What on earth is going on in the Scottish Parliament? We have Anne McLaughlin, Scottish National Party, who is to be sworn in as a list MP this week, secretly filming photos inside the building, and posting them on her blog. Although there are no firm guidelines on photographs being taken by workers in Holyrood, there ARE other things to be considered, such as respect and trust. I would think that she will not be accorded those in abundance by opposition MPs when she takes her seat. If she is voted out at a subsequent election, or decides for some reason that she would like another career, I don’t think she can depend on getting a phone call from David Bailey CBE.
Scottish Labour leader Iain Gray claimed yesterday that Scots could benefit from the “next stage of global economic development” if Labour policies were followed. Maybe he’s forgotten that Labour have been in charge for the past 12 years, and that a certain Mr Brown has been running the economy, as Chancellor and now Prime Minister, when he’s not engaged in that other pursuit of his, saving the world.
In Westminster today, four disgraced members of the banking community were to be smuggled into the building to avoid having to face protests from angry workers. Those four are just some of the high flyers who managed to bring the UK’s financial services industry to its knees, but are too scared to face hard working bank employees. Having watched them on TV news bulletins, their so called apologies seemed to be rehearsed, half hearted, and insincere, and I must concur with John McFall, the committee chairman, that at the end of the meeting, they were as arrogant and unrepentant as ever. They can well afford to smirk, as the Government seems unable, or unwilling, to punish them.
Turning to football, we find the same kind of arrogance and incompetency coming to the surface. The guys running the Scottish Premier League have decided that the league programme for 2009-10 will begin on August 8, only days before Scotland meet Norway in Oslo in a World Cup qualifying tie. The manager, George Burley, asked that they have an earlier start to the league, and then leave the weekend before the international free, so the team could have a few extra days together. So far, they haven’t agreed to this sensible suggestion. Of course, it is not the first time that they’ve clashed – last May, Burley asked for talks to be held between the SFA and SPL over fixtures, as his first game in charge was wrecked with call-offs as it came immediately before an Old Firm game.
Burley himself is under scrutiny this week – he’s known for months that there was to be a Celtic-Rangers game this coming weekend, yet he arranged a get-together for the Scotland squad this week. There has been the usual spate of call-offs, and due to the freezing weather and the fact that Scotland doesn’t have one decent indoor facility, it looks as if the venture has been a waste of time. It seems to me that well paid people at the top in Scottish football arrive at decisions without giving a thought to the consequences, or the adverse effects they will have on our game.
A happy (or otherwise) note to end with :-- Research has shown that a bachelor is three times more likely to go mad than a married man. I tend to disagree, especially if the married man is the father of a bride-to-be, as the average price of a wedding is now £22,000.
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