Austin Williams

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Austin Williams

Austin Williams

@Future_Cities

director, Future Cities Project; author of 'China's Urban Revolution' and 'New Chinese Architecture.' Critic on architecture, environmentalism, and China.

London Sumali Eylül 2010
2.6K Sinusundan6.3K Mga Tagasunod
Austin Williams
Austin Williams@Future_Cities·
If you think the Assisted Dying Bill is compassionate, Kathleen Stock’s new book may make you think again. Debate starts 7pm Mon 20 April. Be there. REGISTER - EVENTBRITE: eventbrite.co.uk/e/bookshop-bar… ONLINE/ FREE 7pm, Mon 20 April.
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Austin Williams
Austin Williams@Future_Cities·
The bureaucracy of incompetence
Josh Hunt@iAmJoshHunt

The British government has wasted more money on failed projects than some countries spend building their entire infrastructure. After hearing about the cancellation of the Stonehenge Tunnel project, yet it still racking up £179 million in cost, I wanted to look at other projects and costs to see what the picture looks like this century. Every number here comes from official reports, the National Audit Office, parliamentary committees, and ministers' own admissions. Let me show you where your money has gone. HS2 was sold to the country as a £37.5 billion high speed rail network connecting London, Birmingham, Manchester, and Leeds. The first phase was supposed to open this year. In 2026. Here's where it actually is. After six years of construction and £46 billion spent, tunnels have been bored, earth has been moved, viaducts have been built. But there is no railway. Not a single metre of track. The legs to Manchester and Leeds have been cancelled entirely. What's left is a line from London to Birmingham with no confirmed opening date, no confirmed final cost, and estimates so unstable that Parliament's own Public Accounts Committee has warned the cash cost of Phase 1 alone could reach £80 billion. Some industry forecasts put it above £100 billion. The Transport Secretary stood in Parliament last year and called it "an appalling mess." She said billions had been wasted on scope changes, ineffective contracts, and bad management. Fraud allegations have since emerged in the supply chain. Three times the original price. A fraction of what was promised. And still years from completion. But HS2 is just one example. The NHS National Programme for IT was supposed to create a unified electronic health record for every patient in England. Launched in 2002 with a budget of £6 billion. Abandoned in 2011 with the Public Accounts Committee putting the expected cost at £12.4 billion. It delivered a fraction of its promised benefits. Only 13 out of 169 hospital trusts received the systems they were meant to get. Then one of the contractors sued the government and won a settlement of nearly half a billion pounds. On top. During Covid, the government threw billions out the door with almost no checks. The Covid Counter Fraud Commissioner's final report, published December 2025, found that fraud and error across pandemic support schemes cost taxpayers £10.9 billion. How much has been recovered? £1.8 billion. The Commissioner's words, not mine. The previous government "left the front door open to fraud." Bounce Back Loans were rolled out in under two weeks with no independent verification. PPE contracts were handed to companies with no track record. Defective gowns, masks, and visors weren't inspected for two years. By the time anyone checked, the money was gone. Universal Credit was supposed to simplify the benefits system. The original programme was budgeted at around £2 billion. The National Audit Office has flagged massive overruns repeatedly as the project ballooned in scope and complexity. Total costs have run many times higher than planned. Nobody was fired. The smart meter rollout was supposed to be finished by 2020. It wasn't. Costs have hit £13.5 billion. The programme has been dogged by meters losing functionality, missed deadlines, and a failure to deliver the energy savings that justified the whole thing in the first place. One many of you will be familiar with. The Post Office spent £600 million on a computer system called Horizon. It was fundamentally flawed. Its defects led to more than 900 wrongful convictions. Sub-postmasters lost their homes. Their businesses. Their families. At least 13 people took their own lives. Compensation has now reached £1.4 billion and is expected to hit £2 billion. Fujitsu, the company that built the system, has not paid a single penny toward that bill. It is still collecting government contracts. The Fire Control project. £469 million. Seven years. An attempt to modernise fire service control rooms. Scrapped. Nothing delivered. What a waste. The electronic tagging programme. Five years late. Tens of millions spent. Abandoned. They ended up buying off the shelf tags that could have been bought for a fraction of the price years earlier. The Garden Bridge. £53 million of public money. Not a single piece was built. You might ask what £53 million was spent on exactly. The Rwanda deportation scheme. £715 million. Four people went voluntarily. Not a single forced deportation was carried out. Then the whole thing was scrapped. Now here's the part that ties it all together. In 2019, the Prime Minister's own Implementation Unit looked at the government's £432 billion portfolio of major projects. Only 8% had proper plans to evaluate whether they were working. 64% of that spending, £276 billion, had no evaluation at all. None. The government was spending hundreds of billions of your money with no way of knowing if any of it was delivering. The National Audit Office has said there has been a "consistent pattern of underperformance" spanning 25 years. Twenty five years of reports saying the same thing. And nothing changes. Add it up. HS2 overruns. NHS IT written off. £10.9 billion in Covid fraud. Universal Credit ballooning. Smart meters over budget. Post Office compensation approaching £2 billion. Fire Control. Rwanda. Garden Bridge. Tagging. And those are just the ones that made the news. The total runs into the tens of billions. More than the entire annual education budget. Approaching what the government now spends on debt interest in a single year. And here's the scary part. This is only what we know about. The NAO has been clear the real picture is worse because most projects aren't properly evaluated in the first place. These are the failures too big to hide. Imagine the ones that aren't. This is the same government that says there's no money for public services. That raises your taxes every year and delivers less every year. That can't build a railway. Can't roll out a computer system. Can't buy protective equipment without losing billions to fraud. And every time it happens, the pattern is the same. The project fails. The minister moves on. The civil servant gets a knighthood. The contractor gets the next contract. And you pick up the bill. The UK doesn't have a funding problem. It has a competence problem. And until that changes, no amount of tax rises, borrowing, or spending reviews will make the slightest difference.

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Austin Williams
Austin Williams@Future_Cities·
“Do Not Go Gentle” – Kathleen Stock’s urgent new book against assisted death. LIVE debate on the Assisted Dying Bill EVENTBRITE: eventbrite.co.uk/e/bookshop-bar… ONLINE/ FREE 7pm Monday 20 April. One night only.
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ripx4nutmeg
ripx4nutmeg@ripx4nutmeg·
The BBC has covered the Jennifer Melle story. But it failed to mention that the man the nurse 'misgendered' was a convicted paedophile who was being transferred from a high-security men's prison, or that he tried to headbutt her (while repeatedly calling her the N-word)
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Austin Williams
Austin Williams@Future_Cities·
Is “dying with dignity” just a polite way to say state-sanctioned suicide? Discuss with Kathleen Stock at the next Bookshop Barnie on her book “Do Not Go Gentle: The Case Against Assisted Death” EVENTBRITE: eventbrite.co.uk/e/bookshop-bar… ONLINE/ FREE 7pm, Mon 20 April.
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Austin Williams
Austin Williams@Future_Cities·
Dylan Thomas: “The force that through the green fuse drives the flower Drives my green age; that blasts the roots of trees Is my destroyer.” The next Bookshop Barnie is with Kathleen Stock on “Do Not Go Gentle: The Case Against Assisted Death” 7pm Monday 20 April. BOOK A PLACE HERE eventbrite.co.uk/e/bookshop-bar…
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Wholesome Side of 𝕏
Wholesome Side of 𝕏@itsme_urstruly·
I love when people fall out laughing. I love how much we can’t control ourselves in this moment. It’s one of my favorite feelings. Re-telling this story would not do it justice. This is really a "You had to be there" moment. Lol
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Austin Williams
Austin Williams@Future_Cities·
The latest Professional Practice Podcasts is now available It's an alliterative special Tim Tapper, director, Turner & Townsend on Terminations soundcloud.com/user-486346414… He heads the UK & Europe Expert team with over 30 years of experience, dealing with claims & dispute resolution.
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Austin Williams
Austin Williams@Future_Cities·
From @guardian Labour MP Jess Asato said: “The sponsor of the bill has rejected 99% of suggested improvements and amendments in the House of Lords and so it still contains all the same faults… Any MP that voted to push this Bill through would do so knowing that it is unsafe and would harm vulnerable people.” Discuss @docStock’s new book “Do Not Go Gentle: The Case Against Assisted Death” EVENTBRITE: eventbrite.co.uk/e/bookshop-bar… 20 April
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Austin Williams
Austin Williams@Future_Cities·
Life is worth living and death is worth fighting. Or is that naïve. For many people, maybe life is not worth living, and death is a welcome relief. Come and discuss Kathleen Stock’s new book “Do Not Go Gentle: The Case Against Assisted Death” EVENTBRITE: eventbrite.co.uk/e/bookshop-bar… Monday, 20 April 7 – 8:30pm
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Real News Éire
Real News Éire@real_eire·
Farmers being attacked in their tractor by Gardai. How can they claim their guardians of the peace
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Austin Williams
Austin Williams@Future_Cities·
It's the #UN, that's bad enough But the #UK just voted that the Islamic Republic of #Iran should join the UN’s Committee for Program and Coordination to shape policy on women’s rights, human rights, disarmament, and terrorism prevention. @UNWatch
UN Watch@UNWatch

Outrage at UN: Democracies Enable Iran, China, Cuba to Oversee Human Rights Bodies GENEVA, April 10, 2026 — UN Watch, the independent Geneva-based non-governmental organization that monitors the United Nations, today called on Canada, France, Spain, Norway, the Netherlands, Australia, the UK, and other democracies to explain why they joined in the election of serial abusers of human rights to key UN bodies that oversee human rights. [Links here: unwatch.org/outrage-at-un-…] On Wednesday, the UN’s 54-nation Economic and Social Council nominated the Islamic Republic of Iran to the UN’s Committee for Program and Coordination, which meets next month to shape policy on women's rights, human rights, disarmament, and terrorism prevention. ECOSOC’s nomination is effectively decisive, as the UN General Assembly customarily rubber-stamps such nominations without a vote. In addition, ECOSOC by acclamation elected China, Cuba, Nicaragua, Saudi Arabia, and Sudan to the influential Committee on NGOs, which oversees the work, accreditation and UN access of thousands of human rights and civil society groups that enjoy consulative status at the world body. The United States was the only ECOSOC member to object, saying that Iran, Cuba and Nicaragua were “unfit.” UN Watch today called on all democratic ECOSOC member states — Canada, France, Spain, Norway, the Netherlands, Australia, the UK, Finland, Switzerland, Austria, and Finland — to explain why they joined in the election of serial abusers of human rights to key UN bodies that oversee human rights. “Appointing China, Cuba, and Saudi Arabia to oversee the work of human rights activists is like putting Al Capone in charge of fighting organized crime,” said Hillel Neuer, executive director of UN Watch. “It’s truly indefensible, and puts lives at risk.” “As an organization accredited with special NGO consultative status at the United Nations, and which regularly gives a platform to dissidents from China, Cuba, Sudan, Saudi Arabia and Nicaragua, we are gravely concerned that brutal dictatorships were elected to oversee our work and credentials — and it is scandalous that Western democracies put them there.” “This means dictatorships will have a majority on the committee in order to deny United Nations accreditation to independent organizations that call out their human rights violations, and to accredit more fake front groups created by the regimes,” Neuer said. “It harms the ability of pro-democracy dissidents to protect the most vulnerable victims and to advocate for human rights inside the United Nations.” “By their cynical actions at the UN, major Western states have betrayed their own human rights principles, severely undermining the ruled-based international order that they claim to support.” “We note that Western states did take action in recent years to stop Russia from getting elected to similar ECOSOC bodies, and we deeply regret that they failed to do the same now to stop the election of serial violators such as Iran, China, China, Cuba, Nicaragua, Saudi Arabia, and Sudan,” said Neuer. Activists Issued Warning Before ECOSOC Election Ahead of the election, 70 civil society and human rights groups warned that countries with poor records were at risk of being elected. The group International Service for Human Rights gave a failing grade to China, Cuba, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Nicaragua and others. Yet their warning was ignored. Key Documents and Sources • Video showing ECOSOC’s nomination without objection of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the UN’s Committee for Program and Coordination: webtv.un.org/en/asset/k12/k… • UN document listing election by acclamation of China, Cuba, Nicaragua, Saudi Arabia, and Sudan to the Committee on NGOs: press.un.org/en/2026/ecosoc… • UN website showing that ECOSOC members currently include Canada, France, Spain, Norway, the Netherlands, Australia, the UK, Finland, Switzerland, Austria, and Finland: ecosoc.un.org/en/about-us/me… • U.S. statement dissociating itself from ECOSOC decisions, the only one of 54 ECOSOC members to do so: usun.usmission.gov/explanation-of… About UN Watch United Nations Watch is a non-governmental organization based in Geneva whose mission is to monitor the performance of the United Nations by the yardstick of its own Charter. UN Watch holds the UN accountable to its founding principles by exposing hypocrisy, bias, and abuses. For more information, visit unwatch.org.

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Austin Williams
Austin Williams@Future_Cities·
Hadn't realised that the Hong Kong-based China Labour Bulletin that maintained excellent interactive maps of strikes/protests & workplace accidents in China has shut down... citing financial difficulties. Fascinating & invaluable... and more open than many Western organisations
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The Bear
The Bear@roarsofthebear·
@SuzieD755164 'c'mon lads, we haven't had this much craic since 1916' 😂
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Kellie-Jay Keen
Kellie-Jay Keen@ThePosieParker·
Ireland is the globalist regime’s guinea pig. It’s horrifying to witness what’s happening.
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