, with the blessing of its powerful military establishment.
Home The Bank of England launched out on a further £75 billion worth of quantitative easing, but refused to buy government bonds maturing in 2017 because traders had driven up the price. Typical households will not return to the level of income they enjoyed in 2009 until 2015, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies. The Olympic stadium is to remain in public ownership after the Games, the government confirmed, and not sold to West Ham. Unemployment rose by 114,000 from May to August to 2.57 million. The BBC decided to cut 2,000 jobs as part of savings of £670 million a year. Dave and Angela Dawes from Wisbech won £101,203,600.70 in the Euromillions lottery, the third largest jackpot for British winners.
Members only Sir: Charles Moore (Notes, 8 October) makes some apposite comments about this year’s Conservative conference. This was my 19th annual conference and I feel disinclined to continue to attend despite being a past branch, constituency and area chairman. It is no wonder the attendance by party members was down: Manchester is not one of the most attractive cities in England, to say the least, and accommodation near the centre is expensive. The venue is inadequate with few rooms being of a suitable size for meetings, and many fringe meetings were held too far from the centre. The echo in the main hall was disturbing.
Voter apathy? Don’t you believe it. Ever since we asked our readers to nominate this year’s best parliamentarian, our digital post bag has been full to bursting. Nominations have come from as nearby as Westminster and as far away as Australia. They have spanned all three major political parties, and Ukip besides. And they have been by turns witty, insightful and impassioned. This really is democracy in action. One early frontrunner is the Conservative backbencher Philip Davies. Reader Steve Mullins praises him as someone who ‘defends us almost single-handed against the massed ranks of pressure groups and sanctimonious political busybodies who want to dictate what we can say, do and see’.
A selection of posts from the past seven days at spectator.co.uk: Fraser Nelson says it might be time to scrap the minimum wage for young workers and calls Andrew Lansley's handling of the NHS reforms historically bad. James Forsyth explains how Lansley got his health bill through the Lords and says Adam Werritty's no Walter Mitty. Pete Hoskin reports on the threat from Iran and the Miliband and Balls double act. Daniel Korski calls Sarkozy's likely opponent dull and says ministers need their Werrittys. Jonathan Jones says the middle ground's there for the taking and reports on the latest Republican debate. David Blackburn reports on Cameron's immigration speech and his attempts to tackle internet porn.
The Slovakian parliament has just voted against extending the eurozone bailout fund. More on this soon.
Thank you to all those readers who entered our online poetry competition last week. There were lots of novel, witty and entertaining entries on the ostensibly mundane subject of ‘games’. The winner is ‘hc18’, who should contact dblackburn @ spectator.co.uk to claim their bottle of champagne. Here is the winning entry: 'The sweat, the fear, the aching limbs, the scowling face of Mr. Symms. The pain, the tears, the shrieks and howls. the muck, the grime, those sweaty towels. Running round the pitch in rain. "You've done it once, get to it again!" Too hot, too cold, too wet, too dry, Mud on your face and grit in your eye... How I miss those days back then, before I'd picked up this bloody pen!
Welcome to the latest CoffeeHousers' Wall. For those who haven't come across the Wall before, it's a post we put up each Monday, on which — providing your writing isn't libellous, crammed with swearing, or offensive to common decency — you'll be able to say whatever you like in the comments section. There is no topic, so there's no need to stay 'on topic', which means you'll be able to debate with each other more freely and extensively. There's also no constraint on the length of what you write — so, in effect, you can become Coffee House bloggers. Anything's fair game, from political stories in your local paper, to chat about the latest football results.
…here are some of the posts made at Spectator.co.uk over the weekend. The Fox Hunt has dominated headlines. Fraser Nelson evaluates the dispositions of the forces engaged in Fox versus Boulter, James Forsyth reacts to Liam Fox’s apology, Daniel Korski warns that the defence secretary may lead the anti-coalition Tories if he is sacked, and Peter Hoskin says that Fox is on a knife edge. Elsewhere, Fraser Nelson offers his most sincere apologies to Chris Huhne. James Forsyth reports on Day Five of the ‘Cat-flap’ saga. Our financial correspondent, Bounderby, says that Project Merlin was aptly named: it’s a fairy tale. Daniel Korski explains why using soldiers to extend women’s rights is problematic.