Friday, 31 July 2020

Friday July 31st 2020


10:00 Our neighbour Frances calls round with some green beans she has just picked, and later Waghornes, the butcher’s shop in the village delivers our meat and cheese order.

We put the grocery order in by phone to Budgens our local convenience store for delivery tomorrow. We’ve asked for Magnums, Cornettos and other ice creams and are keeping our fingers crossed. Our daughter Alison, husband Ed and their 3 children are visiting us from Haslemere on Sunday, the first time we have seen them since Christmas.

(left to right) Josie (now 13), Alison, Rosalind (12), Isaac (10), and Ed,
pictured last year at Wembley Stadium

11:00 The “food shopping” over and done with, Lois and I can now hunker down – it’s going to be 91F/33C today – the hottest day of the year so far, so we don our lightest clothing and do a bit of mild dusting before collapsing in a heap. The temperature’s going to come crashing down starting tomorrow, so it’s not worth doing any work today – “never do today what you can put off till tomorrow”, as the old adage says haha.


We get loads of advice about how to avoid COVID-19 but nothing about dealing with this heatwave! What madness! 

It's different in America, as this story from the influential American news web site Onion News indicates.



Emphasizing the importance of staying cool and hydrated during the record-breaking temperatures, America’s National Weather Service stressed Thursday that those in the path of the upcoming heat wave should crawl towards the sparkling, cold spring shimmering at the edge of their vision.

“Should you, in a moment of thirst, suddenly hear the sound of running water, or spot a picturesque, babbling brook in the distance, we urge you to drop to your knees and pull yourself towards it,” said director of the National Weather Service Dr. Louis W. Uccellini, instructing all those affected by extreme heat to be extra vigilant should they see a shaded area, a waterfall, or a group of naked women splashing in the water beckoning them to come swim.

Sound practical advice! That’s what we lack in this country – our super-conservative Met Office won’t commit to issuing any concrete measures for us Brits to adopt today to deal with the crisis. They prefer to sit on the fence as usual! 

Why not publish maps indicating the nearest shaded areas, babbling brooks, waterfalls and naked bathers? Would that be so difficult????

What’s wrong with us in Britain? What a crazy country we live in !!!!

19:00 Our daughter Alison and her family are dining out in a local pub garden near Haslemere tonight. Let’s hope they “keep safe”, as they’re seeing us on Sunday – yikes!!!!

Alison and family this evening, in a pub garden just outside Haslemere

20:00 We listen to the radio, an interesting programme, first part of 2, dealing with the current crisis in American democracy as regards voting procedures and rules.


Presenter Ben Wheeler takes us through all the barriers to poor and/or non-white voters which, since the American Civil War, various states have erected over the years, chipping away at any attempts at a national level. to outlaw such practices, such as like LBJ’s legislation in the 1960’s. Also the current controversy about postal voting – Republicans say it leads to fraud, although the stats show it’s negligible. And it’s not completely clear in any case which party it will help most – good grief!

The partisanship of most of the Republicans and Democrats Wheeler interviews is incredibly fierce, and it makes us realise how valuable the spirit of bipartisanship is, and how it should be preserved at all costs – when it flies out the window, fairness goes with it, and it’s the electorate that suffers for it.

The situation as we approach the November elections is that neither side can bring itself to contemplate the prospect of losing – so what will happen? We look forward to part 2 of this series next week.

Yikes !!!!

20:30 We watch a bit of TV – the first episode in a new series of ex-cabinet minister Michael Portillo’s train journeys across the continent.


For documentary-lovers like Lois and me it’s slim pickings at the moment – a lot of repeats and rehashes and not much new, apart from the occasional pre-COVID travel programme that the networks have still got in the can.

Travel documentaries are not really our bag, and more and more we see things in them we’ve seen before, in other travel documentaries: oh dear!

But it’s interesting to see tonight presenter Michael Portillo, a minister in Margaret Thatcher's government in the 1980's, looking at the file that Franco’s authorities kept on Michael’s father, a liberal academic, in the 1930's. His father eventually escaped to England where he met Michael’s mother in Oxford.

It’s also interesting to see Michael chatting with George Orwell’s son, Richard Blair, who shows Michael where the Civil War battle lines were near the town of Huesca.

George Orwell's son, Richard Blair, shows Michael
where the battle lines were near Huesca during the Civil War

George Orwell became a socialist in the 1930’s when he worked in the British police force in Burma: he came to realise that the British Empire came nowhere near to fulfilling the ideals it professed to be espousing.

Orwell then went to Spain, first as a journalist to cover the Civil War, and then actually taking part in the fighting on the side of the Left.

What he took away from his Spanish experience, however, was an undying abhorrence of Communism, which he expressed most famously in his books "Animal Farm" and "1984". And “1984” has arguably been the most influential contribution of English literature to the realisation of what totalitarianism means in practice, whatever the propaganda says!

22:00 We go to bed – zzzzzzzzz!!!!!!




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