Robt Fenwick Elliott

4.9K posts

Robt Fenwick Elliott

Robt Fenwick Elliott

@RFenell

Where we are is where we sleep at night

Myponga Beach Katılım Ekim 2009
173 Takip Edilen344 Takipçiler
Robt Fenwick Elliott
@ClarkeMicah For many of us "private motor cars", as @clarkemicah calls them, are a real boon. When I lived in London, having a car was admittedly a bit of a luxury. But now I live in rural South Australia, it is an absolute necessity. A brilliant invention!
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Peter Hitchens
Peter Hitchens@ClarkeMicah·
3/3 .@rfenell And tax on cars does not begin to pay for the congestion and carnage, deaths, injuries, pollution, ill-health and noise nuisance they bring about . Private motor cars have been a failure for a century. We subsidise that failure.
Robt Fenwick Elliott@RFenell

@ClarkeMicah @Dead_as_a_dodo I like @ClarkeMicah. But this one is downright silly. Cars work fine without a subsidy. For sure they need roads which are paid for by taxes, but the cost of roads is much less than the tax on cars

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Robt Fenwick Elliott
@ellymelly I thank my mother for ensuring that I got chicken pox and measles when I was a small child. Immunity for life.
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Alexandra Marshall
Alexandra Marshall@ellymelly·
Shingles is all over the news again. You know, when I was a kid, our preschool closed for a week so all the kids could get together in a 'party' where we all deliberately caught ChickenPox. And that was it. One week of scratching and nothing for the rest of our lives. Then, they brought in the ChickenPox vaccine. STOPPED kids getting the virus naturally. You were told you were an irresponsible parent if you let your kid get ChickenPox. And all of a sudden, young adults have Shingles. You can't tell me something went wrong.
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Robt Fenwick Elliott
@A1an_M Darren Jones is ghastly. But probably less ghastly than Rayner or Miliband? That is a VERY low bar.
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Robt Fenwick Elliott
@LozzaFox It is the case that the advances made by pretty much every civilization in the world ever were achieved without women having the vote.
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Laurence Fox
Laurence Fox@LozzaFox·
We should discuss whether giving women the vote is actually a good idea.
Laurence Fox tweet media
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Robt Fenwick Elliott
@JEyal_RUSI An Argentinian once told me of his view that Argentinians are a bunch of Italians who speak Spanish and who think they are English.
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Frog
Frog@MartyMcFrog·
@ClarkeMicah @RFenell 1. Insinuate that Mr. H is an idiot. 2. Flee as if accosted while closing down dialogue in the manner of a victim when challenged on the inflammatory statement. Who are these people? They are everywhere.
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Peter Hitchens
Peter Hitchens@ClarkeMicah·
.@rfenell. Perhaps, if you can’t discuss the matter without unearned superiority, best not do so at all. You levelled the accusation of ‘irrationality’ , which is quite rude. Now you find you can’t justify it, but lack the courage to admit it.
Robt Fenwick Elliott@RFenell

@ClarkeMicah A number of my dearest friends have religious beliefs. I do not get stuck in the mire of pointless argument with them. Enjoy your day, @ClarkeMicah, with my very best wishes.

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Robt Fenwick Elliott
There are both similarities and differences between religions. Some similarities are unsurprising, like a belief in an afterlife. Others are less obvious, like belief in a great flood, and that there were once giants knocking around. And for that matter, that the sacrificial killing of animals or, worse, young people, would somehow go down well with whichever deity was in vogue. Whatever prompts that unpleasantness, one wonders?
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Robt Fenwick Elliott
I do not claim "unearned superiority". Nor do I lack courage. Neither did my acquaintance Rupert, despite his youthful looks. When not climbing mountains solo of a weekend, he used to wait for Jehovah's Witnesses or similar to ring the doorbell. In answer to their usual question, he used to start by telling them he had been brought up by his parents without any beliefs, but that he has started to wonder if there might be some deeper meaning to life. After feigning some initial reluctance, he would invite them in and listen to them. And then slowly start to talk. 5 or 6 hours later, they would leave, exhausted and with their faith in tatters. Do not be a Rupert, I tell myself. And anyway, I suppose that after 5 or 6 such hours, @ClarkeMicah would be as cheerful and as engaging as ever!
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Robt Fenwick Elliott
@ClarkeMicah A number of my dearest friends have religious beliefs. I do not get stuck in the mire of pointless argument with them. Enjoy your day, @ClarkeMicah, with my very best wishes.
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Peter Hitchens
Peter Hitchens@ClarkeMicah·
@Rfenell I'm sorry, you missed out the bit that explained why it was irrational.
Robt Fenwick Elliott@RFenell

How long have you got, @ClarkeMicah? But in the shortest terms: mankind has over several millennia in many different places believed in deities in ways which are wholly inconsistent and mutually exclusive. That speaks only to an ubiquitous human predisposition to belief founded, not in truth, but on instinct. Not based in rationality, but in a craving for spiritual comfort, real in its force but arbitrary in its formulation. At the very, very least, all but one of these thousands of belief systems is utter bunkum. But hey! If it makes you happy, and if your particular imaginary friend is not calling on you to murder imagined infidels, good for you. And anyway, if your particular delusion does in fact make you happy, I suppose it has a certain rationality to it, in a way? Christians have built some great churches and have some brilliant hymns.

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Fraser Nelson
Fraser Nelson@FraserNelson·
I recently wrote about the importance of the battle of ideas. Great to see Dan Hannan, columnist and author, take such an important job at the IEA: All that’s needed now is someone to run the Centre for Policy Studies!
Institute of Economic Affairs@iealondon

🗣️ We are delighted to announce that @DanielJHannan will be joining us as our new Director General. "The IEA set Britain free. When it was founded in 1955, there was a consensus in favour of high spending, industrial management and economic planning. Ralph Harris and Arthur Seldon showed people what was wrong with those ideas, and thus unleashed the genius of our nation. We face a similar challenge today. Public spending and taxation are higher now than they were in 1955. We are back to the fatal conceit, the idea that politicians, bureaucrats and planners know best. Just like the IEA's founders, we need to change people's minds, to open people's eyes. The route to national prosperity, now as then, is through deregulation, free trade, sound money and low spending. It's not just the politicians we need to convince; it's not even primarily the politicians. When voters understand the case for smaller government, MPs follow. I am so grateful to every one of my predecessors, from Ralph Harris, who inspired me as a teenager, to David Frost, whom I am proud to call my friend. They kept the flame burning. Now it is time to heap up the fire." — Lord Hannan of Kingsclere, incoming Director General of the IEA, from 1 June 2026.

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Robt Fenwick Elliott
How long have you got, @ClarkeMicah? But in the shortest terms: mankind has over several millennia in many different places believed in deities in ways which are wholly inconsistent and mutually exclusive. That speaks only to an ubiquitous human predisposition to belief founded, not in truth, but on instinct. Not based in rationality, but in a craving for spiritual comfort, real in its force but arbitrary in its formulation. At the very, very least, all but one of these thousands of belief systems is utter bunkum. But hey! If it makes you happy, and if your particular imaginary friend is not calling on you to murder imagined infidels, good for you. And anyway, if your particular delusion does in fact make you happy, I suppose it has a certain rationality to it, in a way? Christians have built some great churches and have some brilliant hymns.
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Quentin Letts
Quentin Letts@thequentinletts·
Just had to switch off @BBCRadio3 . The music was good but the script was too matey for me. Kept on about 'putting a smile on yer face' and tracks being 'stunning' and tales of listeners' Pilates classes and babies. Intellectually not much different from Ed Stewpot in the 1970s.
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Robt Fenwick Elliott
@Sherelle_E_J But if the UK left the ECHR, and just dumped them all on a beach in Somalia, that would be quite a bit cheaper?
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Sherelle Jacobs
Sherelle Jacobs@Sherelle_E_J·
Mass deportations may be a popular idea. But the cost figures are bonkers. Are we really going to spend money that could fund a generation of doctors, hundreds of thousands of teachers, another Sizewell C to power 6 million homes, or the task of finally connecting up the northern railway network on deporting 2 million people? The cash would also be roughly half the annual investment needed to genuinely double British earnings through R&D/skills etc. The counter is that we’ve removed net fiscal drains - but we’re looking at a decade-plus before we see a single penny back. During which time the disruption to the economy would be massive. Not what a lot of people want to hear but it’s the inconvenient truth of the matter!
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Fraser Nelson@FraserNelson

This is one of the more striking Reform policies: a UK version of ICE. To deport 2m would require a separate police force and methods more intrusive than anything seen hitherto.

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Kate Elliott
Kate Elliott@kteltowers·
Hermer, Starmer & Shiner sounds like a 1960s sitcom based on a vaudeville act of cantankerous old hoofers rotting in a Blackpool boarding house, written by Galton and Simpson.
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Robt Fenwick Elliott
@EnochBurke I wonder how much public money the Irish legal system, has spent making themselves look utterly ridiculous?
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Enoch Burke
Enoch Burke@EnochBurke·
BREAKING: Enoch Burke to face THIRD Disciplinary Appeal Panel after High Court refuses to halt proceedings Teacher Enoch Burke has spent over 650 days in prison after refusing to refer to a male student using the “they” pronoun. On Wednesday of this week Enoch Burke sought an extension of time from the Court of Appeal to appeal the judgment of Judge Alexander Owens in 2023 upholding his suspension. This application follows serious developments in recent days, including a Department of Education statement issued in January this year that there is “no legal obligation” on schools to use “preferred pronouns” of students. In particular the Court of Appeal must address the issue of whether the instruction by Principal Niamh McShane to use the “they” pronoun for a male student was lawful. Today High Court Judge Micheal O’Connell (appointed in 2026) refused to grant an injunction restraining the Disciplinary Appeal Panel proceedings pending the outcome of the Court of Appeal case. Enoch Burke must now go before this panel while the key issue of his case — whether the instruction of Principal Niamh McShane to use the “they” pronoun for a male student was lawful — has not been ruled upon by the Court of Appeal. This is a travesty of justice.
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Robt Fenwick Elliott
Obviously, belief in an external deity (at any rate with at least some vestige of omniscience and/or omnipotence) is irrational. But I learned the hard way when required to study hardback-chair philosophy when young, the cleverer people are, the more ingenious their ways to circumvent the obvious, if that is their bent.
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Robt Fenwick Elliott
Robt Fenwick Elliott@RFenell·
@tomhfh When I was acting for some contractors in this field, I calculated that you are 13 thousand times more likely to be killed by a lightning strike than by a cladding fire.
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Tom Harwood
Tom Harwood@tomhfh·
At some point we should reappraise whether the response to the Grenfell tragedy (circled) should have been to make it impossible for thousands to sell their homes, impose tens of billions of costs on our economy, and practically end the construction of new tall buildings.
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