The Altera Centauri collection has been brought up to date by Darsnan. It comprises every decent scenario he's been able to find anywhere on the web, going back over 20 years.
25 themes/skins/styles are now available to members. Check the select drop-down at the bottom-left of each page.
Call To Power 2 Cradle 3+ mod in progress: https://apolyton.net/forum/other-games/call-to-power-2/ctp2-creation/9437883-making-cradle-3-fully-compatible-with-the-apolyton-edition
Dyke resigning will force home how innocent Blair/the government really was. Whatever "majority" once backed the BBC (according to the Guardian ), is now a joke.
I still think that everyone was wrong and the BBC has got the kick in the arse it deserved but the government hasn't got it's because the things it'd really get crucified for (eg. the fact we went to war because of WoMD and there not being any, which was lucky because they didn't bother equiping our troops to deal with them anyway...) weren't covered by the report.
Hence, a brilliant smokescreen.
Jon Miller: MikeH speaks the truth
Jon Miller: MikeH is a shockingly revolting dolt and a masturbatory urine-reeking sideshow freak whose word is as valuable as an aging cow paddy. We've got both kinds
Originally posted by lightblue
I like the bit how the MoD isn't apportioned any blame for naming Kelly to "interested sources". Basically the press phoned the MoD, went through a list of names, the MoD said: Mr Smith, no he didn't do it, Ms Jones, no she didn't do, Dr Kelly, yes it was him...
It is just too biased in one way to be held fully credible. Public opinion is going to see it as whitewash. If the MoD was criticised, and Hoon sacrificed, the report would have been accepted as is.
Actually Hutton specifically pointed out in his summary 2 or 3 newspapers that correctly got Kelly's name from the available information and the MoD then confirmed it. He then mentioned the one that sent in a list of 20 names.
Once No 10 challenged Gilligan's story it was such hot news that Gilligan's source was going to come out. Hutton was, IMO, right not to criticise the MoD for a somewhat half hearted attempt to fight off the inevitable.
It is worth remembering that Lord Hutton has a legal background - innocent until proven guilty. The fact that he only criticises where there is clear fault actually shows that his report was not politically influenced either way.
And I think the reason the public thinks it was a whitewash is because the issues we all wanted addressed weren't covered by the report. And they never will be.
Jon Miller: MikeH speaks the truth
Jon Miller: MikeH is a shockingly revolting dolt and a masturbatory urine-reeking sideshow freak whose word is as valuable as an aging cow paddy. We've got both kinds
That it was decided to confirm the man's name if that name was put has been known throughout. It is not a secret unearthed by the inquiry.
What has been in issue is why that was done. The assertion was made - and Hutton decided it was one of the issues for him to address - that getting the source's name out into the open by that roundabout route was part of a concerted stategy. It was put like this. The government was in dispute with the BBC. It believed, so it was said, that it strengthened its own position in that dispute if the name came out. Because it could then seek to demonstrate what, in the event, it has taken this inquiry to show. Namely that the main allegation made by Gilligan is not supportable from the information he had. But, it was said, the government (or rather Tony Blair who chaired the meeting at which the question of what to do about the fact that a civil servant had come forward and said he might be the source was discussed) recognised that it would attract opprobrium to itself if it directly named the civil servant. Hence the roundabout route. It was said.
Anyway Hutton exposes this rather elaborate conspiracy theorist proposition for hooey. Because what the meeting really discussed was the fact that a Commons committee which is concerned with intelligence matters was interested in the dossier and if the government concealed the fact that a civil servant had come forward it would lay itself open to the criticism - from the Commons committee and from everyone else - that it had engaged in a cover up.
Which is obviously exactly what would have happened. Indeed they under-estimated the response they would have got. Because the chairmen and members of the Commons committee gave evidence to Hutton in which they said they regarded the government as under a duty to tell them immediately about what had happened and that, for good measure, they would have then wanted to bring the source before themselves - which is, of course, exactly what they actually did.
So the decision was made to make a statement to the effect that a civil servant had come forward.
Now the point of confirming the man's name if it was directly put was this. No one - and that includes the man himself - had the slightest doubt that the press would rapidly ferret out the name. So refusing to confirm his name in these particular circumstances would have led to a brief period of speculation during which the few other people in the field whom it might have been (The Times put 20 names to the BBC, most everyone else put one) would have been besieged. Which exposes others to hassle which is a waste of space when no one thought it would save the man from shortly being exposed anyway.
Frankly all of this makes complete sense. The guy had himself created a situation where to hope for some clear and simple course of action which no-one could criticise is just wishful thinking.
I have no personal view as to whether it could have been handled better. But that it was honestly muddled through and not part of a deep and cunning plot is pretty well unarguable. Well, no one is arguing on that as far as I know. And the opposition had pinned such high hopes of nailing Blair with this that if there was any real way to challenge these findings they would certainly be screaming about it.
Instead of which they stand silent.
Those who are determined that the answer to everything lies in deep conspiracies will take no notice of Lord Hutton as they take no notice of anyone except someone floating a yet wackier conspiracy theory.
But the truth is that secrecy in this case was both impossible to maintain and wrong.
And I think the reason the public thinks it was a whitewash is because the issues we all wanted addressed weren't covered by the report. And they never will be.
The public are free to address the issues at the next election.
I never believed that this enquiry was going to be anything but a whitewash, although I was surprised at how blatant it was.
My reason for this is simple: look at what was at stake. This isn't some enquiry that might result in the sacking of a minister, or a nasty item about prison conditions on the six o'clock news, but one that had the power to reshape Britain's strategic policy. Everyone knows that the UK has used its special relationship with the US as a means of accruing international power to itself and as a counter to European influence. If you didn't know that, kick yourself in the head. That much is obvious. Moreover it is also obvious that the UK is a much more inegalitarian society than those in continental Europe. This explains why there is so much whining from a large chunk of the elite on the subject of Europe. What's good about the US relationship with Britain is that it does not demand a great degree of domestic interference. Increased integration into the EU will mean exactly the opposite. So the UK has successfully played a double game for many years now.
So let's assume that Hutton trashed the Prime Minister and the Government. What would be the immediate consequences? Blair would probably have to resign and the government would be disgraced, but the main effect would be to make the special relationship politically untenable (it would become what the Americans refer to as a "third rail"). It would also be laid clear that Blair and Britain had made itself America's ***** and it's quite clear that most Britons do not like that idea. In the worst case the special relationship would be finished, in the best case severely strained and the UK would lose a large amount of diplomatic influence because no British Government could ever promise support to dubious US enterprises ever again. In short, it would cause a fundamental realignment of British foreign policy and lessen the power that Britain wields in Europe.
Given that this was at stake, I'm not surprised Hutton balked.
Given that this was at stake, I'm not surprised Hutton balked.
This really is ridiculous. If there was any shred of credibility to what you are saying, we wouldn't be seeing a mass exodus of management from the BBC.
And there's no removing Blair at the next election unless he dies or really ****s up with something. Neither of which I can see happening. I'd give a 90% of Blair being around until 2009.
The public are free to address the issues at the next election.
Shame we can't vote for the BBC and there is no opposition. I'm not voting for the cvnting Tories so it's a Lib Dem landslide?
Jon Miller: MikeH speaks the truth
Jon Miller: MikeH is a shockingly revolting dolt and a masturbatory urine-reeking sideshow freak whose word is as valuable as an aging cow paddy. We've got both kinds
For you to think that the everyone else is the same is natural but wrong.
Your post shows your interest to be to reconcile events to your entrenched views.
You show not the slightest interest in the evidence the inquiry heard.
Good luck with your approach. People with strong and entrenched views are often very effective. But if you are asked to conduct an inquiry - turn it down.
Originally posted by Park Avenue I agree - I'd like to see a referendum of whether we should continue to pay the BBC's licence fee.
You and Rupert Murdoch. TV in this country would be so much worse without the BBC.
Jon Miller: MikeH speaks the truth
Jon Miller: MikeH is a shockingly revolting dolt and a masturbatory urine-reeking sideshow freak whose word is as valuable as an aging cow paddy. We've got both kinds
Originally posted by Agathon
A question: has anyone here ever had the inside info in such an inquiry?
Yes- I spent a month studying the Strangeways inquiry as part of my degree.
Agathon- the problem with inquiries is not their compilation, content or presentation. It's the fact that governments fail to act on them, and that it's far easier to pass blinkered comments from a position of ignorance than it is to actually read the buggers and think constructively off the back of it.
We had a comment about journalists muttering "whitewash". Well the Murdoch papers are championing the report in order to kick the BBC, the Independent is sneering "whitewash" to kick the government, and the "Daily Mail" is in a tizzy over which bete noir it wants to slap first. Yup- what a shock. Relentless sticking to settled editorial stances of long standing.
The problem is with the media, the government and with the public being too ****ing thick, bloody-minded and apathetic to actually consider a finding that challenges their existing beliefs. So you'll forgive me for failing to accord a great deal of respect to your parade of knee-jerk reactions founded on nothing more corroborative than what some bloke down the pub said.
Lord Hutton is a highly-respected and effective legal mind, and was considered an acceptable choice by those calling for the inquiry in the first place. Now you can feel free to criticise the act of going to war against public opinion and/or on faulty military intelligence, but calling this a whitewash just won't cut it.
Comment