Yesterday began bright and sunny and very cold. Today began grey and damp and less cold. Somehow, though, the crisp cold is preferable to the damp less cold, no matter how much the weathermen congratulate us on having milder weather.
So I ran round the village in the damp, noting Christmas decorations along the way. Maybe the early putting up of Christmas trees is a way people have of cheering up this rather dull time of year.
Most of the family seems to have given in to sniffles and coughs, possibly spread by the smallest grandchildren. On a Thursday I collect said smallest grandchildren from school and we all have tea together before Phil is given a lift to chess club. In recent weeks I have had to concoct something Granddaughter number Two will eat as she spurns the scrambled eggs on offer to everyone else. Today she declares herself too ill to come visiting - no sausages and chips today!
Earlier this week our prime minister visited a primary school and inadvertently, or perhaps advertently if such a term exists, set a class of children off on six-seven uproar. Maybe he was setting out to prove he has a less serious side before Rachel Reeves got into the budget. Here’s a link to what happened.
In Hong Kong they’re still seeking survivors from the horrific skyscraper fires. Apparently the residential blocks were clad in bamboo, which surely must burn easily. Latest reports tell of 55 dead, many injured and hundreds missing. Fire and flood, two elements we have not conquered yet.
In Palestine, in other words Gaza and The West Bank, chaos continues. The ceasefire seems very shaky, to say the least. Here in the UK pensioners are still being arrested for supporting Palestine Action, or at least protesting at the organisation being deemed a terrorist movement. And according to this article the high court is being told the ban should be lifted:
“On the first day of a legal challenge to the ban brought by co-founder Huda Ammori, her lawyer said the group had been engaged in an “honourable tradition” of direct action and civil disobedience prior to proscription.
Raza Husain KC told the court in London on Wednesday: “There are reasons of profound importance as to why, in the 32 executive orders that have been made adding organisations to proscribed lists, no direct action civil disobedience organisation appears.
“Such proscription is repugnant to the tradition of the common law and contrary to the European convention on human rights.””
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!







