November 15, 2010 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

Aung San Suu Kyi, the Chandlers and Freedom. At a time when news tends to be both disturbing and complicated, the simple and happy release of not one, but three famous captives over the weekend was very heart warming. It was a curious coincidence of timing that both Aung San Suu Kyi and Ron and […]

November 14, 2010 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

War without  Victory The Head of all the U.K’s armed forces, himself a former British commander in Afghanistan, has now said it is not possible to defeat AlQaeda and other terrorist groups, only to contain them. This Blog, along with countless people across the world, has argues this continuously. It is now official. The War […]

November 13, 2010 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

  WE MUST NOT FORGET Whilst we engage in the ceremony and formality of Remembrance Sunday, with the poppies, the parades and the silence, our thoughts turn to those in our own families who gave their lives. My father fought throughout and survived WWI. My uncle, his brother, was killed on the Somme, so I never had […]

November 12, 2010 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

The Price of Big Government Many U.K. readers will have seen the excellent Channel 4 documentary by Mark Durkin last evening which brought home the scale of the public debt here. I have already explored these figures many times, so I will not repeat them.  The programme examined in depth the fact that big government (as […]

November 12, 2010 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

Quantitative Easing America came in for a good deal of criticism in Seoul for its latest batch of QE from the Fed. Quite right too. To expand the money supply whilst spending at cosmic levels on borrowed money risks a very bid bang indeed. Even if there is no explosion economically, it further damages the economic […]

November 12, 2010 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

G. 20 and the Balance of Power It is clear from the reports of goings on at the G.20 that the balance of economic power has shifted away from the United States. The condition of its own economy, the fact that it was at the heart of the global financial crisis and the fact that the […]

November 11, 2010 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

G20 in Seoul Correspondents report that the U.S. is on the back foot at this summit and does not exhibit the clout of previous summits. This is not surprising. In the height of the crisis the priority was to stop a global financial collapse. Now it is how to build recovery. In determining that path, […]

November 10, 2010 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

The £10 Trillion Debt  and Flat Tax. PwC has just published the result of an in depth financial survey which confirms what I and others have been saying since the start of the financial crisis, except their figures which are worked from scratch, are worse than mine, which came from the IMF. I have stated […]

November 10, 2010 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

The Falklands and the Retired Admirals A group of very distinguished retired Navy grandees, one an ex- minister, have written to the Times complaining that the scrapping of the out of date Harrier force places the Falklands at risk from invasion. There are two issues here. One political, one military. They are wrong on both. […]

November 10, 2010 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

President Bush George W. Bush has published his memoirs. All of this is designed to improve his image. It might do this if we caught a glimpse of a wiser man, who could see that things did not work out as planned. Instead we saw self  justification for a range of bad judgement calls and […]