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Not quite the bright-eyed eager pup you once were? It seems the New Zealand green-lipped mussel

17 Oct Posted by admin in General | Comments

Not quite the bright-eyed eager pup you once were? It seems the New Zealand green-lipped mussel is your miracle remedy of choice. Goodness knows why, but it seems the New Zealand green-lipped mussel is your miracle remedy of choice. Top breeders will soon be recommending it.Fortunately, fashions in human food consumption are favourable for arthritic dogs. Next time your owner takes you for your daily hobble, drag it down to the nearest trendy eaterie for your shellfish.Don’t forget the chips and mayonnaise.. If the Private Finance Initiative is the issue on which the militants hope the trade unions will regain their political muscle, they have miscalculated badly; the unions should stick to issues such as pensions.

Much talk in the trade union world of a new wave of militant leaders taking over from the compromised old guard. Some of it is shiny-eyed nostalgia for the days when debates at the Trades Union Congress would shake the nation. Some of it is wishful thinking indulged in by the Labour left, which has not had much to be wishful about for a good 10 years.
Most of the evidence for this radicalisation of union leaderships consists of the ousting earlier this year of Sir Ken Jackson by Derek Simpson as the head of what used to be the Amalgamated Engineering Union. This week, however, we are promised an assembly in Blackpool that is more assertive than ever, not just on foreign policy, but on the subject of private-sector involvement in the public services.We shall see. It has always been the case that union leaders who become too closely identified with employers or governments risk replacement in union elections by fire-breathing militants. Political activists work hard to get them elected, and political inactivists vote for them because they think they will strike a harder bargain for their interests. Once elected, however, they often temper rhetoric with pragmatism.We also wonder whether the unions really have the moral or political leverage to force the Government to retreat on the Private Finance Initiative and public-private partnerships.

This is complicated territory, in which the interests of trade unionists, public-sector workers and public-sector union leaders are not the same. As consumers of public services, trade unionists have an interest in seeing them provided efficiently and effectively and – as consumers – usually recognise that a state monopoly is a bad idea.Nor will any posturing on this subject pass the inversion test. If the CBI demanded policy changes of a Conservative government on the basis of corporate donations to party funds, it would be roundly condemned by fair-minded observers.If this is the issue on which the militants hope the trade unions will regain their political muscle, they have miscalculated badly. The unions should stick to issues such as pensions, on which they yesterday fairly represented their members..

It was irresponsible to try to frighten people into supporting a war which is not yet shown to be necessary and which could be so disastrous. Tony Blair claims that he and George Bush have a “shared strategy” for dealing with Saddam Hussein. That is as may be: what they certainly have is a shared tactic for dealing with the growing reluctance of their respective publics to go to war. Both leaders have cleverly used words to suggest that the threat of a nuclear attack on their home populations is real and imminent.
Mr Blair yesterday managed to conjure a vision of an Iraqi nuclear missile heading toward Charing Cross while his actual words were only of “direct implications for the interests of Britain” if Saddam acquired nuclear capability.

 


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