Daybook: 2001, Week 27

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The Highlights

Mon 2 July

  And back to work I'm only slightly surprised to discover that things are falling around my ears even before I get in. The primary server is in someone's office, not an air-conditioned computer room (ah, air con!) and it's been falling over with the heat. It did the same over the weekend. Then the usual parade of suspects and people needing a sticking plaster for brain fade, and I can finally play catch-up. Four people who can't follow simple instructions to navigate password control (fill out the I-86 while on the plane, not while in the line); two who have contracted a virus (go to casualty pronto); three bitching about a government scheme (ever thought about emailing the government?); and about 40 communications that aren't problems but might be of interest or relevence. About 4 are.

It's 26 degrees C today - something like 8 colder than DFW, but it's the sticky British heat, and it feels just as oppressive. If not more.

Editorial: Perverse verdict After a three-month trial, and almost a week of jury deliberations, a majority verdict finds Barry George guilty of the 1999 Jill Dando murder. Dando, a television presenter, was shot in the head outside her home in Fulham. There are the usual blahings from the judge, before passing the mandatory life sentence.
Here's what bugs me: the Crown failed to prove its case. The only evidence linking the accused with the murder was a particle from a gun in a jacket pocket that came from one similar to that used in the killing. This evidence is clearly flawed, the chain of custody for that jacket is not up to evidential standard, and should really have been tossed. Witnesses placing a man of medium height and substantial build in the area on the day of the shooting weren't able to pick the accused from a line-up. Given Dando's association with the popular Crimewatch programme, her appeal for aid in the illegal war against Serbia, and the style of a professional hitman, I have sincere and grave doubts about the safety of this conviction.
Sadly, any doubts anyone will have about this will be conveniently airbrushed out of history. The police and the system have their scapegoat, the real killer is probably still at large, but the good people of London can sleep soundly in their beds, not knowing that it's not just Dando that's dead. Another part of British Justice has died, too.

chelle:
i've never been through newark but what an awful mess!
Yes, it is. They claim that half the airport is being rebuilt and "improved", but this seems to be nothing more than an extension to an over-priced McDougals. The place is so slow that is could be taking the concept of fast food in an ironic manner, but then I remember - they don't do irony there. They just stand about and bleat about not being New Yorkies.

Angella:
Thank you for reminding me how much I never, *ever* want to do *that* again.
Wait, when did you ever fly into or out of Newark? I have no gripes against airports in general, just the slow, sad wannabes of Noy Joiysey.

 

Tue 3 July

  It's virus day All told, I'm spending something like 40% of the day resolving people's infections, the sort contracted by their own culpability. Computer viruses. Two outbreaks of the KAK worm, which has been circulating round the country for something around a year now, without ever quite going away. A bit like the common cold, or foot and mouth; trivial, but annoying. Two who have run screensavers that look like porn, have contracted the MTX infection, and now need replacement internet connection files. A bit like herpes, really. And one who has the MAGISTR infection, is emailing wonky documents without realising it, but needs nothing more than a good rub-down with a hot towel. Bit like a skin rash.

Marvels at Wimbledon Capriati recovers from a near-certain defeat (7-6 5-2 0-30 is usually fatal) to beat Serena Williams. And Tim Henman plays inspired tennis to beat Todd Martin in five sets.

Outbreak (C4) Dispatches investigates the foot and mouth bungle job, the one that caused such hassle earlier in the year. It took a month for the government to realise it was totally chuffing things up, and still managed to blow it. The sort of damning evidence that really should have aired during the election campaign, causing a national scandal.

paulo:
-The good: "Once and again" starts in Spain!!!!!!!!
UK viewers may wish to keep an eye on WOK1 in August.

God bless Silvio Berlusconi
Now *there's* a sentence you don't see very often.

-The bad: summer's here... and no sign of "Buffy" yet.
You'll have to get to work cracking WOK's digital encryption. Enjoy Buffy every weeknight, plus new(ish) episodes on Friday nights. Thursdays, too, if you can crack the BBC.

Incidentally, does this make the UK the first country to put Buffy into syndication?

we're still stuck in the middle of the third season. A shame. A shame!!!
Indeed. You've gotta have faith...

Brendan adds
It's all downhill from the third season anyway, imo.
Disagreement here. Season four's main plot was a pile of pants, but the growth for the other characters really made up for that. Season five was better.

And Thomas
I never really liked buffy the vampire slayer. i never really gave the show a fair chance though either so i guess im in no position to pass judgement.
Good of you to be so frank. I like it a lot, but mainly for the Willow-Xander-Giles axis, not the titular character. (That's *titular*, for those with dirty minds or macs.)

"Charmed" this summer. Can anybody give opinions about it? Is it good or is it... well, a teen-oriented show about teen witches with Shannen Doherty?
For my two pence, it's OK, though the claims for realism are misplaced and vaguely insulting. The major letdown is Ms ZipCode, who *still* has an amazing power to make my finger connect with the remote within moments. Not since Charlie on Party of Five has there been a character that annoyed me more.

It does have the redeeming features of a) Coombs and b) Milano. And seeing as how Dohbrain is leaving the show soon, to be replaced by McGowan, I may not be wearing out the remote's battery quite so quickly.

Simon adds
it is Buffy Lite (TM) for those who are stuck with terrestrial viewing regimes...
In which case, you need spoilers.

there is this new Australian show starting tonight called "Secret Life Of Us" which is being heaped with praise
Not all of it deserved. It has many of the good and bad points of THIS LIFE (BBC, 1996-7) with subtle overtones of crappy Aussie soaps. Not my cup of tea.

it has a great Friends crossed with This Life and Sex & The City vibe and I have read this in about 5 different places
Did C4's press release say this, by any chance? I really don't see the FRIENDS resemblance at all.

 

Wed 4 July

 

Overheated It's 31 degrees out there, within error distance of the heat in Dallas the last couple of weeks. The heat here is far worse. Britain, typically, is unprepared for any sort of extreme weather - we can't handle snow, we can't handle more than a few degrees of frost, last autumn showed that we can't handle lots of rain, and heat is completely off the record. Nowhere has air conditioning, never mind *working* air conditioning. Add to this the extreme humidity from being less than 100 miles from a coast, and it's really, really painful.

Autoexec for the people Gotta love professionally written software. We've recently had a piece of software written to handle course bookings. It needs to be installed on lots of computers, but it's been a pain. Today, we're working with the most remote office, and the computer won't head into Windows. It stalls with a DOS message. The manager tries to solve the problem, but it's miles over her head - she's having difficulty booting into DOS, a skill that should be second nature. A little bit of disk shuffling and emailing from another PC shows the problem - the PATH command has lost the %path% variable, the one that keeps the previously set path. Duh. Amateurs.

REM's "Everybody Hurts" helps dairy cows produce more milk, according to boffins at Leicester University. Herds yield 3% more when the tragic song is played. Other slow songs demonstrated similar results, such as "Bridge Over Troubled Water" and "What a Difference a Day Makes." Upbeat songs decreased productivity. Those cited include Supergrass' "Humping On Your Stereo" and anything by Jamiroquai, though that could have been an outbreak of good taste by the bovines. Approximately 1000 Holstein Friesians participated in the experiment. Spokescow Daisy said, "Moo."

 

Thu 5 July

  YAIHD Yet Another Insanely Hot Day. Thankfully, I'm down in the basement workroom for much of it, so avoid the worst of the heat. We've got a chap from the anti-virus company in to install the new system. It's a snap, it's a cinch, it's a shame that the product it's supporting isn't worth the candle. And I get a free lunch out of it, too.

Brass Eye (C4) There was supposed to be a new episode of Chris Morris's groundbreaking satire series tonight. It's been pulled from the schedules. het graun says because of its content, suggesting that it really is addressing paedophilia, the moral panic of the past ten years. Others suggest that this is an episode about the internet, and how it's easy to hoax people. I wait to see the episode with some trepidation: next thing we know, we find Kaycee (aka Debbie Swenson) was, in fact, Chris Morris, pulling perhaps the biggest hoax *ever*. It's replaced by a repeat of the classic "Cake" episode, in which Noel Edmonds and other sundry television celebs sprout off about this "made-up drug" at the behest of Free the UK from Drugs. "It ruins Shatner's Bassoon," exclaims the bearded wonder.

Kati:
Put Budapest on the list. AKA the city of bastards behind the steering wheel.
It never ceases to amaze me just how quickly the former Eastern Europe has become westernised. First came the intrepid tourists. Then came cheesy imported soap operas. Then came the trepid tourists. And the "fast" "food" "restaurants." Now Budapest is adopting Western style "good" "driving" practices.

i can't understand to this day how someone can be such an assh++le and park his car just where he stops in a lane.
It's use of "he" in that sentence that is a dead giveaway.

 

Fri 6 July

  More virus stuff today, along with another free lunch. This looks like a simple, cool product.

Cooler weather at last For once, the hot spell ends with little more than a crack of thunder, though it does rain heavily for almost two hours.

Henmania Rain at Wimbledon means I get to see highlights of Pat Rafter beating Andre Agassi in five breathtaking sets. Tim Henman splits the first two sets with Goran Ivanisevic, then races to take the third 6-0. Rain comes early in the fourth, and we're back tomorrow.

Digital cable I've had access to digital terrestrial (through one's rooftop aerial) on and off since November 98, and digital cable since moving in April. Suppliers: onDigital and Telewest. I'll refer to them as DTTV and DCab, also making reference to Digital Satellite, to which I've never had access.

Eric Geyer:
Digital cable is more expensive than analog, even without movie channles
There's no direct comparison between DTTV and free-to-air analogue. AFAIK, DCab is the same price as analogue.

The picture quality sucks on the all-digital channels. This is because there is not enough bandwidth on the cable to carry a sufficient resolution digital data stream.
Correctamundo. This was a problem on one of the DTTV multiplexes in the early days, but compression technology has advanced to remove the problem. It's still a problem on DSat, and my DCab installation needed tweaking to improve the signal strength.

Suggested action: a persistent campaign with the cable company. They will try to pretend it's all in your head / related to the weather / part of the system. Eric's diagnosis is accurate.

I have two specific complaints about the picture quality, first that there are many digital artifacts in the picture, particularly in low-contrast pictures.
As you know, there's a trade-off between squeezing in lots of channels, and high-quality pictures. The BBC on DTTV has gone for quality, the pay channels have gone for quantity. The comparison on the same show (Buffy is an excellent example, being dark of picture) is very clear.

I've found it less of a problem as compression has improved, and it's not so noticeable on DCab. (Problems with the last few episodes of Buffy 5 were at Sky's end, Mark.)

The other problem is that the MPEG decoder sometimes has problems keeping up the correct frame rate. This leads to an *extremely* distracting slow/fast effect, where the pictures pauses for a fraction of a second then speeds up again for a fraction, then is back to normal.
I found this far more noticeable, especially on Cartoon Network. Again, it's better on DTTV. Part of it is the compression thing, part could be not getting quite enough signal.

I also dislike the fact that I cannot tape one all digital channel while I watch another.
Same here, and on all platforms. There's been vapourware about a DTTV-compatible tv-video that will record one channel while watching another, but these will retail for £800.

OLN carries professional bicycle racing, and this year will have live coverage or the Tour de France for the first time ever in the US.
UK viewers will have to watch Eurosport on digital *or analogue* satellite. And, as a real bonus, we don't have Phil Liggett's legendary commentaries. (Cue Google:)

byron
the cable provider for my part of town will be carrying the UPN affiliate in (of all places) Fredericksburg, TX
Where? Cue Encyclomedia.

110km west of Austin. Any more info, em?

No.

Roswell season 3 and Buffy season whatever.
6. And no spoilers without warnings, people. (Not that byron or Eric need reminding.)

(I also get the Game Show channel, but that's another story.)
Britain's equivalent shows such classics as Crystal Maze, Treasure Hunt, 3-2-1, and Whittle. I think we win.

Simon
the digital age is being slowly resisted here
Take-up of DTTV and DCab have slowed to almost nothing; DSat is also slowing. There are about 50% of households that have no intention of going digital. This is one in the eye for the government, which wants to sell off the analogue frequencies.

despite one evil company showing a majority of good shows (ER, Ally, West Wing) on their even more depicable digital channel
E4 is independent of Warner Brothers! Channel 4 (E4's parent company) is still 100% owned by the government.

have a gardening channel and win the vote of the old people!
Already got one, that's BBC1. Though they might like 4O, which could show "Countdown Gold" and "Classic Fifteen-To-One."

the disposable income of "yoof" are going
Dr Wordsmith writes: This sentence does not gramattical sense make.

playstation 2 (over priced! over hyped! over here!)
Selling barely 10,000 units in nine months doesn't seem a huge success.

DVD is still in the novelty phase!
Regional differences mean that the US market can only see the 12 episodes of Friends that WB wants them to see. UK viewers can purchase all six seasons on the format. Sometimes we lose.

the Star Wars 1 DVD will have wobbly cardboard sets and silly string for lasers... should be fun
Isn't editing fun!

 

Sat 7 July

  Quick trip As the weather has cooled somewhat, head into town to do a bit of shopping. It's sale season; it's building season at the Vermin store, so cross that one off my list for the forseeable future. Body Shop yields cheap shampoo and soap, they feel so much better than the regular stuff. Tower is having a lot of singles for not a lot of dough - recent issues by the Bee Gees, Fatboy Slim, Everlast for 49p, and Erasure's classic Abbaesque EP is 99p. Nothing doing at the clothes stores, I pretty much maxed out on those in Dallas. And some interesting browsing in Waterstones, maybe for action in the future.

Back for lunch, a quick trip up the chippie. It turns into a very quick trip back, as heavy rain starts when I'm halfway back. By the time I'm under trees, I'm soaked.

Vampire High Imagine Rupert Giles trying to give Spike, Harmony, and a couple of others a decent education. Set it at a private school, and add in an illicit relationship with a mortal student whom our hero is not meant to meet. This has a little promise, but it'll take more than fancy effects and glow-in-the-dark plots to keep me viewing. One of the actors on the precredits is Karen Cliche, a pretty decent summary of the show. (productions la fete / YTV, airing on WOK1)

Sport. There would be a review of the day's play at Wimbledon, had there been any. It's England, it's Wimbledon week, it's rainy. Australia is a mile ahead in the cricket already. And the Tour de France is starting.

 

Sun 8 July

 

I hadn't realised how tiring this hot week has been. But last night was the first really cool night in over a week, and I slept most of the way till 9am, far longer than normal.
A quick walk to the superstore gets me there when they open. I couldn't bring frozen chips back on the train yesterday, and need cake and fruit they didn't have in the city centre. But most of my shopping can come from the city, which is desperately bad news for the inefficient store locally. Do I care? Not at all!

Sport update: mass sprint in the Tour. Henman won't win Wimbledon. Williams (V) will - Justine Henin, the defeated finalist, is a name to watch. England loses the first test against Australia badly.

This Week's Charts

#1 (#1) CHRISTINA AGUILERA, MYA, LIL' KIM, PINK - Lady Marmalade 9 wks (3 at #1)

The girls with the corsets retain the top slot, and by quite some distance over all comers...

#2 (#2) SHAGGY / RAYVON - Angel 18 wks (3 at #1; SS)

...which leaves this fun little number holding as runner-up for the third week...

#3 (#3) FAITH HILL - There You'll Be 3 wks (#3; SotM June)

...Faith makes all three weeks anchoring the top three...

#4 (#4) USHER - U Remind Me 2 wks (#4)

...and Usher spends his second close behind. Close, but not close enough.

#5 (#7) BLUE - All Rise 7 wks (#5; SS)

A lack of popular new releases allows this veteran hit to climb back up to match its peak position of four weeks ago...

#6 (#8) S CLUB 7 - Don't Stop Movin' 11 wks (#1)

...and this one to reach its highest position in three weeks.

#7 *NEW ROGER SANCHEZ - Another Chance 1 wk (#7)

Highest new entry is another dull old dance track.

#8 (#5) DIDO - Thank You 19 wks (#2; SotM May)

Dido's classic hit is still doing the rounds.

#9 *NEW WHEATUS - A Little Respect 1 wk (#9; SS)

"Teenage Dirtbag" also remains hot at airplay, but this has risen through the ranks to go top 10. It's a cover of Erasure's 1988 top tenner, and repeats that feat after 13 years and losing the synths to guitars. A 1992 cover by ABBA tribute band Bjorn Again just made the top 30.

10 (#9) HERASEY - Way To Your Love 2 wks (#9)

Six months ago, this group was put together by an idling LWT producer, purely in order to sell commercials on his station. After single one made a week at #1, the follow-up has barely scraped into the top 10. Only a dearth of new releases this week has given them a second spell in the charmed circle, and oblivion, splits, or being dropped from a very great height await.

12 (15) GORILLAZ - 19-2000 2 wks (12)

Another strong grower from Damon Albarn's solo project.

15 *NEW OPM - Heaven Is A Halfpipe 1 wk (15; SS)

Second modern rock track to enter this week, with all the boppiness and fun that are a traditional part of summer. This one could well run and run.

16 *NEW JESSICA SIMPSON - Irresistable 1 wk (16)

After an absence of almost a year, the third teen of US pop returns, and might be trying to be the solo Destiny's Child. She's not as big as Britney, not as high-profile as Christina, but quite possibly a better talent than both.

21 *NEW BLINK 182 - The Rock Show 1 wk (21; SS)

Another modern rock track, this time from a band with a bit of a history. "All The Small Things" gave the Blink a #4 hit in March last year, and this first track from their new album gives a deserved big hit.

25 (36) UNCLE KRAKER - Follow Me 13 wks (25; SS)

This week's fastest climber, beginning to take off at UK airplay, and top three in Germany. A light record, sure to go down well on release late this month.

26 (31) DESTINY'S CHILD - Bootylicious 2 wks (31)

Maybe the party is over - this is going down quite poorly at radio.

29 *NEW DAMAGE - So What If I 1 wk (29)

This is the fourth hit of the past year for the group, apparently. I couldn't name any of them.

32 (30) NELLY FURTARDO - I'm Like A Bird 21 wks (#4; SS)

The longest runner notches up five months.

33 *NEW WEEZER - Hash Pipe 1 wk (33; SS)

And another mod-rock track, though this is the weakest of that genre's new entries this week.

37 (47) U2 - Elevation 2 wks (#37; SS)

Third single from the "All That You Can't Leave Behind" album, not quite as anthemic as "Beautiful Day," not quite as beautiful as "Stuck In A Moment..." but glorious in its own way.

39 *NEW JANET JACKSON - Someone To Call My Lover 1 wk (39)

She's back already.

40 (43) FATS & SMALL - This Time Around 3 wks (23)

45 *NEW BELLEFIRE - Perfect Bliss 1 wk (45)

From the management team that brought you Westlife, Boyzone and Samantha Mumba comes a four-piece Irish group. They look good, they sound twee but great. And have one-hit wonders stamped all over themselves.

Also new this week: Feeder "Turn" 74; Beta Band "Broke / Won" 80.

 

The Week In Game Shows

 

Survivor

Big Trousers has set the group a challenge. Walk along bamboo poles. Dive for 25 treasure chests. Richard wins this one, leaving Charlotte certain of her pending eviction. Nothing like pre-judging the public vote, is there.

There's a plot to oust Peter. Zoë trusts this Richard person, but Pete's double-crossing himself with Jackie. Charlotte and Eve are rubbing kerosene into Mike's rear end. But who has been canoodling with Big Trousers' Big Trouser? Are bottles of water really an indigenous plant species? Finally, the voting. Big Trouser declares the result from the dairy pot. Charlotte 1, Peter 5, Eve 1.

Big Brother

The Shrink reckons more bitching this week - he's wrong. This week's task is to teach an old dog new tricks - a task they fail. Brian reckons the dog is gay, but this isn't South Park. Liz takes the lead in training Paddy, with a lot of help from Helen, Amma, and Josh.
"People are getting tetchy... I'm starting to irritate people," reckons Helen.
Helen, Brian, and Paul are goodie-goodies; Dean, Liz, and Amma are challenging Big Brother over anything. Josh, reckons Shrink 2, could go either way. Insightful.
Brian is making more and more digs at Josh; they are disguised as humour, but they're hurting Josh.

Voting:Amma and Paul have 4, Josh 2, everyone else one. Bookies reckon Amma will get around 65% of the vote. Instant reaction: both expected it, Helen squeaks like a dog whistle, Amma's surprised it's taken this long.
Brian has promised to shave his head if he's not nominated. Josh joins in the snippage, especially in 30-degree heat.
Liz and Dean are talking in the garden every night.
Dean spends an hour with BB on Wednesday. The others seem to be rallying more to Josh that Brian.
Brilliant shot on Friday's eviction show: the group has gathered on the patio table, allowing a pullback shot to Davina in the camera run. Vanessa Feltz, star of CelebBB, says Paul should be dating Helen already. Amma's out. Paul rises and looks shocked and pleased. Brian to win, thinks Amma, but she'd like Helen to triumph.

 

The Week In News Snippets

 

It's as you were for trade sanctions applying to Iraq. An Anglo-Station plan would have made them apply more specifically to arms and oil smuggling and less to most civilian goods. But fear of a Russian veto, which would have killed the proposal for the foreseeable future, meant the proposal bit the dust, and the existing sanctions will continue into their twelfth year. Iraq enjoys increasing financial muscle with its trading partners - like Russia - because of its ability to work around the current sanctions regime.

Slobodan Milosevic is extradited to a UN war crimes tribunal in Den Haag. In an attempt to reject the tribunal's legitimacy, the erstwhile Yugoslav president refused all offers to be represented before it by lawyers. "I consider this tribunal a false tribunal and the indictments false indictments. It is illegal, being not appointed by the UN general assembly. So I have no need to appoint counsel to an illegal organ." Judge Richard May (UK) told Milosevic that he will be allowed to challenge the legality of the court later on in the proceedings.
When the suffering-already judge asked if he wanted the details of his indictment read out in court, a stony-faced Milosevic said: "That's your problem." Milosevic also refused to enter a plea for the four charges he faces: deportation, murder, violation of the laws of war and persecutions on political, racial, and religious grounds. "This tribunal aims to produce false justification for the war crimes committed in Yugoslavia," he said in Serbo-Croatian. The deputy prosecutor admits the shaky nature of the charges upfront: "It's a circumstantial evidence case, basically."

Over in Macedonia, the Albanian insurgency is brought to an end - at least for the moment - after both sides sign a ceasefire. NATO troops will help to disarm the rebels.

Just when we thought it was safe to go back to the farm, the government warned of the return of foot and mouth. Chief scientist David King tells farmers that the danger isn't over yet, and there could yet be a resurgence of the animal equivalent of the common cold in the autumn.

Zimbabwe lurches from crisis to crisis under dictator robert mugabe. A two-day general strike, called over rising fuel prices, paralyses the capital Harare and most of the rest of the country. Zimbabwe's trade union congress says all banks and factories were closed, though some food shops remained open. Mugabe is unable to blame his usual scapegoats, the English, and homosexuals.

Ten years after the first trials, the British media finally wakes up to the SpermMaster process for spinning X sperm from Y, allowing prospective parents to choose their offspring's sex. 200 sprats have been born following this treatment. Arguments against baby gender selection because selected children will be more or less cherished, or that one gender is being discriminated against, have a hollow ring in Britain.
There's no evidence that, given easy and universally available gender selection, there would be an imbalance between boys and girls in the population. Indeed, we all know that some parents are disappointed when a third, or fourth, or fifth child turns out to be the same sex as the others.
Common sense, and recent experiences in Houston, suggests that the diminished cherishing of multiple same sex siblings in a family that has children the natural way, is worse for society than any negative consequences that might flow from a big family that has artificially balanced the sexes.
There could be more problems in countries like China, where sons are traditionally valued more highly than daughters. But the technology is out in the open now; it's relatively cheap, would be hard to outlaw, and is coming soon to a clinic near you. There are interesting times ahead.

Candidates for the Conservative Party Leadership in the UK are named. Last time's runner-up Ken Clarke; favourite Michael Portfolio; all-round nice guy Michael Ancram; the unknown David Davis; and extreme right-winger Iain Duncan Smith. The MPs vote in three rounds over the next two weeks, the loser of each round goes out. The two surviving candidates go to a ballot of party members. The winner will be known in September.

Not standing: Peter Lilley, who shed the "He's Dead Silly" tag we've been using for the past ten years in one interview this week. The former deputy leader called for cannabis to be legalised and available from off-licences. Outlawing cannabis is unenforceable and indefensible in a country where alcohol and nicotine are legal. He writes, "I have tried deploying the arguments for criminalising cannabis in discussions with sixth formers, students and, come to that, their parents, in my constituency. Whether I convinced any of them I don't know. But I invariably failed to convince myself. The arguments for prohibition crumble on close analysis."
Describing the claimed health risks of moderate indulgence in cannabis as bogus or exaggerated, Lilley dismisses the argument that its use is a gateway to harder drugs. "Soft drug users are forced into the arms of hard drug pushers precisely because both cannabis and hard drugs are available through the same channels. Short of legalising the trade in cannabis entirely, the only way to stop driving soft drug users into the arms of the criminals who push hard drugs is to license some legal outlets to retail cannabis."
Such a proposal would stop wasting the time and resources of an already overstretched police force. The health risks are arguably lower than those of alcohol and tobacco. The claims that cannabis is a gateway drug are flimsy at best, and seem based on people caught with hard drugs admitting to having tried cannabis at some point. By this analysis, eating bread leads to hard drug use.
If the government were to produce and tax cannabis they would be in a price war with existing dealers, who will be reluctant to lose their income.
For the record, Labour's Health Minister made a wishy-washy burbling that this isn't a measure they back, and rants on in the way that really winds up Lilley. The Party's contribution to the debate will be minimal, clearly. Backers include Alan Duncan, a close ally of leadership candidate Michael Portfolio.

From the Politicians Just Aren't Funny files: "Let's put the sense back into sentencing" - David Blunkett (Lab, crime). The proposed changes, like the party's proposed spending increases, are just old stuff re-heated and given a garnish of parsley and watercress.

This week's Pointless List
Fastest gainers at google.com this week:
1. wimbledon (rain festival in london)
2. paula poundstone (comic, apparently)
3. jack lemmon (dead actor)
4. delta airlines (dead airline)
5. barbara schett (tennis player, popularised by british tabloid)

Slumping away faster than ratings to Survivor:
1. california lottery (someone won. it wasn't us)
2. eclipse (sun, moon, earth)
3. john lee hooker (dead singer)
4. mp3pro (dead website)
5. continental airlines (based out of ewark. how sad.)

 

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