The other night
I watched a program on Donald Trump and it frightened me to death, it seems to
me that if he succeeds in becoming president America will become as unstable as
the Middle East is at present. Whilst he appeals to the wilder side of his
followers, he lowers the regard for the USA in the rest of the world. How can a
man who is aggressive as he is negotiate with Iran, or any of the Muslim world or anybody?
He may have a lot of money and no doubt he is clever in certain fields but if
what we see on our television screens is anything to go by he doesn’t have a
hope in hell internationally.
Thursday, 31 March 2016
Sunday, 27 March 2016
Mike's Just different
When I first
went to Saudi Arabia I smoked like pretty much everyone else at the time
(1974). When I first met the Saudis I was to work with I found them polite but
a little arrogant one of the first shocks I experience was when one of my
trainees said “Give me a cigarette” just like that. I know it annoyed many of
the expatriates as it was not an uncommon way of addressing us but I soon
realised they spoke to each other in the same way. After that I accepted it as
their manner but many of my fellow expatriates insisted on them saying please
and thank you. A mental hark back to the empire maybe but then later I found
that the American expatriate reacted in the same way. It seems that we must
alter even ancient cultures to our way instead of learning from them not of
course in the way of asking for a cigarette but look at any of the countries we
have been too we have left our mark not always for the good but to create a new
market or to exploit their resources. Sad that we have learned so little from
them as civilisations when we could have started with individual relationships,
no we are not better just different.
Thursday, 17 March 2016
Mike's memories - The tale of two bombs
I don’t know
what made me start thinking of my young life in the Second World War. I was six at the time when we lived in a
little house on an avenue in Manchester. My parents had strengthened the cellar
to act as an air raid shelter and each night my mother and her family and her
sister’s family used to troop down into the shelter to sleep. One night during
the blitz a bomb landed at the end of our road, it broke every window in our
house shook it badly so the dust caused a thick fog in our little bolthole. As
the fog cleared my little cousin was stood at the end of his cot with one
finger raise and said “Hark” I can’t remember what the parental reaction was
but I imagine it was something that released the tension.
Because of
this near miss we moved to the country, we had no time to build a shelter there
when a lone German bomber dropped a bomb on us. I believe it was a lost aircraft
dumping it’s cargo, I sat with my mother in her bed while we heard the
whistling of the falling bomb. I was convinced it was about to fall on us and I
must admit to being frightened into a blind panic when there was a loud
explosion and once again we lost all our windows. The next morning I had
recovered enough to go looking for the crater which was about half a mile away,
naturally there were several people about looking at the hole but much to my
joy I found a piece of metal which I believed came from the bomb. This treasure
stayed with me for the rest of the war and beyond.
Thursday, 10 March 2016
Mike's Memories - How things change
I loved my
time in Saudi I was living there for ten years coming home in late 1983. I had
many friends amongst the locals and so did Syb but over the period we were
there things changed in a slight but noticeable way. The Quran encourages
Muslims to venerate teachers and as I was responsible for teaching them so it
was easy to gain their respect if you tried. This made it simple to be friends
with them and in turn they were proud to be friends with their teacher, this of
course was when I first went out in the mid 70s.
By the time
I left the younger Saudis had become more self confident without much to
support it and somewhere along the line they seemed to have been warned that
friendship with expatriates was not to be encouraged. This showed itself in
less socialising amongst the men outside work and a more formal atmosphere at
work. When we left things had just started to cool down.
I hate to
think what it’s like for the expatriate community now when anti lobby in this
country is trying to stop the sale of arms to the Saudis. Do they really think
that the Saudis will stop buying arms if they don’t get them from us there are
very many countries where they can get them. What is more we would lose what
little influence we have. Check how many jobs will be lost in this country and
over there. Also these lobbies never seem to consider the effect they have on the
relationship between the people of the
countries they criticise and the treatment of expatriate working there. I
much prefer the Saudi Arabia I knew as described in Syb’s book Inshallah.
Friday, 26 February 2016
Mike's view - Only confusion
I am so
worried about this referendum coming up in June. I am not particularly keen on
the way Europe is going nor am I too enthusiastic about the way this countries
going. I have two main worries I can’t believe politicians and if we leave I
can’t see anyone capable of running the country for the good of the population.
In my view Margret Thatcher was a leader not that she did this country much
good but at least you knew where you and the country stood like it or not. But
since her demise there has not been a leader amongst any of the past prime
ministers, Tony Blair seemed okay at the start but when he ignored his country
in favour of George Bush and cocked up the Middle East for an unknown period of
trouble he lost totally my belief in him. So if we vote to stay we continue to
kowtow to that ever closer band partners all following their own agenda or
leave them behind and become like a rudderless ship. Not much of a choice is
it?
Friday, 19 February 2016
Coming soon 'Tee for two'
Well the new
book is nearing completion and will be going out to my beta reader for their
opinions in a couple of weeks. It actually started as a short story and like
Topsy just grew. It now runs to about 70,000 words and tells the tale of the
private life of a professional lady golfer. No it’s not a golfing book Gemma
just happens to play golf for a living and like many ladies has an interesting
and challenging life on and mainly off the golf course. Caddies can be both a hindrance
and a help, demanding and long suffering especially if they’re male which Gemma’s
are. It’s funny how they can affect a girls game no matter where it happens but
you do need to be close to them.
Saturday, 13 February 2016
Mike's They're dead so what
There are
times when I look at a blank page and think I’ve got to write a blog, as I like
to write one once a week, and nothing comes to mind. Then you look around for a
hook to start you off, I’ve just been reading a most interesting book, no it’s
not one of Syb’s excellent publications, it’s a biography of Lawrence of Arabia
but more precisely it’s a history of the first world war in the Middle East. It
left me thinking nothing’s changed our leaders are still keen to follow their
own agendas seemingly without thought to the common man, in WW1 the leaders of
both sides threw men into battle saying we didn’t do badly we only lost 10,00
men to day still we’ll do the same tomorrow. During one advance the British
army lost a man for every 2 inches of ground gained and now each year we
remember dead. It seems that society is becoming immune to other peoples
suffering. To bring it up to date how many digital games employ the
murder/killing of others to gain ground and win. I saw my grandson playing a
game involving a swimmer, he was called for a meal and instead of just ending
the game he drowned the swimmer, a shock to me as the drowning was realistic, a
way of ending the game to him. What does it do to their minds? What if they
become the leaders in future and some of them will.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)