Posts from November 17, 2003

Pro-American Britain

Pro-American Britain
: The Guardian bravely reports — contrary to reports in other media on both sides of the Atlantic — that Britain is not seething with anti-Americanism (my emphases).

A majority of Labour voters welcome President George Bush’s state visit to Britain which starts today, according to November’s Guardian/ICM opinion poll.

The survey shows that public opinion in Britain is overwhelmingly pro-American with 62% of voters believing that the US is “generally speaking a force for good, not evil, in the world”. It explodes the conventional political wisdom at Westminster that Mr Bush’s visit will prove damaging to Tony Blair. Only 15% of British voters agree with the idea that America is the “evil empire” in the world….

The ICM poll also uncovers a surge in pro-war sentiment in the past two months as suicide bombers have stepped up their attacks on western targets and troops in Iraq. Opposition to the war has slumped by 12 points since September to only 41% of all voters. At the same time those who believe the war was justified has jumped 9 points to 47% of voters.

This swing in the mood of British voters is echoed in the poll’s finding that two-thirds of voters believe British and American troops should not pull out of Iraq now but instead stay until the situation is “more stable”….

The detailed results of the poll show that more people – 43% – say they welcome George Bush’s arrival in Britain than the 36% who say they would prefer he did not come….

Pro-Americanism, as might be expected, is strongest among Tory voters with 71% saying the US is a force for good. But it is nearly matched by the 66% of Labour voters who say the US is a force for good. Anti-Americanism is strongest among Liberal Democrat voters but is still only shared by 24% of them and the majority see the US as the “good guys”….

You can make fun of the Guardian but at the end of the day, you have to respect its journalistic integrity for reporting this forthrightly and as the top story online.

Eccentric or sick?

Eccentric or sick?
Ken Livingstone, looney mayor of London, says this about George Bush’s visit:

I actually think that Bush is the greatest threat to life on this planet that we’ve most probably ever seen. The policies he is initiating will doom us to extinction.

And you, sir, are the greatest threat to intelligence I’ve seen in years.

What, a cause of optimism in this crappy world?

What, a cause of optimism in this crappy world?
: Well, well, well: Applications for asylum from Iraq to Germany have plummetted after the war. Must mean things are better, eh?

10 simple rules for dating our President

10 simple rules for dating our President
: The Telegraph gives a memo to security personnel explaining how to handle our Pres:

HRH Prince Andrew. To be kept out of goosing distance of Condoleezza Rice, please….

If you hear Mrs Camilla Parker Bowles slip out of the palace reception early, saying she is “Just heading out for a quick fag”, contrary to what you may have read in certain newspapers, this is not a cause for alarm. In Britain this is street talk for a menthol lite…. [Mentol is apparently Brit for menthol -ed]

The Mall is a road next to Buckingham Palace, not the local shopping/multiplex/Krispy Kreme venue….

[via the Guardian presidential-visit blog]

Who needs editors?

Who needs editors?
: Microsoft responds to Google News with Newsbot. I’ll have to live with it for a few days to judge its news judgment. [via JD]

: I forgot to mention that this is powered with help from Moreover and — full disclosure — I’m on the board of that company.

Remember them as you protest in London

Remember them as you protest in London
: Norm Geras lists the suggestions of the Socialist Worker’s 10 suggestions for what Brits should do when Bush comes to town — and then he adds his own suggestions, for example:

‘Ask all your friends and family to join Thursday’s national demonstration and the local protests. Make sure you have coach tickets to sell.’

> No, ask all your friends and family to think about those Iraqis who saw friends and members of their families disappearing into torture chambers and mass graves, and who welcomed the defeat of the Baathist regime.

: Now hear from Omar, yet another Iraqi who just started a blog. He, too, will remind those demonstrating about the horrors of Saddam and the reasons they should be thanking Bush, if they were true humanists:

I was counting days and hours waiting to see an end to that regime, just like all those who suffered the cruelty of that brutal regime.

It

Step back from that plug

Step back from that plug
: This is why I don’t want anybody pulling my plug… The NY1 reporter who was bashed by a passing truck and spent eight weeks in a coma has regained consciousness. [via Anthony]

Quotes

Quotes
: Not that you could/should/would possibly care, but in case you have no life, I’ll join in the rather self-aware blog trend of posting the Q&A with the New York Times reporter who wrote the Nick Denton story today. Click on “more.”

: But first, see Denton in pornographer pose. And don’t you agree that his apartment looks like the set of Oz?

(Then again, I shouldn’t make fun.)

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