Wednesday, 25 February 2026

Rog T's cancer blog - The awful truth that you probably don't want to hear

 It's coming up to that time again. Tomorrow I go for my six monthly PSA test. It has been 2.5 years since my radical prostatectomy and all of the tests have been clear since then. Most of the time I don't think about cancer returning, but between now and when I get the result, it will loom large in my thoughts. I have spoken to plenty of other people who have been through a brush with cancer and have come through the other side and they all tell you that this is a very unpleasant period. I have no idea if I will ever not need PSA tests. At the moment I have one every six months. I'd gladly never have another one, but I don't want the b****rd disease to get me so if this is the price, then so be it.

I realised recently that there are four stages of having cancer, each has its challenges, The stage where you blissfully don't know you've got it. The stage where you are told you have it, but you know you have it, but are waiting to see what happens next. The stage where they are treating it or you are recovering from treatment and the stage where you are told that you are as OK as they can ever tell you. If I am still clear in August, I will move to the fourth stage, if tomorrow or August's test brings bad news, I will be back to stage two or three. For me, the waiting and seeing lasted from 2011 to 2015 and again from 2016 to 2024. It was easy to get lulled into a false sense of security. When the PSA starts going up again for prostate cancer sufferers, it is truly awful. When we await the result, it is like peaking into the windows of Hell.

I don't deal with this period particularly well. I am very snappy. I snapped at my wife for no real reason a couple of times today. Something I rarely do. I couldn't really understand why, until I started to write this blog. In truth I just want it all out of the way. The awful truth for anyone who has 'had a brush with cancer' is that this s**t will be a part of your life from now on. Maybe I am just weak and stupid and don't cope with such things very well, but its a quarter past eight in the evening and all I want to do is go to sleep and pretend it isn't happening. 

And the silly thing is that there is almost certainly nothing wrong with me. You may wonder why I am sharing this today. Well I was having a chat with a mate a week or so ago, who was going through a similar thing and I realised that on this horrible roller coaster ride at the worlds worst theme park, cancer valley, there are many nuanced ways in which you suffer. For me, cancer has become more of a mental health issue than a physical one. I am not afriad to say that and if you are feeling stressed, you are not alone.

And if you are just a bit curious, here is a little song and video I made about my experience having a prostatectomy. For 50 weeks of the year, I am fine. That is the upside, but until I get my test results, I am feeling rather anxious. 






Tuesday, 24 February 2026

Workplace blog #1 - The best and the worst boss I've ever had!

What is the worst boss you can have? One who belittles you, embarrasses you,  sets you almost impossible tasks, puts you in the path of physical harm for fun, berates you, swears at you and makes you feel useless.

What is the perfect boss? To me it is the one who you learn most from, who makes you up your game, makes you approach every task from the perspective of being a problem that you can solve, if you approach it correctly. One who when they are no longer your boss, you feel that you can rise to any challenge.

Let me tell you about the worst boss I ever had. He was called Micky. I worked for him for a couple of years on and off after I left school. I worked as a painter and decorator for Micky. He was Hungarian. He was a refugee who had come over after the Hungarian uprising against the Soviet Union. He would entertain us with stories of Russians he'd murdered as they approached Budapest. How they only ran when they ran out of bullets, or their machine gungs became too hot to fire. He told us how, when he arrived ithe UK, he was paid by the UK Secret services to dispose of people. He explained, they would be paid cash and ask no questions. I have no idea if it is true, but he said they employed people like him, as they could claim that it wasn't the UK murdering people. He also got work redecorating places where people had been murdered and a mess had been made. I had no reason to doubt him. His mates would laugh about some situations, which were truly stomach churning. Initially he worked in a restaurant and would hide weapons in the fridge. 

When I first worked for him, I was 18 and I finished when I was 20. Micky delighted in humiliating me. Even if it would cost him money, he would set traps, that meant I injured myself. On building sites, he'd get me to do dangerous tasks, with no safety gear and scream at me when I screwed up. If I was painting a window frame too slowly, he'd swear at me and call me "f*****ng Picasso". When I had a haircut for a gig with my band, it was "f*****ng Lochinvar". When I nearly cut my finger off with a Stanley knife it was "Are you a f*****ng girl, but some masking tape on it and get back to work". When I refused to help him nail a pigs head to the door of a local Rabbi's house, who had refused to pay him for work, he sacked me and called me a "Jew Lover". Micky liked the Nazi's, because they had been anti Soviet. He wasn't anti semitic, and worked for most of the Rabbi's in Golders Green, but if you didn't pay Micky, he'd take a terrible revenge. I heard from one of his other guys that after the Pigs head incident, the Rabbi paid and got him to do more work. To Micky, it was simply business and he would do what he needed to to get results. When I worked for him, I hated him most of the time. He would not let me drink tea, insisting I drank Nescafe Gold Blend coffee, as he said the smell of tea made him feel sick. He'd encourage his mates to nick my sandwiches, which only stopped when I put a disgusting filling in one. Another of his mates used to physically bully me. That stopped when he surprised me by punching me in the back of the head. I punched him, knocking him clean out, resulting in him falling down the stairs and being off work for a week. Micky thought it was hilarious and the bullying stopped. There was a French guy who also worked for Micky. I got off lighty compared to him. Micky didn't like the French at all.

But in many ways, Micky was also the best boss I had. All of the belitlling of my work made me up my game and work quickly, which meant I earned more money. All of the setting of traps when assigning work, made me think about what I was doing and take nothing for granted. The bullying taught me to stand up for myself. I learned to always have eyes in the back of my head. The insults made me resiliant. I never lose my temper at work, even when faced with the most obnoxious of behaviour. I came to respect Micky, he'd come with nothing and made a lot of money. But the biggest lesson was in the ten minute tea breaks, where I was forced to drink Gold Blend. Micky would feed us rolls made with Hungarian salami "the best salami, not like that Italian s**t". Micky read the papers every day and listened to the news on the world service. He'd give us a monolgue on the news of the day. It was 1981-83, the cold war was still going on. He predicted the fall of the Soviet Union. He explained that when he took his family to the USA, he realised that the USSR simply could not compete and it was slowly falling to bits. He explained that none of Russia's Warsaw pact allies would fight for them. When they invaded Hungary, the Poles accompanying the Russians were not given bullets, as the Russians feared they'd join with the Hungarians. He emphasised that every time we go to the shops, every choice we make in buying products is supporting someone. He would only buy products that aligned with his world view. He refused to put a penny in the pockets of anyone he felt were not aligned with his views. 

When I knocked his mate out, his only comment was "I thought you were a girl" and he used to tease his made that he'd been beaten up by a girl. After I was sacked, he told a mate who worked for him "I had to sack him, he was catching on too fast". Micky didn't want workers who thought for themselves too much. I couldn't understand why he picked fights and sacked good people. I came to realise that it was all about control. Once you started to question him, he felt undermined. If he was undermined, he couldn't keep the jobs running on schedule. Many of his Hungarian mates were alcoholics with severe PTSD and some were clearly psychotic. If he let his guard down for a second, they would cause mayhem.He simply wasn't suited to managing people like me in what we now consider a reasonable manner, but I can honestly say that it gave me nearly all the tools I need to be successful in life.

Years after, I met his son by chance. His son was four years old when Micky died. He had been told stories of how heroic Micky was, how he was perfect in every way. Micky's wife presumably either never saw the side we saw, or didn't pass it on. I told a couple of the more tame anecdotes and realised his son was deeply shocked by them. He hadn't realised what Micky had done to get himself on his feet in the UK, when he arrived as a refugee. He'd just assumed he was a successful immigrant businessman.

It was not a pleasant experience working for Micky, but it was a massive education. The best side of it was that he made me realise that you had to rise to the challenge and think. The abuse and the bullying was unpleasant, but of all things he said, the most important was one sentance "We are all only here to make money, so stop f*****ng around". That is the essence of running a successful business.Micky would say that to staff. To customers he'd say "I only have two rules in business, one is that I do the best job and the second is that you pay me what you are supposed to. If you understand that we will be friends". When it came to business, you wanted to be Micky's friend. 

Such jobs no longer exist. I don't suppose many of todays British teenagers would last five minutes with Micky. I am not entirely sure whether that is a good thing or a bad thing.

******

This is the first in a series of blogs detailing my experiences working in various industries etc, over the course of my long career. I thought I'd start with the most extreme example


Sunday, 22 February 2026

The Sunday Refection #77 - Why I won't be giving up lying for Lent!

 Like many of this series of blogs, the seeds were sown at mass this morning. If you are not familiar with sich things, this is the first Sunday of Lent. Normally, I give up something for Lent, but as I was away I completely forgot to make a 'lentern resolution'. Often they involve giving up items of food or booze. To be honest, with all the lunacy in the world right now, I could not cope with the idea of 40 days without a drink. I normally don't drink 3 days a week, the days I do, I tend to enjoy it. As for food. Generally I give up something I like that is not particularly healthy, but I am eating too much of. Since I had cancer, I am pretty sensible. I toyed with the idea of giving up cheese, but I don't eat that much of it most of the time. So what could I do? I had a wonderful idea at Mass. I'd give up telling porkies! Now I like to think of myself as a pretty honest and straightforward person, I don't con or rob anyone. But I do on occasion tell the odd white lie. Yesterday, I went to see Luton Town play Burton Albion FC, with a mate I've not seen for a few months. A group of us went out in Bedford then Luton. I bailed out relatively early. I wanted to watch Man City Vs Newcastle and we'd been drinking since 11.30am.

On the train home, I realised I'd not been showing my beloved wife enough appreciation. So I stopped by at M&S and got her a bunch of flowers and some nice food and cooked her a nice dinner, before the match started. I got the inevitable question "How much did you have to drink?". My answer "Not that much, we didn't have one at the match". The second part was true, but the first part? Well we had two in Bedford, then got the train to Luton and had three. Aftre the match, we went back to the pub and had another one, then went to the pub over the road and had another two. That is eight  pints, albiet over about seven hours. By most people's standards it is quite a lot. It occurred to me I'd mislead her as I didn't want a bent ear. 

As I contemplated this at mass, I felt a tad guilty. I had mislead her as I didn't want my ear bent. HAd \i told her, it wouldn't have made any difference and I'd have had a bent ear, but it would have little effect on anything. Next time I go out with my mates, the number of pints I drink won't be reduced as the result of her ire. Today I won't be drinking. Sunday is often a day I abstain, usually as it is the day when I can ensure I do my three days non drinking. This week, as I was away, it will just be two. In Portugal with Boz, I drank far more than I should, but it was great to catch up and didn't interfere with our work. Boz likes to start around noon. I got up every day at 8am and took his dogs for a two mile walk up a mountain.

Anyway, as I sat in mass, I thought "Yes I should give up lying". The first reading was all about the Serpent tempting Eve to eat the apple in the garden of Eden and the gospel was about the Devil tempting Jesus in the desert. I have trouble with both stories. The apple story ends with Adam and Eve eating the apple and realising the horrible reality of existence. My personal view is that it is not a true story, rather a parable with a deeper meaning. In many ways the story is the same as Pandora's box or even the rhyme of Humpty Dumpty. The message is that if you seek the truth, what you find may well be the most terrible thing in the world. The current situation with Prince Andrew/Epstein is rather like that. I think we all preferred it when he was gamourous war hero, who dated porn stars and was one of the good guys. The fact that he's seedy, money grabbing fool, who enjoys parties at the residence of people trafficking paedophile is pretty awful. But it is the truth. It always was the truth.

Which comes back to me. Is Mrs T happier knowing that I had 8 pints yesterday or not? Would she be happy if I told her thr truth when she asks if her bum looks big in a pair of jeans she likes. Incidentally, I've always found the "does my bum look big" question a ridiculous one. Surely the question should be do I look nice, as on occasion a female will look very fetching when her bum looks big in something.  I am not brave enough to say what I think and to be quite honest my view has always been she looks beautiful in just about anything or nothing. I care vary little about the wrapping paper, as it were. 

And then there is work. I run a music studio. Bands, often young ones often ask my opinion of their music. Often it is rubbish. Now if I say "Blimey, it's awful" who does that serve. Often the reason it is awful is because they are young, inexperienced and tpo busy enjoying being in a band to listen properly. Again they've asked the wrong question. The question should be, what do you think we could do to improve the track. Oddly the answer is usually the same. Make sure you are in time and in tune. Make sure that the good things in the music are let breath. Make sure you can hear the vocals and work out what the key hooks are. Often when such things are broken down, there are many great elements that are being swamped through inexperience. 

And then there is just the fact that upsetting people, when you don't need to is not what good people do. A mate of mine was telling me that his mum had alzheimers and she wasvery confused. She was saying long dead people had visited her, She often told stories of being whisked away in helicopters. None of it was true. He'd been advised to come to terms with her reality and just go along with it. Telling her that Uncle Jack was dead would just upset her.  I sanyone's best interests really best served. 

Which takes me back to Adam and Eve and the apple. It seems to me that they were happy living in a world of illusion, where everyting was peaches and cream. The truth just made us all miserable. All I really concluded was that I'd make a very poor theologian. 


Friday, 20 February 2026

Back on track! What have I missed

 The more sharp eyed readers will have noticed a relative lack of activity on the Barnet Eye over the last week. There is a very good reason for this, I've not been being lazy. I've been in Portugal with my good mate, music maestro Boz Boorer mixing the brand new album by The False Dots. Boz lives in Monchique in Portugal, up a mountain. It is the perfect location to get totally immersed in mixing an album. This is pretty much all I did for four days!  


All of my creative energy was pretty much used up on the job at hand, and I didn't want to start getting sidetracked. It was nice being in the sunshine, away from the everyday distractions and the news. I deliberately avoided the news etc. 

I travelled back yesterday, got a takeaway curry then got home watched the news and BBC QT. Blimey.....

My first thought was I wished I'd stayed up the mointain! I'll give a short round up of what caught my eye.

The Artist formerly known a Prince Andrew. What on Earth can anyone say. I did a quick google to see how much he'd earned as a Royal from the Taxpayer (well it says from the Queen, but we all know where the cash really comes from "Total Official Funding: Over his roughly 40-year career as a working royal, he received an estimated £13 million (roughly $17.5 million) in public and royal-household funding.". For most people I know that would be plenty. He got free housing and accomodation. I recall his wedding well. I was workin in an office on Buckingham Palace Road. The Police and SAS used it as a hub, as the top two floors were empty. At the time he was a National Hero, a helicopter pilot from The Falklands. He was marrying Sarah Ferguson. She wasn't a beauty in the classic sense. I actually thought "He's a decent boke, clearly values personality over looks". He was a handsome Prince and I assumed he could have his pick of attractive young ladies. I recall a mate of mine saying "what's wrongw ith him marrying her?" I said "maybe he wants someone who will be a life partner and be on the same wavelength as him"..I suspect I was right, but not in the way I thought. In many ways, his life is a modern day Shakespearean tragedy. All Prince Andrew ever had to do was not be a complete twats and we'd have forgiven him anything. 

I got an inkling what he was actually like 20 years or so ago. A friend was having a 40th Birthday party at a club in Notting Hill Gate. Prince Andrew was at a party downstairs. He got very drunk and abusive and a couple of friends, witnessed him throw a tantrum. We can all have bad days, but what I heard was that this was the norm, not the exception. With every revealation, it becomes worse. Being involved with a dodgy paedophile is never good. Supplying one with dodgy information, so he can make millions is even worse. I have always been a republican. I said that out of respect for her Majesty The Queen, any decision on their future could wait. Butthe horrific truth is that had The King fallen off his horse in 1969 and killed himself, Andrew would be the King. Andrew has done more to undermine the Royals than every UK republican in the last 100 years. But the horrific truth is that The Queen, Charles, the lot of them all knew what he was like. 

Reform. Last night I watched BBC QT. WTF is going on at the BBC. They had Tories, Labour and Reform in QT last night. Where were the Lib Dems and the Greens? The bloke who was their spokesman was Robert Jenrick. A bloke who was a Tory until he decided that Reform had better career prospects. A man with no principles and no honour. Reform have more MP's who defected from the Tories than were elected. The truth is that the country is in a mess because of 14 years of Tory misrule. Jenrick was a big part of that. The only vaguely compelling argument for Reform was that they were untainted by the failure of Tory and Labour governments. Taking the worst of the Tory Party is IMHO a massive mistake.I have an aversion to people like Jenrick, but to me he came across as smug and irritating. A man who stabs all his former mates in the back to further his career is no good at all. 

Immigration. Journalist Jon Sopel made a fascinating revealation last night.  Net immigration to the UK is at a record low. I googled it and it appears to be true. Jon Sopel explained that if current trends continue, the UK may not actually be aable to function as a working economy in ten years. There simply won't be enough people to do all the key jobs. It would be the biggest irony of all, if Reform win in 2029 and have to increase immigration to stop an economic collapse. I need to do a lot more research to properly understand this, but should be the biggest story, as the wellbeing of the economy affects us all. No one seems to know.

Arsenal. This is one story I did know about. I always follow the football result. At Xmas, it looked like Arsenal were romping to the league title. Now they are having a serious wobble, dropping points to a team that had a single digit points tally with twelve games to go. I know, only too well, that you can't celebrate until the trophies are in the cupboard. It is clear that the Arsenal we are seeing in Februrary are a very different beast to the one we saw in December. Winning the Premiership is hard. Pressure is a funny thing and football puts pressure on teams like no other sport. When Wolves scored the equaliser, every Arsenal fan would have felt sick in their stomach. As to how the players felt. Ifyou want to be Champions, you need to pick yourself up and go again. I have seen many Arsenal fans starting to question Arteta. Careful what you wish for. You are still top of the league and it is still in your hands. I hope you lose, as a Mancheser City fan, but Arteta has done an amazing job and anyone who thinks that he's the wrong man should look at their nearest neighbours or City's. If you press the panic button every time things go badly, you end up in a mess. I actually quite like Arteta, tribal allegiances aside. He is a pragmatic manager, who gets results. He sometimes gets criticised for being over cautious, but he has to work with what he has got. Arsenal have far less resources than Mancheste United, but look at the difference in points. It is not Arteta's fault that he is competing against the best manager on the planet, with owners with the deepest pockets. Arsenal fans will hate me for saying this, but for Arsenal to win the league, CIty have to have an off season. And when I say a season, I mean 38 games. City have not been brilliant thus far, but they have a track record of doing the business when it matters. 

And finally....

It's Friday, so as is the tradition in Barnet blogs, here is a Friday joke. This made me laugh, which is probably a terrible indictment on me!

Have a great weekend



Tuesday, 17 February 2026

Brown sauce or Red sauce on your sausage sarnie

 Today’s discussion is perhaps one of the most fundamental questions of all. What is better on a sausage sarnie, brown or red sauce? In my 20’s, I’d definitely have said Heinz tomato ketchup, but I gave up eating meat for 16 years, and when I started eating it again, I realised HP sauce is far better. It has been suggested that Heinz changed the recipe to their ketchup. I don’t know if this is true, but I have to say I really don’t enjoy the taste or texture any more. Ian I alone in this? I need to know!

Saturday, 14 February 2026

Rock and Roll Stories #59 - 47 years ago today, my life changed forever

Is there a pivotal moment in your life, when things changed forever. When the old you faded and the new you, the real you was born? The birth of the new me was a long pregnancy. The eggs were fertilised on the 6th June 1977, when I saw The Ramones, The Talking Heads and The Saints at The Roundhouse. I discovered music. It was a radical change in my life, I found a new group of friends, new interests. But most of all, I wanted to be in a band. There were four problems. The first was that I couldn't play, the second was I didn't have an instrument, the third was I had no mates who could play and the fourth was, we had nowhere to rehearse. 

The first thing was to get a guitar and start learning to play. That was pretty easy. My sister had a black Columbus Les Paul copy. It looked great, but was almost unplayable and didn't stay in tune. But it was a guitar and so I started trying to learn chords. After seeeing The Ramones, I was chatting with a mate of mine (we were both alter servers at The Sacred Heart Church) and he told me he'd got into punk music. We had been mate since we were four and had even written songs together, sending them to glam rock mega stars Sparks, suggesting they needed a few decent songs, when we were 11 or 12. Needless to say, they weren't interested. But we agreed we'd learn to play. Pete didn't have any money or an instrument, but we decided he'd play bass. When he turned 16 in May 1978, he left school and got a job as a butcher at Dewhursts in Mill Hill. The aim was to get the money to buy a bass. Pete was an extremely bright guy and his Dad was horrified. But he was nothing of not strong minded. After a couple of months, Pete bought a bass and started learning it. We would sit in my bedroom every night, practising, writing songs, listening to punk rock and discussing politics. The Labour government of Jim Callaghan was falling apart. 

I was kicked out of Finchley Catholic High School in May after a disagreement with the hedmaster Nick Kelly, flunking my O Levels, as a result of spending every night doing the above. Unlike Pete, I decided that I needed to get some O levels. In Augsut 1978, I turned 16. This meant I had access to my bank account. My Mum had set up an account for me. In the 1960's I'd been a child actor/model and earned a decent amount of money from TV commercials I'd appeared in. On the day I turned 16, I went down to Don Mackrills Music shop in Edgware and bought a Hofner Galaxy guitar and a Fal 50 watt amp. My parents were horrified, but they could do nothing. They concluded it was proof I was an idiot. My parents tried to persuade me to hand over the cash to them 'for safekeeping'. I politely declined. I had a plan! They then informed me that they needed the cash as they were planning to buy Bunns Lane Works, where my Dad had his car repair business. If they didn't raise the cash, someone else could buy the site, as the Landlord was selling and had given Dad first refusal. I reluctantly handed over the cash (and never saw it again! I have no regrets though). I informed my parents I would only do it, if I was given a share of the yard and my mum drew up an agreement, that stated that I had to be consulted on all decisions and had a share. I signed and I never saw that again. Apparently it was lodged with her solicitors, but hey ho. 

In September 1978, I joined Orange Hill School to resit them. It was a pivotal moment. I met Boz Boorer, who was in The Polecats. They were a real band. It made me realise that being in a band wasn't a pie in the sky pipedream. If Boz could do it, so could we. There were two other bands at the school. My mate Joe Malone had a band with a guy called Steve Kutner, who would go on to be a football agent, managing Frank Lampard. Steve's uncle was Lord Levy, who owned Magnet Records. Steve got a job there, and signed Bad Manners and The Damned to the label! But when I joined he was the guitarist. Also in the band was Russell Smith, who was the younger brother of Graham Smith, Editor of The Face magazine. I can't recall what they were called, we always called them The Moje's. There was bad blood between Pete Conway and Joe Malone. Both were hot headed mavericks from solid Irish stock. They had a massive punch up, over who had been the first punk to wear bondage trousers in Mill Hill! I never really got the animosity, but they hated each other. The other band were The Rapids. A rythm and bliues band in the Doctor Feelgood mold. 

By January 1979, my Dad had tired of Pete and me making a racket in my bedroom. He made an offer I couldn't refuse. When he bought the yard, there was a derelict caretakers cottage, I could rent it from him for £2 a week, to rehearse in. I did some maths, If I rented it, I could charge the Mojes and the Rapids £2 each to rehearse every week and make a profit! The only problem was that we only had my amp. Discussions were had. It was agreed that we'd form a collective, all pool our gear and they could rehearse once a week for £2. 

In December 1978, we'd met a couple called Dave and Mandy at The Fall. Dave expressed an interest in drumming and Mandy in singing. Having sorted out the rehearsal space, we decided that we would have the first rehearsal and an opening party. We invited Dave and Mandy down to join the band, We also invited other friends, who had a band. We chose Valentines night, party because there was a girl I liked at school and thought it might lead to a romantic liaison. The only trouble was, we had an audience and had never actually played the songs. The other band came down and played a bunch of songs pretty well. We were absolute chaos. I don't think Dave had actually drummed before. He had two beats, Dave beat 1 and Dave beat 2. He told us that those were the only beats he knew, so Pete simply said "Start playing Dave beat one, and we'd join in. I had made a fuzz box from a design my former physics teacher John Shuttler at FCHS had given me. He'd given me a few bits. to get going. I couldn't afford the volume or attenuation pots, etc. So it was just on or off. It sounded like the devil, but suited the songs. 

Although we were complete rubbish, it was probably the most true punk rock gig ever. No one really knew what to make of it. Pete decided that we'd spend the whole rehearsal with the lights off and standing on chairs. We drank copious tins of beer. It was gloriously bad, everything we did was awful, but somehow, it felt amazing. I realised that if we could be that bad and still be good, there was something there. Dave was highly embarrassed about the whole thing, and insisted we rehearse properly before we let people watch us again. I am not really saw what Pete thought, he was clever enough to maintain the pretence that it was brilliant. I am not sure I ever had that feeling since, but we knew we had to be a million times better before we could gig. But we had done it. Both Mill HilL Music Complex and The False Dots were born today. Both are still going. I am not sure if I'd even be here if that hadn't happened. 

Here is the story of 1979 as I wrote it in my Scrapbook at the time





Today, I am going to Portugal to mix and master our new album. It will be called We don't live in America and will feature a song called Wrong, which was the first song we played at our first rehearsal, albiet a slightly different arrangement. 


Is there a pivotal moment in your life, when things changed forever. When the old you faded and the new you, the real you was born? The birth of the new me was a long pregnancy. The eggs were fertilised on the 6th June 1977, when I saw The Ramones, The Talking Heads and The Saints at The Roundhouse. I discovered music. It was a radical change in my life, I found a new group of friends, new interests. But most of all, I wanted to be in a band. There were four problems. The first was that I couldn't play, the second was I didn't have an instrument, the third was I had no mates who could play and the fourth was, we had nowhere to rehearse. 

The first thing was to get a guitar and start learning to play. That was pretty easy. My sister had a black Columbus Les Paul copy. It looked great, but was almost unplayable and didn't stay in tune. But it was a guitar and so I started trying to learn chords. After seeeing The Ramones, I was chatting with a mate of mine (we were both alter servers at The Sacred Heart Church) and he told me he'd got into punk music. We had been mate since we were four and had even written songs together, sending them to glam rock mega stars Sparks, suggesting they needed a few decent songs, when we were 11 or 12. Needless to say, they weren't interested. But we agreed we'd learn to play. Pete didn't have any money or an instrument, but we decided he'd play bass. When he turned 16 in May 1978, he left school and got a job as a butcher at Dewhursts in Mill Hill. The aim was to get the money to buy a bass. Pete was an extremely bright guy and his Dad was horrified. But he was nothing of not strong minded. After a couple of months, Pete bought a bass and started learning it. We would sit in my bedroom every night, practising, writing songs, listening to punk rock and discussing politics. The Labour government of Jim Callaghan was falling apart. 

I was kicked out of Finchley Catholic High School in May after a disagreement with the hedmaster Nick Kelly, flunking my O Levels, as a result of spending every night doing the above. Unlike Pete, I decided that I needed to get some O levels. In Augsut 1978, I turned 16. This meant I had access to my bank account. My Mum had set up an account for me. In the 1960's I'd been a child actor/model and earned a decent amount of money from TV commercials I'd appeared in. On the day I turned 16, I went down to Don Mackrills Music shop in Edgware and bought a Hofner Galaxy guitar and a Fal 50 watt amp. My parents were horrified, but they could do nothing. They concluded it was proof I was an idiot. My parents tried to persuade me to hand over the cash to them 'for safekeeping'. I politely declined. I had a plan! They then informed me that they needed the cash as they were planning to buy Bunns Lane Works, where my Dad had his car repair business. If they didn't raise the cash, someone else could buy the site, as the Landlord was selling and had given Dad first refusal. I reluctantly handed over the cash (and never saw it again! I have no regrets though). I informed my parents I would only do it, if I was given a share of the yard and my mum drew up an agreement, that stated that I had to be consulted on all decisions and had a share. I signed and I never saw that again. Apparently it was lodged with her solicitors, but hey ho. 

In September 1978, I joined Orange Hill School to resit them. It was a pivotal moment. I met Boz Boorer, who was in The Polecats. They were a real band. It made me realise that being in a band wasn't a pie in the sky pipedream. If Boz could do it, so could we. There were two other bands at the school. My mate Joe Malone had a band with a guy called Steve Kutner, who would go on to be a football agent, managing Frank Lampard. Steve's uncle was Lord Levy, who owned Magnet Records. Steve got a job there, and signed Bad Manners and The Damned to the label! But when I joined he was the guitarist. Also in the band was Russell Smith, who was the younger brother of Graham Smith, Editor of The Face magazine. I can't recall what they were called, we always called them The Moje's. There was bad blood between Pete Conway and Joe Malone. Both were hot headed mavericks from solid Irish stock. They had a massive punch up, over who had been the first punk to wear bondage trousers in Mill Hill! I never really got the animosity, but they hated each other. The other band were The Rapids. A rythm and bliues band in the Doctor Feelgood mold. 

By January 1979, my Dad had tired of Pete and me making a racket in my bedroom. He made an offer I couldn't refuse. When he bought the yard, there was a derelict caretakers cottage, I could rent it from him for £2 a week, to rehearse in. I did some maths, If I rented it, I could charge the Mojes and the Rapids £2 each to rehearse every week and make a profit! The only problem was that we only had my amp. Discussions were had. It was agreed that we'd form a collective, all pool our gear and they could rehearse once a week for £2. 

In December 1978, we'd met a couple called Dave and Mandy at The Fall. Dave expressed an interest in drumming and Mandy in singing. Having sorted out the rehearsal space, we decided that we would have the first rehearsal and an opening party. We invited Dave and Mandy down to join the band, We also invited other friends, who had a band. We chose Valentines night, party because there was a girl I liked at school and thought it might lead to a romantic liaison. The only trouble was, we had an audience and had never actually played the songs. The other band came down and played a bunch of songs pretty well. We were absolute chaos. I don't think Dave had actually drummed before. He had two beats, Dave beat 1 and Dave beat 2. He told us that those were the only beats he knew, so Pete simply said "Start playing Dave beat one, and we'd join in. I had made a fuzz box from a design my former physics teacher John Shuttler at FCHS had given me. He'd given me a few bits. to get going. I couldn't afford the volume or attenuation pots, etc. So it was just on or off. It sounded like the devil, but suited the songs. 

Although we were complete rubbish, it was probably the most true punk rock gig ever. No one really knew what to make of it. Pete decided that we'd spend the whole rehearsal with the lights off and standing on chairs. We drank copious tins of beer. It was gloriously bad, everything we did was awful, but somehow, it felt amazing. I realised that if we could be that bad and still be good, there was something there. Dave was highly embarrassed about the whole thing, and insisted we rehearse properly before we let people watch us again. I am not really saw what Pete thought, he was clever enough to maintain the pretence that it was brilliant. I am not sure I ever had that feeling since, but we knew we had to be a million times better before we could gig. But we had done it. Both Mill HilL Music Complex and The False Dots were born today. Both are still going. I am not sure if I'd even be here if that hadn't happened. 

Here is the story of 1979 as I wrote it in my Scrapbook at the time


Today, I am going to Portugal to mix and master our new album. It will be called We don't live in America and will feature a song called Wrong, which was the first song we played at our first rehearsal, albiet a slightly different arrangement. 


Is there a pivotal moment in your life, when things changed forever. When the old you faded and the new you, the real you was born? The birth of the new me was a long pregnancy. The eggs were fertilised on the 6th June 1977, when I saw The Ramones, The Talking Heads and The Saints at The Roundhouse. I discovered music. It was a radical change in my life, I found a new group of friends, new interests. But most of all, I wanted to be in a band. There were four problems. The first was that I couldn't play, the second was I didn't have an instrument, the third was I had no mates who could play and the fourth was, we had nowhere to rehearse. 

The first thing was to get a guitar and start learning to play. That was pretty easy. My sister had a black Columbus Les Paul copy. It looked great, but was almost unplayable and didn't stay in tune. But it was a guitar and so I started trying to learn chords. After seeeing The Ramones, I was chatting with a mate of mine (we were both alter servers at The Sacred Heart Church) and he told me he'd got into punk music. We had been mate since we were four and had even written songs together, sending them to glam rock mega stars Sparks, suggesting they needed a few decent songs, when we were 11 or 12. Needless to say, they weren't interested. But we agreed we'd learn to play. Pete didn't have any money or an instrument, but we decided he'd play bass. When he turned 16 in May 1978, he left school and got a job as a butcher at Dewhursts in Mill Hill. The aim was to get the money to buy a bass. Pete was an extremely bright guy and his Dad was horrified. But he was nothing of not strong minded. After a couple of months, Pete bought a bass and started learning it. We would sit in my bedroom every night, practising, writing songs, listening to punk rock and discussing politics. The Labour government of Jim Callaghan was falling apart. 

I was kicked out of Finchley Catholic High School in May after a disagreement with the hedmaster Nick Kelly, flunking my O Levels, as a result of spending every night doing the above. Unlike Pete, I decided that I needed to get some O levels. In Augsut 1978, I turned 16. This meant I had access to my bank account. My Mum had set up an account for me. In the 1960's I'd been a child actor/model and earned a decent amount of money from TV commercials I'd appeared in. On the day I turned 16, I went down to Don Mackrills Music shop in Edgware and bought a Hofner Galaxy guitar and a Fal 50 watt amp. My parents were horrified, but they could do nothing. They concluded it was proof I was an idiot. My parents tried to persuade me to hand over the cash to them 'for safekeeping'. I politely declined. I had a plan! They then informed me that they needed the cash as they were planning to buy Bunns Lane Works, where my Dad had his car repair business. If they didn't raise the cash, someone else could buy the site, as the Landlord was selling and had given Dad first refusal. I reluctantly handed over the cash (and never saw it again! I have no regrets though). I informed my parents I would only do it, if I was given a share of the yard and my mum drew up an agreement, that stated that I had to be consulted on all decisions and had a share. I signed and I never saw that again. Apparently it was lodged with her solicitors, but hey ho. 

In September 1978, I joined Orange Hill School to resit them. It was a pivotal moment. I met Boz Boorer, who was in The Polecats. They were a real band. It made me realise that being in a band wasn't a pie in the sky pipedream. If Boz could do it, so could we. There were two other bands at the school. My mate Joe Malone had a band with a guy called Steve Kutner, who would go on to be a football agent, managing Frank Lampard. Steve's uncle was Lord Levy, who owned Magnet Records. Steve got a job there, and signed Bad Manners and The Damned to the label! But when I joined he was the guitarist. Also in the band was Russell Smith, who was the younger brother of Graham Smith, Editor of The Face magazine. I can't recall what they were called, we always called them The Moje's. There was bad blood between Pete Conway and Joe Malone. Both were hot headed mavericks from solid Irish stock. They had a massive punch up, over who had been the first punk to wear bondage trousers in Mill Hill! I never really got the animosity, but they hated each other. The other band were The Rapids. A rythm and bliues band in the Doctor Feelgood mold. 

By January 1979, my Dad had tired of Pete and me making a racket in my bedroom. He made an offer I couldn't refuse. When he bought the yard, there was a derelict caretakers cottage, I could rent it from him for £2 a week, to rehearse in. I did some maths, If I rented it, I could charge the Mojes and the Rapids £2 each to rehearse every week and make a profit! The only problem was that we only had my amp. Discussions were had. It was agreed that we'd form a collective, all pool our gear and they could rehearse once a week for £2. 

In December 1978, we'd met a couple called Dave and Mandy at The Fall. Dave expressed an interest in drumming and Mandy in singing. Having sorted out the rehearsal space, we decided that we would have the first rehearsal and an opening party. We invited Dave and Mandy down to join the band, We also invited other friends, who had a band. We chose Valentines night, party because there was a girl I liked at school and thought it might lead to a romantic liaison. The only trouble was, we had an audience and had never actually played the songs. The other band came down and played a bunch of songs pretty well. We were absolute chaos. I don't think Dave had actually drummed before. He had two beats, Dave beat 1 and Dave beat 2. He told us that those were the only beats he knew, so Pete simply said "Start playing Dave beat one, and we'd join in. I had made a fuzz box from a design my former physics teacher John Shuttler at FCHS had given me. He'd given me a few bits. to get going. I couldn't afford the volume or attenuation pots, etc. So it was just on or off. It sounded like the devil, but suited the songs. 

Although we were complete rubbish, it was probably the most true punk rock gig ever. No one really knew what to make of it. Pete decided that we'd spend the whole rehearsal with the lights off and standing on chairs. We drank copious tins of beer. It was gloriously bad, everything we did was awful, but somehow, it felt amazing. I realised that if we could be that bad and still be good, there was something there. Dave was highly embarrassed about the whole thing, and insisted we rehearse properly before we let people watch us again. I am not really saw what Pete thought, he was clever enough to maintain the pretence that it was brilliant. I am not sure I ever had that feeling since, but we knew we had to be a million times better before we could gig. But we had done it. Both Mill HilL Music Complex and The False Dots were born today. Both are still going. I am not sure if I'd even be here if that hadn't happened. 

Here is the story of 1979 as I wrote it in my Scrapbook at the time


Today, I am going to Portugal to mix and master our new album. It will be called We don't live in America and will feature a song called Wrong, which was the first song we played at our first rehearsal, albiet a slightly different arrangement. 


Wednesday, 11 February 2026

My worst nightmare, Reform win the next election

 I had a terrible nightmare last night. Sir Keir Starmer had called a snap general election and Reform UK had won with 450 seats. The Labour Party was reduced to 9 seats. The Lib Dems were the second biggest Party with 130 seats. The Tories had also done rather badly. I was watching the coverage of Nigel Farage at the plinth outside number ten, doing all of the things that Farage does that makes me dislike him intensely. As I was watching, my whatsapp was pinging with gloating messages from my Reform supporting friends and acquaintances.

Now the thing about democracy is that it does mean that you spend much of your life with people running the country who you can't stand, but at least they get booted out occasionally. We have seen what happens to people in China this week, who disagree with unelected despots. People like Farage are the downside (for me), but whoever replaces Starmer, whenever they come in and whatever party they represent, they will just be transient residents of No 10. The saving grace of my  nightmare is that Farage would be just as transient as Boris, Keir, May and Truss. 

The real horror of the dream though wasn't Farage himself. If Reform win, whatever you may or may not think of Farage, it will be a personal mandate, in a way that no other British Prime Minister  has had. No one voted for Keir for his charisma or personality. They voted Labour, for the party, Starmer was always just the bloke at the top. If Reform win, then we have to acknowledge that Farage has a mandate. However the problem is that Reform has no one in its ranks with experience of government. The only people who have real political experience of doing top jobs are Tory defectors, who by and large were mostly booted out for being either useless or a bit dodgy. Farage has got very sparse cupboard to choose from, when it comes to appointments. There is an argument that a new broom is needed, but anyone who has ever dealt with civil servants, knows they will run rings about inexperienced ministers. 

There is a bit of me that is curious as to how Farage would get on with Trump if he became tomorrow. If, as is more likely, the election is 2029, Farage may find himself having to deal with a Democrat, who would be none to impressed with Farage and his links to Trump. 

In my nightmare, I was thinking about what to say in a blog. The absolute bottom line is that both Labour and The Tories deserve to be decimated at the polls. Starmer's judgement has been appalling. He came out yesterday saying "I've won every fight I've been in". I've watched a lot of boxers make similar claims. Then they get their head knocked off, because they've not really been in a proper fight. I cannot see any scenario where Starmer can regain his credibility. Usually the Captain goes down with the sinking ship, but it is rare for the Captain to ram an Iceberg first. Any sane person would have known how the Mandelson appointment would play out. Starmer lost his chief of staff, but if he couldn't see the advice was flawed, he's an idiot. 

Then there are the Tories. Kemi Badenoch has had a good two weeks, but she has been given a massive open goal. No one could miss from where she was at PMQ's last week. The sad truth is that one good PMQ in nearly two years is an appalling record. What really shocks me is that Badenoch has no strategy to counter Farage.  She seems to be pushing the party into the right wing fringes. This is suicide. Farage has already claimed that space. He's nicked most of the high profile hard right big hitters already. The Tories tend to win when they are percieved as a sane, centre right party. It is the sensible centre right voters who are moving to the Lib Dems who she needs, but she seems intent on alienating them.

In my dream, Sir Ed Davey and the Lib Dems became the official opposition. With Starmer being useless, Badenoch fighting a war for the hard right with Reform, no one has asked the question "could the Lib Dems actually win?", which puzzles me. They have experience in government, with the coalition. Davey has played a blinder on the Mandelson issue. He is criticised for being a lightweight clown, but he is a decent man. The Lib Dems showed they could function as a party of government in the coalition. It is really not to my taste, but I could see a scenario where the Lib Dems and either Labour or the Tories have enough seats to form a government. If the Tories had the choice between a coalition with Reform or the Lib Dems, which way would they jump? It is clear to me that Labour would happily ditch Starmer and hook up with the Lib Dems. 


....
The polls tell a very interesting story. The latest poll today shows Reform with a 7% lead over Labour. I cannot imagine that there would be a worse time to be the Labour Party or possibly a better time to be Reform. But they are only on 30%. There is an argument that the right wing voters make up over 50% of the electors, but I suspect that the 21% who are still Tories are not going to switch to Reform. As for Reform's 30%, I also suspect that 10% of them are disgruntled Labour supporters. 

What this poll doesn't say is how any of these voters would vote tactically. The Lib Dems are masters of getting people to lend them votes. Both Tory and Labour voters can stomach a Lib Dem vote if they percieve it will keep a party they don't like out. My prediction is that the election will be in 2029 and the result will be a hung parliament. I genuinely have no idea how that will break down or whether it will end up with a Tory/DUP/Reform government ( I suspect that would be Badenoch's choice), a Tory/Lib Dem alliance (likely if Badenoch goes and someone like Jeremy Hunt takes over), or a Labour/Lib Dem alliance (Wes Streeting might go for this). I genuionely believe that Reform will not be 7 points ahead by 2029, despite the best efforts of Starme and Badenoch to make them look like a feasable choice. 

Anyway, I must say that I was glad to wake up. I know there are a few people in Barnet who wished I hadn't but hey ho..

Monday, 9 February 2026

Perspective

Mu Cephei. Never heard of it? Well maybe you should have. It is the largest object that any human can see without a telescope. If you took a picture, you would see the star as it appeared 2,400 years ago, because the light has travelled 2,400 light years to reach us. It's radius is 1,000 times that of the Sun. But in London, most of the time you'd need binoculars to pick this giant out. There are thousands of stars in the sky which are brighter. The Brightest start in the night sky is Sirius, which is only about 2 times more massive than the Sun. It is a mere 7.5 light years away so it appears brighter. 

Now the Barnet Eye does not normally concern itself with Astronomy. There are many great things in London, but with all of the light pollution, it is not a great place for stargazing. However the night sky has always held a strong fascination for me. When I was a kid, before I discovered punk rock, I quite fancied becoming an Astronomer. I liked the idea of getting paid to stay up all night looking at stars. My Dad once explained that it was not a well paid job and I'd be better off becoming a plumber, especially as I was far too thick to be an astronomer. Dad knew the stars. He had trained as an RAF pilot and could use them to navigate his Wellington bomber. I was fascinated when Dad explained that you could tell exactly where you were at night if you had a good watch, a compass and could see the stars. He then confessed that pilots preferred it when it was a bit cloudy and there was no moon, as there was less chance of a fighter seeing you.

Dad explained how the RAF in North Africa made fake runways and airfields with with model planes lined up to fool the German bombers. These were smaller than real planes, but it was impossible for the Germans to tell as the perspective fooled them. He explained that the bigger an object was, the further away you had to be to properly appreciate it. For instance, the Earth is massive and has all manner of regions and areas, but we only see the tiny little bit we are stood on. It seems incongruous that someone in Australia, Thailand, the USA or the North pole is on the same planet and breathing the same air, but they are. 

Some time in the next couple of months, a crew of Astronauts will fly around the moon. They will be the first humans since before I was a teenager to see the Earth from the other side of the moon. When Neil Armstrong landed on the moon 1969, I assumed that by now, we'd have bases on the Moon and Mars, but when Apollo 17 completed its mission, that was that. Can you imagine what it will be like to see the Earth as a small disc, that you can blot out if you hold a 2p at arms length? I would love to see the view, but it is a very long journey to the far side of the moon and I actually think it would be rather boring for most of the time. When  I was about 14, I realised that going to see The Ramones was far more exciting that looking at the moon with my telescope. The moon we see today is the same one that Jesus and the prophets looked up at millenia ago. However, if the likes of Elon Musk and his friends have their way, within our lifetime, it will look different. When we see the crescent moon, we will see faint lights twinkling, as humans build outposts and then cities. Can you imagine that we will be the first human generation to be able to see the artefacts of our fellow human beings on another world?

Mr Musk believes there is serious money to be made by developing the moon and building factories there. The appeal (rather sadly) seems to be that you can engage in mining and other dirty industries with no planning restrictions. My Dad had a mate from his air force days, who was involved in the British Space projects of the 1950's and 1960's. He had a novel view. He said that the British should not bother with exploring other planets. We should concentrate on getting satellites to the asteroid belt, as there was most like huge resources of almost pure precious metals there. Very little mining would be needed. Sadly, the British government cancelled the whole thing. It seems that these days, the British Government could not organise a brewery trip for a bunch of drunks, let alone a ground breaking space project.

Perspective. We have come full circle. I started by explaining how the biggest thing you will ever see is only just visible and unless you are an astronomy nut, you've probably never heard of it. I also explained how you can only see things properly with some distance, which is why we have no real appreciation of the Earth. Likewise, the British government of the 1960's couldn't see that they had world beating technology in the 1960's that could have made us the richest nation on the planet, if exploited properly. Satellite launches are a massively lucrative building and there is a massive shortage of rare metals. We could have been ahead of the game, but we chose to throw it all away. 

But with distance and perspective, come perhaps the most dangerous thing of all. Enlightenment. If we all realised just how small and fragile our planet is in the scheme of things that is the Universe, could we really cope. I can recall once travelling by train from Washington to New York. As you approached New York, the first thing you saw was the two buildings that were the World Trade Centre. This was followed by the Empire State building, then the other skyscrapers. It seemed that for almost an hour the picture grew ever bigger, but by the time you arrived you couldn't see any of them. What seemed so calm and impressive on the Horizon became a bustling concrete jungle as you stepped off the train, I found it almost disturbing to contemplate how you could see the same thing from two different places and it could seem so different. 

Which brings me to the point. We, the UK are in crisis. For years, most of us saw our government and our leaders as I saw New York on the skyline. Distant and incomprehensible. The modern age of social media and instant news has laid it bare, Nothing is as it seems. A horrible thought occurred to me. Just suppose that our leaders are actually the best of a bad bunch? If you look at the UK, it is not that bad. Find yourself a globe and stick a pin in a country you'd rather live in. Then do a quick google to see the scandals and the tittle tattle there. As I explained, I put down the telescope and stopped staring at the Moon, when I discovered The Ramones. Over the last couple of years, I have done the same thing with the news. I suspect if it wasn't for The Ramones and the other music I love, it really might just be too much. I am by nature an optimist, but it is reaching the point where all I can do is despair and pretend it isn't happening. I have no idea whether Mu Cephei has a habitable planet circling it, with people like you and me living on it. Just for a second imagine they are, they are seeing the light arriving from Earth 2,400 years ago. They are seeing light from a time when Greek and Babylonian civilisation was at its peak. Maybe, they have the problems we have. Maybe they see that little blue planet in their telescope and like me, when I saw New York, think what a lovely place, it looks so serene and peaceful, as it emerged over the horizon. 

To sum up - Perspective - Too close and you see nothing, too far away and everything looks wonderful - Where does the truth lie? Maybe you don't want to know

Time to scrap VAR - Football is being ruined by it

 Two weeks ago, I went to see QPR vs Wrexham at Loftus Road. The ground was packed and raucous. I was with the Welsh boys, I've been a part time Wrexham fan since the mid 1980's, when I worked with a mate from North Wales, who suggested I tag along to watch a match with him and his mates, and a few bevvies and a curry afterwards. Other commitments allowing, I've been to see them once or twice a season most years since. Since they became a Hollywood sensation, I've not been able to get tickets. However one of the Wales boys dropped out, so I got a ticket. 

Going to a packed stadium for a game with no VAR was so refreshing. The game had one of the best second halves of football I've seen, with Wrexham taking off two defenders and throwing the kitchen sink at QPR for the last few minutes, turning a 2-1 defecit into a 3-2 victory. The Rangers fans were devastated, the Welsh boys elated. For me, it was an object lesson in why I love football.

Yesterday, I watched Liverpool vs Manchester City from the luxury of my sofa. The game was a Premier League classic. City turned around a 1-0 defecit to win 2-1. There were worldies, great saves, some amazing skill and until the last seconds no one knew who would win. All manner of teams were affected by the outcome. A Liverpool win would almost certainly, hand Arsenal an all but unassailable lead in the title race. It would also put Liverpool right back in the race for a Champions League place. A City win would put them back on Arsenal's tails. They are six points behind, but have to play the Gunners at home.

Liverpool (as always seems to be the case) came out clearly feeling they'd been robbed. Their manager Arne Slot felt City defender Mark Guehi should have been sent off for a foul outside the box. He felt VAR had not been fair, as "anyone who had watched Salah would know he would score". Salah rather undermined this claim, ballooning the resulting free kick over the bar. The truth is that Salah has been out of sorts and spent rather too long throwing himself on the floor and waving his arms around when he didn't get what he wanted. The VAR panel correctly (IMHO) decided that it was not a clear and obvious Red Card. The trouble is that such decisions will always be subjective. I think that if Slot encouraged Salah to stay on his feet rather than diving every time he felt a slight brush from another player, he may get more lucky. But that is by the by. The bottom line is that we all had to wait for a minute or two before VAR decided that the Ref was right and that Ruben Diaz would probably have made a tackle.

However that was not the worst example of VAR madness. That happened at the end of the game. City were 2-1 up. The Liverpool keep Allison had gone forward in a desperate attempt to help Liverpool score an equaliser. The ball broke, City's Cherkie hit the ball towards the goal. Erling Haaland and Dominic Szoboszlai, who had both scored, got in a race. The Liverpool player tried to pull Haaland back, then Haaland did the same. Neither reached the ball, so it crossed the line. There were seconds left. City celebrated the third. Then the dreaded VAR stepped in. The goal was chalked off, and the Liverpool player was sent off. The reason being that because Haaland had fouled Szoboszlai, they had to pull the game back and give City a free kick from outside the box, which meant the Liverpool player went. Both teams were punished. There was no room for common sense at all. Liverpool now have a key player suspended and City have one less goal in a tight title race. As ever, we hear "the rules are the rules".

Football is meant to be a form of entertainment. However these sort of decision destroy all of the drama and excitement. Unlike the Wrexham game, I suspect that despite the game being a classic, both sets of fans would be highly frustrated with VAR. Manchester City have a goal difference of five less than Arsenal. In the event that all other results are the same and CIty win 2 games 1-0 and Arsenal lose two games 1-0, then that goal will send the title to the Emirates. As for Liverpool,  Szoboszlai was their best player. If they drop points during his ban, then that could also have a massive effect on the shake up for European places, for what was an incident that didn't change the outcome of what should have happened.

Sticklers for rules and the law will say that VAR got it right. Every football fan on the planet will disagree. Football is a massive business and the customers (the fans) are probably the worst treated customers around. Our views are never listened to. We are just cash cows, our tribal loyalties make us ripe for ripping off. As a Manchester City fan, I've seen us be on the receiving end of both bad and good decisions. I am sure that it balances out eventually.If it was instant, I'd probably tolerate it. What bothers me is the fact that it takes so long. I am sure more players are getting muscle tears etc, as the hanging around means their muscles tighten. In the stadium, you rarely know what has actually happened. We now have referee's explaining the VAR decision, but I wonder if anyone could actually hear through the noise of Anfield.

For the number of times VAR makes a positively good decision, it just isn't worth the disruption to the game. I am sure anyone at the QPR vs Wrexham game with me would agree. As would most people at Anfield yesterday. But we are just the mugs who fund the whole thing. Before VAR came in, there were warnings that it would disrupt the flow of the game. It's beena round a few years now and if anything it is getting worse.

Sunday, 8 February 2026

The Sunday Reflection #76 - Sex and Money - the root of all evil (and all the best stories)

One question that people keep asking me, not that I am an more clued up than anyone else, is why on Earth Sir Keir Starmer was so stupid as to not dismiss out of hand the suggestion that Peter Mandelson become US ambassador, given his record of dodgy financial dealings and his close association with Paedophile Peter Mandelson. Whilst I cannot really throw any light on such matters, I do recall some advice my Dad gave me, when I was in my early teens. He said "Son, the most important lesson you can ever learn, is that if someone is behaving in a way that you cannot fathom, then there is either sex or money involved". The current scandal has both and in the most unsavoury of ways. 

One of the more interesting things that you learn when you dig into politics is how much richer people seem to become when they hold public office. It also seems to do wonder for their libido's. There are many lessons to learn from the whole sorry Epstein business and most of them are very disturbing. It is clear that you can make a huge amount of money operating a peadophile procurement business for rich and powerful men. It is also clear that when you become a liability to the men who you've been supplying with children, you are disposed of. It is also abundently clear that many of the worlds most powerful men think that money gives them the right to become sex abusers. One of the darkest elements of the whole tawdry affair is that it also shows that no one in power gives a stuff about the victims of rich and powerful sex abusers. 

I am in many ways what we might call quite old fashioned in my views. I have only ever really been interested in sex in a consensual relationship, where both parties like each other. The idea of giving a woman who doesn't like me cash to have sex with me is something I find most unappealing. When I was a teenager, I worked as a painter and decorator. I worked repainting the home that a local Madame used as brothel. I spent about four weeks tarting it up (forgive the pun). I got to know several of the girls who worked there. None did it because they liked the work. None of them had any respect for the punters, except for one guy. He was disabled and in a wheelchair. His brother used tp bring him once a month for a treat. The brother would bring biscuits and chat to the girls over a cup of tea, whilst his brother was being entertained. One of the girls told me that they were the only customers they had any respect for. They would make a special effort for him. The customers were all respectable men, policemen, bankers, GP's and JP's. When you work on a place, you almost become part of the furniture. The lady who ran the place was keen on a safe environment, no pimps, diserespectful customers were chucked out. But ultimately it was all a bit dehumanising and sad. 

When I read about Epstein Island and the likes of Prince Andrew, I can't help but feel sick. Epstein clearly thought he had the perfect setup. He thought his rich and powerful clients would protect him. He was wrong. I suspect that in a few years, there will be a film about the whole sorry mess, rather like the film about the Profumo affair. There are millions of documents being released. The whole thing has already brought down a Prince and an ambassador. It is likely to bring down a Prime Minister and possibly a President. The more I read about Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, the more I am convinced that for them, it was all just a rather grubby money making scheme. Epstein ended up knowing too much and having too many names and dates in his little black book. I doubt anyone really believes he committed suicide. The web is full of theories, but I suspect the number of people who had an interest in seeing him gone was a rather long one. Will the truth ever come out? I suspect that it will be like the assassination of JFK. The problem is that there are so many players who it suited to see them gone that the truth will only ever really come out when we are all dead and gone.

The one question I have been pondering is this. How many other Jeffrey Epsteins are there out there. He had a lucrative little set up and presumably there is a vacancy for someone to do that sort of thing for the rich, powerful paedophiles who seem to run the world. The sad truth is that such people are all around us. Just because Epstein is dead, the men who he procured young girls for are still around, still with bulging wallets and sick desires. They will have learned the lessons of Epstein. The lesson I suspect they've learned is to be a lot more careful with the noncemasters they employ. My worry is that all that has happened is that it will be harder to catch them next time.

The sad truth is that  Sex and Money - the root of all evil. It is also at the core of all the best stories. In about 10-15 years, I suspect an "Epstein Island" film will come out and rather like the JFK film, will raise a lot of speculation about the various players. What it won't do is tell us anything about the next Jeffrey Epstein and his clients.  The only thing I can say I am really sure about is that the next Epstein is out there and doing rather well procuruing young girls and selling them to rich men. That is a very sad truth.