| 22/09/2004 - 1963.001
Animal Rights
It is well known that in England animals are more highly
regarded than children. We have the Royal Society for the Protection of Animals
(RSPCA) but merely the National Society for the Protection of Children (NSPCC).
In 1963, when I was in the Parliamentary Counsel Office, I drafted a spoof Bill
on this topic. I have just come across it, so here it is.
A
BILL
To confer better protection on children, and proper protection
on animals.
Be it enacted etc.
Protection of children
1. Any enactment now applying to animals shall from the
passing of this Act instead apply to children.
Protection of animals
2. Any enactment now applying to children shall from
the passing of this Act instead apply to animals.
Interpretation
3. In this Act-
“children” means the offspring under sixteen
of human parents;
“animals” means the offspring of any age
of any other parents.
Short title
4. This Act may be cited as the Children (Better Protection)
Act 1963.
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| 31/08/2004 2004.140
Why it was a mistake to topple Saddam Hussein
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| Times Letters
27/8/04 -
Iraq invasion seen as ‘backward step’
From Mr Daljit Sehbai
Sir, The invasion of Iraq, far from triggering
modernisation (letter, August 24), has inflamed and emboldened the forces of
religious fanaticism in a country that has been a secular state so far.
Saddam Hussein was not a religious fanatic.
He was a cruel and ruthless dictator but, nevertheless, ran a secular state.
He crushed those who wanted to establish an Islamic regime on the Iranian model.
The forces of religious fanaticism led by Islamic militias, which had been dormant
so far, have now taken over Najaf and other parts of the country and will pose
a grave danger to the region.
International terrorism must be fought with
maximum force and undivided attention. The war in Iraq was a diversion from the
real struggle against terrorism, which is still alive and kicking in the border
areas of Pakistan with Afghanistan.
If only half the number of American and British
Forces employed in the invasion of Iraq had been sent into Afghanistan to fight
the remnants of the Taleban and the fanatics led by Osama bin Laden and his lieutenants,
there was a very good chance of defeating or at least crippling the forces of
international terrorism.
I believe the invasion of Iraq was a backward
step in the fight against religious fanaticism and international terrorism, and
a gross error of judgment on the part of George Bush.
Yours faithfully,
DALJIT SEHBAI,
c/o The Reform Club,
Pall Mall,
SW1Y 5EW.
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Letter from Francis
Bennion 27 August 2004
Mr Daljit Sehbai,
c/o The Reform Club,
Pall Mall,
SW1Y 5EW.
Dear Mr Sehbai,
I am writing about your important letter
in today’s Times. You have certainly hit the nail on the head. I am sure
you are absolutely right in what you say.
Of course your letter is written with hindsight,
but I can’t help feeling that President Bush and his advisers (not to mention
Prime Minister Blair and his) really should have grasped from the beginning the
truth of what you say and refrained from toppling Saddam.
I supported the war, but I now see that Saddam
acted as a stopper in one area of Islamist militarist activism. In the war against
terrorism, that was more important than trying to introduce democracy into Iraq.
I do not believe democracy will work in any country where the ayatollahs and
imams are in political control. Turkey is different, but things are now going
that way in Turkey too.
All the coalition can do now is try to uphold
the new secular government under Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, and prevent the
fanatical Islamists taking over. I fear it is a forlorn hope, though things may
be better after the US and British elections. By then it may well be too late.
Yours sincerely,
Francis Bennion
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23/08/2004 2004.139
Bad English by Cricket Commentators
On 21 August 2004 Francis Bennion sent the following
three emails to the Channel Four programme broadcasting commentary on the Fourth
Test, England v West Indies.
Mike Atherton made three errors when covering the
last Test Match.
1. He used ‘criteria’ as a singular noun when it is a plural. The singular is ‘criterion’.
2. He pronounced ‘schedule’ as skedule, which is the American way. The English way
is shedule.
3. He pronounced ‘debacle’ as debbakle. This word is of French origin, and is pronounced
daybarkle.
1. Geoff Boycott has just talked about conditions ‘deteriating’. Surely he knows
that the word is ‘deteriorating’.
2. Geoff certainly knows that the word ‘hand’ is spelt with four letters. Why does
he constantly speak as if there were only three?
I wouldn't trouble to mention the above if it were
not that there are thousands of impressionable boys watching him. Does he want
them to grow up illiterate?
Dermot Reeve has just mentioned ‘latitude and longtitude’. The latter word is ‘longitude’.
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20/07/2004 2004.133
Paul Foot is no longer with us
The previous Line criticised Paul Foot. Now I learn
that on 18 July he died of a heart attack, aged 66. With any other person (saving
a few exceptions such as Robert Mugabe or Sadam Hussein) I might express formal
regret at such news. Here I’m not able to do that. The reason is partly
expressed in my Oldie
letter. For the rest I will just remark that the late Paul Foot’s virulent
desire, from an early age, to inflict maximum harm on values which I and many
others hold dear caused more hurt than would anything I might say about him now.
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19/07/2004
Read
about Paul Foot and the thuggish Ricky Thomlinson
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05/07/2004
ARE OUR JUDGES AND THE BAR REALLY INDEPENDENT?
Judges Bar
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Week beginning 17/05/2004
This week’s Line is the Union Castle
Line
I am too indolent, lazing in the sunshine on the
Devon coast, to compose a proper Line this week. So I will just recall the day
45 years ago when I sailed away on a Union Castle liner to the Gold Coast, with
my then wife and two little daughters aged 5 and 3, to take up, for a stint lasting
two years, what used to be called the White Man’s Burden.
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Week beginning 26/04/2004
Tony Martin anti-burglar Bill (drafted by FB)
was debated by the Commons on Friday 30 April
Click
here for the text of Bill and full story
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Week beginning 19/04/2004
John Mortimer: a man who despises his profession
See Blog FBBB106
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Week beginning 05/04/2004
The Arch-Priest of Multiculturalism stands
on his head
See Blog FBBB103
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Week beginning 29/03/2004
A lie in The Times
This week the House of Commons once again debates
university top-up fees. Last time it happened I wrote Blog FBBB49.
As a prelude to this week’s debate see Blog FBBB101.
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Week beginning 22/03/2004
The Vandal of Downing Street
Will Blair prove any more right than the Bishop
of Southwark did sixty years' ago?
See FB's Blog FBBB99
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Week beginning 15/03/2004
Should England's cricketers tour Zimbabwe?
Get
some ideas from the story of how FB got Peter Hain convicted for interfering
with South African sporting fixtures.
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Week beginning 08/03/2004
Revisiting Horizon
FB goes back 60 years to the wartime days of Cyril
Connolly's literary and arts monthly, price one shilling
See Blog FBBB90
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Week beginning 01/03/2004
Mr Toad takes the road
The light-hearted way Britain's drivers get behind
the wheel
See FB's Blog FBBB85
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Week beginning 23/02/2004
The Government takes up Sexual Autonomy
See FB's Blog FBBB82
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Week beginning 16/02/2004
Do suicide bombers mean the end of fair trials?
See
FB's Times letter of 13 February
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| Week beginning 09/02/2004 The
Police Are Getting Above Themselves
(especially the North Wales Police)
See FB's Blogs numbers 28, 68, 69 and 71.
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Week beginning 02/02/2004
Are Human Rights a Danger to Law?
See the recent article by
FB in the University of New South Wales Law Review.
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Week beginning 26/01/2004
The big question on university top-up fees
This week the House of Commons debates university
top-up fees. They won’t be debating the big question, which is this. Why
are parents expected to pay for the university education of their adult children?
For the full argument see Blog FBBB49.
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Week beginning 19/01/2004
Statute law reform - is anybody listening?
I was rather rough with poor dear Geoffrey Howe
in my blog FBBB45.
The article with the above
title, though published in 1993, is still highly relevant. Some of the reforms
it proposed have been brought in, but most have not. The wake-up call to the
hapless Lord Howe of Aberavon has come much too late of course. (He is, after
all, only four years younger than me.) But others ought to be doing something
about them.
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Week beginning 12/01/2004
Sexual
Offences Act 2003
The Sexual Offences Act 2003, which received
Royal Assent in November 2003, makes all children under 16 criminals if they
engage in any kind of consensual sex with each other. Harmless petting, smooching,
groping, even kissing, by under-16s with their age mates is criminalised by the
Act, already held to be contrary to human rights. See
Briefing
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