Time to bring some sense to fuel 'rationing'
Published: 02 May, 2008
WELL, how did it go? Did you get through all the driving you had to do last week without a hitch?
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Fuel crisis could test Salmond and Company
Published: 25 April, 2008
OIL, oil, oil. These days it's oil more than money that makes the world go round.
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Hoping for a cold snap Down Under
Published: 18 April, 2008
The excitement must have been too much. Your poor humble columnist was laid up all last week with a particularly nasty cold/'flu virus.
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Air security in tatters — thanks to Terminal Five
Published: 04 April, 2008
HILARIOUS, absolutely hilarious. When Heathrow Airport's new Terminal Five opened for business there was, apparently, only one cloud on the horizon. Those pesky demonstrators.
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Who really can lecture on morality?
Published: 28 March, 2008
I'M not a gambling Mann. It's never floated my boat. My parents didn't gamble either, apart from the annual ritual of a half-crown on whatever took our collective family fancy in the Grand National.
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A strange case of democracy v. human rights
Published: 21 March, 2008
GO ON, admit it. You thought the Irish "troubles" were over, didn't you? After all, they've now got their own parliament. Former hard line republicans are sharing power with former hard line unionists.
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We thought Major’s 'cricket' question was daft?
Published: 17 March, 2008
WHAT crazy, harebrained scheme will they come up with next?
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Wind power at mercy of interpretation
Published: 10 March, 2008
You'd have thought I was asking for his daughter's hand in marriage, not proposing to erect a small wind turbine in the field beside our house.
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Pointless scheme plays into hands of Big Brother
Published: 29 February, 2008
It's men (again). Not all men, of course — just a tiny minority. But the key linking factor in their horrific, violent crimes is gender.
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Indiscriminate way to tackle minor problem
Published: 22 February, 2008
I'VE never heard it and I never will. Reports from those who can hear it vary. Some say it's just really annoying — a high-pitched buzz that drives you up the wall. Others say the sound is actually painful. Some have described feeling as if their heads were about to explode.
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End of the phone line for call boxes
Published: 15 February, 2008
WHEN did you last use a phone box? Knowing that I was going to be asking you that question this week I've been racking my brains to think when I last used a phone box.
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Anti-EU lobby could have chosen the wrong target
Published: 08 February, 2008
TUESDAY 5th February was Fat Tuesday — Mardi Gras. And, if you've got the slightest interest in the way the world's going to go over the next few years, it was also Super Tuesday.
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Imminent wind farm refusal bodes ill for the isles
Published: 01 February, 2008
TALK about a death wish. The economy of the Western Isles is dying on its feet. Has been for years.
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Whatever they are... they're not charities
Published: 25 January, 2008
CHARITY. It begins at home. It's greater than Faith and Hope, triffic though both of them may be. And it's about helping the poor, innit?
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Sniping could give a boost to Nationalist government
Published: 18 January, 2008
NORWAY, Iceland, Italy, Denmark, Portugal, Austria, Republic of Ireland. What have they got in common?
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From death row to possibility of an early demise
Published: 11 January, 2008
KENNY Richey is, as I write, heading home to Edinburgh after 21 years spent on death row in Ohio for a "crime" he did not commit. It's been clear for years that there was no crime. There was simply a tragic accident in which a little girl, Cynthia Collins, died.
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Consequences following years of persecution
Published: 04 January, 2008
BILL Rowe was a nice guy by all accounts; an Australian farmer, quiet, hardworking, honest and just pushing 50. He died on Christmas Day, beaten to death in a vicious, senseless attack.
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That's not the right verdict, try again
Published: 28 December, 2007
IT is 18 months since I last wrote about that consummate showman, the Man with the Tan, Tommy Sheridan.
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Whistling in the dark and hoping for an answer
Published: 21 December, 2007
SAY "Bali" and the words "Hell" and "handcart" spring unbidden to mind.
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Conveniently ignoring wave power
Published: 14 December, 2007
THERE is good news and bad news this week. What do you want first? The good?
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Doomed to 'sectarian' politics — all because of £950
Published: 07 December, 2007
A WEEK is, as Harold Wilson so accurately said, a long time in politics.
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Spoiled for choice in the stupidity stakes
Published: 30 November, 2007
NUMPTY of the week award: should it go to Peter Watt or Gillian Gibbons?
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The final nail in Identity Card Scheme's coffin?
Published: 23 November, 2007
I BELIEVE the expression is: dead in the water. I refer, of course, to the government's ill-starred Identity Card Scheme.
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Politicians must shoulder blame for Stockwell 'execution'
Published: 16 November, 2007
GO on, admit it, you thought the death penalty had been abolished, didn't you?
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Treading very carefully in the field of overseas aid
Published: 09 November, 2007
SO, IS Zoe's Ark, the French children's charity, a cover for paedophile child-traffickers, as some in Chad have suggested, or simply a bunch of well-meaning but deeply misguided do-gooders?
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Sit tight Alex — you're safe
Published: 02 November, 2007
I CAN'T work out whether Alex Salmond's very clever, or whether Gordon Brown and David Cameron are both very stupid. It's a bit of both, I guess.
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A whole new experience for the Scots?
Published: 26 October, 2007
IT is ironic that, just when we're using every diplomatic card in our hand to try to steer the likes of Iran and North Korea away from developing and deploying nuclear weapons, our government is busily announcing bigger, better nuclear weapons systems of our own.
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Faults or not - you can't beat charisma
Published: 19 October, 2007
THE breaking news as I write this column is that Sir Menzies Campbell — leader of the Lib-Dems has quit, blaming Gordon Brown for calling off a snap election.
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Care and inheritance - a taxing problem
Published: 12 October, 2007
IT IS the only Tory policy that's got anyone excited in years. Scrap inheritance tax on estates valued at less than a million.
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Scots summer heightens the appreciation of sunshine
Published: 05 October, 2007
SCOTLAND, Scotland, Scotland: how could you let me down? In the middle of August our son and his girlfriend arrived from Australia for a six-week holiday.
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Culture that's crumbling through sheer neglect
Published: 28 September, 2007
THEY are amazing, vibrant images. Images that tell of the very foundations of a town's economy. Images that show ordinary working people in ordinary working lives, a fascinating glimpse of social history from a bygone age.
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Flight fiasco and budget airlines
Published: 21 September, 2007
"ARE you off early?" Keith asked before pouring us all another glass of wine. "Nope," we said. "It's very civilised. The flight's not till 11.15."
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Parents are always among those suspected
Published: 14 September, 2007
I CANNOT begin to imagine how awful it must be for Kate and Gerry McCann. First there is the disappearance of their three-year-old daughter. Words just can't sum up the anguish the parents of a child who dies or disappears must feel.
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Can anyone recognise babies from their passports?
Published: 07 September, 2007
IT IS not until you get out and about with your grandchild 21 years after you had your own babies that you realise just how much things have changed.
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Too late to tackle drug gang culture
Published: 31 August, 2007
WE live in a country where violent crime runs as a sort of background noise. It's there, but we don't really take much notice of it until something in particular draws it to our attention.
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An example of cronyism at its worst
Published: 24 August, 2007
MALAWI. It’s got AIDS, poverty, corruption, runaway population growth and pressure on agricultural land. And now it’s getting Jack McConnell too. Lordy, Lordy — how unlucky can one little African country get.
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High nuclear ideals that crumbled
Published: 17 August, 2007
ACROSS Scotland the bunting's blowing in the breeze. Street parties have been swinging along all week.
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A minor glitch that really matters
Published: 10 August, 2007
HOW glad am I that we no longer have to go through that annual parental agony, the long, nail-biting wait for that brown envelope with the offspring's exam results dropping through the letterbox?
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Playing the independence waiting game
Published: 03 August, 2007
AYE, wee Eck's nae daft, is he? He's about to publish his much-trailed white paper on an independence referendum. It was an election pledge, so he is pretty well obliged to do it.
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Time, tide — and global warming, wait for no man
Published: 27 July, 2007
WE have seen flooding before — but never anything quite as extreme and excessive as the deluge that's affected large swathes of England over the past couple of weeks.
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Basing benefits on illusions of family life
Published: 20 July, 2007
ARE you married? No? Ah well, tough luck. We’re now well into our 32nd year in that blissful institution.
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Going batty over bats. . . and babies
Published: 13 July, 2007
BLOW up the balloons, unfurl the streamers, fly the flags. Yes, we are grandparents.
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Time to lay aside assumptions
Published: 06 July, 2007
PRECONCEPTIONS? We all have them. Try this one: terrorists, who are they?
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Well, whose a good boy then?
Published: 29 June, 2007
WE are now on the home run and the excitement is practically too much to bear. Our first grandchild is scheduled to put in an appearance in little more than a week.
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Democracy, but only when it suits
Published: 22 June, 2007
THE extraordinary thing, in last week's violence in Palestine, is that only about 100 people, including some civilians were killed, fewer than the number killed most days in Iraq's bloody violence. But it is likely that many, many more will die over the next few months.
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Easy target in blame game
Published: 15 June, 2007
THERE are those who would fall in a slurry pit and come out smelling of roses. And then there's the other sort. The George Galloway sort.
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No choice but to keep going
Published: 08 June, 2007
BEN Needham. Vicky Hamilton. Madeleine McCann. That's only three and their cases span 16 years. They are the tip of a nightmarish iceberg.
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On loan teachers won't bridge the class divide
Published: 01 June, 2007
HEY, thank goodness for devolution, our shield from some of the UK government's wackier ideas.
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Set for power struggle over energy
Published: 25 May, 2007
HEY, the new Scottish Parliament isn't a fortnight old yet and already we have the issue which may yet determine whether we continue with devolution or go for a full divorce from England.
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Lib-Dems on the outside looking in
Published: 18 May, 2007
LAST week I echoed Harold Wilson's sentiments about the extensive nature of a week when it comes to politics. Funny, that. For it seems a week is an even longer time in Highland politics.
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A litany of electoral disasters
Published: 11 May, 2007
AS Harold Wilson so succinctly put it, a week is a long time in politics.
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Harry really has no choice but go to war
Published: 04 May, 2007
SO – Prince Harry’s going to Iraq. It’s difficult to see how it could be otherwise.
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Beware the rip-off on ringtones
Published: 27 April, 2007
HEY guys — I’m a winner!! At the moment I’m not quite sure what I’ve won. But what I can tell you is this...
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'Brigadoon' must make way for renewables
Published: 20 April, 2007
IT'S widely accepted as the biggest single threat to mankind. Millions will die. Vast areas of our planet will become uninhabitable, through low-lying areas becoming flooded and through deserts expanding.
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The dangers of a uniform education
Published: 13 April, 2007
PEOPLE occasionally ask me: how do you decide what to write about in your column? Well, usually something's just happened.
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There's no world shortage of kangaroo courts
Published: 06 April, 2007
TONY Blair is, for once, perfectly right. The arrest of 15 Royal Navy sailors and the subsequent parading of several of them on television was "cruel and callous"; "a disgrace" which only served to enhance people's sense of disgust with Iran".
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Some significant milestones since devolution
Published: 30 March, 2007
THE Scottish Parliament is an established force in our country. I was one of those who campaigned for it. I was one of those celebrating its birth.
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Dangers from the harmless little ‘flutter’
Published: 23 March, 2007
THERE are lots of ways to ruin your life should you wish.
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Nuclear is no deterrent to fundamentalists
Published: 16 March, 2007
IT represents horror beyond belief or understanding and betrays the most profound of immoralities at the core of our country and our country’s leaders.
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A choice that’s only available to the better-off
Published: 09 March, 2007
WE will call her Debbie. She was 11 when I knew her. She would be over 40 now and I often wonder how she got on.
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Too hung up on terrorism
Published: 02 March, 2007
I DON’T know about you, but I’m confused (yeah, yeah, I know — isn’t the first time, probably won’t be the last).
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Consultation? This one is merely a ‘con’
Published: 23 February, 2007
WHEN is a consultation not a consultation? When it’s just a con — of course.
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Theories abound over source of ‘hot’ particles
Published: 16 February, 2007
BY the time you read this, UKAEA, the operator of the notorious Dounreay Nuclear Establishment, will have been sentenced for illegally discharging radioactive waste to the environment.
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Too many risks with present safety measures
Published: 09 February, 2007
LAST Friday morning dawned mild, bright and clear. The sun shone with that yellow brightness that seemed to turn the world to gold.
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It’s about the children — isn’t it?
Published: 02 February, 2007
CHRIST was silent on homosexuality. Not one word on the subject, as far as we know, did He ever utter.
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Switching energy horses to keep economy moving
Published: 26 January, 2007
SHETLAND and the Western Isles: hey, what’s the difference you might wonder? They’re both island groups off mainland Scotland, though admittedly Shetland’s a lot further from the mainland than the Western Isles.
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Something significant in lack of celebrations?
Published: 19 January, 2007
THIS past week has seen a momentous anniversary. It is exactly 300 years since Britain came into being though the 1707 Act of Union.
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All the fun — none of the fuss
Published: 12 January, 2007
THEY are the most exciting pictures I have seen in many years.
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Execution by state is repugnant
Published: 05 January, 2007
SADDAM is dead. He was a vicious tyrant who maintained his power base by a combination of patronage, corruption and the murder of his political enemies. He ordered the mass destruction of entire villages complete with innocent inhabitants who happened to be from a rival ethnic group.
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Cabals and secret deals will continue
Published: 29 December, 2006
WELL, that’s about it, folks. It is amazing how the years roll round fast and faster each time. Just when we were getting used to 2006 — whoomph!!! — it is gone and we stand on the cusp of 2007.
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Yo-ho-ho, Christmas chaos rules
Published: 22 December, 2006
I SHOULD not be doing this. I should be doing my Christmas cards instead.
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Is marriage the cure for society’s ills?
Published: 15 December, 2006
IT’S poverty, stupid. Are the Tories deliberately contrary or just thick when they tell us that most of society’s ills are down to co-habitation?
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Time to lead by example on WMD
Published: 08 December, 2006
WEAPONS of Mass Destruction — do you love ’em or hate ’em? D’you know — I don’t think it’s such a difficult question.
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Poisonings too outrageous — even for a Bond movie
Published: 01 December, 2006
“I MEAN, who…” the radio presenter intoned, “…had ever heard of Polonium two-one-oh before last week?”
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Cross conflict moves toward an impasse
Published: 24 November, 2006
THERE are times you just want to bash peoples’ heads together, aren’t there?
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Freedoms come with all kinds of responsibility
Published: 17 November, 2006
ONE black, two white. One guilty, two innocent. incitement to racial hatred is a despicable, filthy crime regardless of where it comes from and irrespective of the race of those it seeks to whip up hatred against.
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Ultimate betrayal of trust
Published: 10 November, 2006
CHILD murder is always a dreadful thing. I may have written before about Elaine Anderson; a bubbly, talented, popular and academically gifted former school friend of mine. She, her brother and their grandmother were killed during a frenzied hatchet attack by Elaine's father.
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Mention of money raises interest in global warming
Published: 03 November, 2006
SIR Nicholas Stern's name has been a gift to headline-writers from John O'Groats to Lands End. "Stern Warning" (The Times, The Guardian) "Stern Warning to Save the Planet" (The Herald). You get the picture. But does the government? And do we?
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Iraq set for an inevitable bloodbath
Published: 27 October, 2006
IT is difficult to look back on Iraq and remember the way things used to be. It wasn’t perfect, of course, and it wasn’t democracy. But Baghdad was a reasonably cosmopolitan, secular nation. Women had the right to education and to be able to work. If they didn’t want to cover their heads or faces, they didn’t have to.
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Energy battle swinging in favour of renewables?
Published: 20 October, 2006
HUNTERSTON, Hartlepool, Hinkley - as far as this week's nuclear stocks and shares are concerned, you might call them the H-bomb.
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Personal choice or symbols of oppression?
Published: 13 October, 2006
YOU don't go to see your MP for fun, you know. If your MP happens to be Jack Straw, I'm guessing you'd have to be pretty desperate to go at all.
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It's time for care - not condemnation
Published: 06 October, 2006
ENGLAND and Wales - 143. Spain - 140. Scotland - 135. Yippee! At last; a European league table in which we Scots are in the top three.
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The drip, drip, drip of the British water torture
Published: 29 September, 2006
CAT or dog? Cat. Red or white? Red. Bath or shower? Bath, bath, bath.
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At last, Inverness is doing the decent thing
Published: 22 September, 2006
WE do a fair day's work. We get a fair day's pay. That's the deal.
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Over fed, over weight and . . . over there
Published: 15 September, 2006
YOU can get used to a stack of blueberry buttermilk pancakes for breakfast, really you can.
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Endless scope, thanks to nature's bulging larder
Published: 08 September, 2006
THIS year nature's bounty has been a bit - well - unrestrained. I haven't really known what to do with it all.
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Foreign policy adding to world threat
Published: 01 September, 2006
IN the new world order, Iran is arguably Britain and America's worst nightmare, making all our recent enemies look positively benign by comparison. Thought to be behind various terrorist groups and to be clandestinely arming Hezbollah who have recently been locked in mortal combat with America's best friend Israel, Iran is run by Islamic fundamentalists under Sharia law and seeks, many believe, to acquire nuclear weapons under the guise of a nice, friendly nuclear power programme.
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Submitting to collective paranoia
Published: 25 August, 2006
YOU can knit on the tube, train or bus. But you can't knit on a plane.
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'Unimaginable' - depends how you look at it
Published: 18 August, 2006
GULP! The news of a foiled terrorist plot to blow up planes leaving British airports has caused more than a frisson of concern in the Mann household. You see, it's not too long till we fly to the States to celebrate a friend's 50th birthday. Gulp!
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Is there still some mileage for Sheridan's bandwagon?
Published: 11 August, 2006
CALL me sad, but I have to confess: I've been transfixed. I've listened goggle-eyed to every twist and turn in the lurid stories The News of the World and its columnist, Anvar Khan, invented about the socialist man-with-a-tan, Tommy Sheridan.
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Decent folk pushed into terrorism
Published: 04 August, 2006
THE slaughter of innocents. There is no other way to describe it and there can never be any excuse for it.
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You just can't beat nature's way
Published: 28 July, 2006
LOOKING at the photo close up, you can see the sheer, raw delight on the boys' faces. They're bursting with excitement in the way only very small children can be.
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Innocent suffer in a conflict without end
Published: 21 July, 2006
IT is like an endless nightmare replaying itself over and over again.
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Is death knell sounding for nuclear energy?
Published: 14 July, 2006
THIS week I asked for - and got - special dispensation.
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Getting to grips with digital TV viewing
Published: 07 July, 2006
WE didn't used to have a telly. In fact we didn't have one until quite recently.
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Balance must be struck on human rights
Published: 30 June, 2006
IT'S strange how, sometimes, events just come together in a way that appears as if the pieces of a jigsaw have dropped into place.
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Poisonous well pours out rough justice
Published: 23 June, 2006
WHAT do New Labour peer Lord Watson of Invergowrie and Shetlander, Sakchai Makao have in common?
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Police are right to be cautious
Published: 16 June, 2006
BETWEEN a rock and a hard place. Damned if you do, damned if you don't. Between the Devil and the deep blue sea.
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Ugly side of parenting does kids no favours
Published: 09 June, 2006
BONNYRIGG Primary School in Midlothian has two primary one classes. Until recently it differentiated between the two by calling one of them "Primary One A" and the other "Primary One B".
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Unfathomable, illogical, and alarming
Published: 02 June, 2006
LET'S assume for the moment, dear reader, that, like me, you're a Scot. And let's assume for the moment, that, unlike me, you're a football fan.
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The death penalty for shoplifting?
Published: 26 May, 2006
THE real worry is that Tony Blair might actually have meant it. "Those people, in my view," he said, "should be deported irrespective of any claim that they have that the country to which they are going back may not be safe."
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Extremists destroying public support
Published: 19 May, 2006
I FIRST heard about it - or, rather, overheard about it - a couple of years back.
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Weather for all seasons - I love it!
Published: 02 May, 2006
WELL, last week's snow was a bit of a surprise, wasn't it? Just when we were busy scoffing retrospectively about weather forecasters' predictions of a hard winter, down came the white stuff.
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