Morning music

Saturday quiz

Well, this week 5/10, as against the 2/10 scored by political journalist John Rentoul. I knew the answers to questions 2, 4, 8, 9, and 10. I also “knew” the answer to question 3, but could not bring it to mind.
News from the multikulti society
https://www.cornwalllive.com/news/cornwall-news/student-doctor-raped-women-travelodge-11065250

“A student doctor who raped two women in Devon and Cornwall has been jailed for 14 years.
Chris Clark, 32, of Battersea Park Road in London, was convicted by a jury at Truro Crown Court of two counts of rape.
He was sentenced to 14 years in jail by the court on Friday, July 17.“
[Cornwall Live]
Wall. Squad. End.
Tweets seen
Talking point
Interesting YouTube documentary. Worth watching. I knew most of it (and a good deal besides), but there were a few things I did not know.
Brighton has changed even in my own lifetime [b.1956]. I went there a few times as a child in the early 1960s, and to the racecourse a few times in the early 1970s, and once more in 1997. I had one quite nice and successful day in 1974 at Brighton Racecourse, but lost all my winnings the same day at the evening meeting of the Hove Greyhound Stadium a couple of miles away.
I have only been to the “dog tracks” a few times in my life, but never had any luck there. Not as pleasant as a real racecourse (with horses) either.
As a matter of fact, I think that dog racing is a thing of the past: all but one of the tracks I have seen (once only, in each case) are now defunct, turned into (inevitably in the UK) housing developments or business parks. Hove is still racing: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brighton_%26_Hove_Greyhound_Stadium.
Wimbledon closed in 2017, and the site now houses 600 apartments and a football stadium: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wimbledon_Stadium.
Reading closed in 1974 (I think I attended the final meeting), was replaced by another stadium, but that also failed: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reading_Stadium_(Oxford_Road).
Brighton Races are still “a thing”, as people now say. An element of criminality has always been there. I recall seeing detectives from (maybe) the Serious Crime Squad or the regional crime squad looking at mugshots in the Members’ Enclosure in 1974, maybe seeking a wanted man.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brighton_Racecourse
I also appeared as Counsel once only at the appallingly badly-designed Brighton County Court, in 2006 or 2007. At least I won there.
Reverting to that video, I noted that it covers the career of the notorious Sabini, an Italian gangster and so-called “King of the Razor Gangs”, who extorted monies from bookmakers across southern England, and particularly at Brighton.
When I stayed (about half of each month) in England in 2005-2008, I often lived (for up to 10 days per month) at the Royal Oak inn on Dartmoor.
Apart from the usual local crowd, a group of very polite local boys and girls in their late teens would often come in to socialize and play snooker in an adjoining room. One, usually there with his girlfriend, introduced himself as Something (I think Tony) Sabini (or was it Sabatini? I think Sabini, anyway). My ears pricked up, especially when he said that his family had originated (having left Italy), many decades previously, in the Saffron Hill area of Clerkenwell, the one-time “Little Italy”, of which a few traces still remain. That is where the gangster, Sabini, had been born and brought up. An obvious connection. The area is mentioned in one or two of the novels of Charles Dickens as being rather evil.
The young man (certainly no criminal) was surprised that I knew more than he did about that area of London (he lived with his affluent family in a farmhouse near Dartmoor). I of course never asked what his family did for a living, but they had money; one day he cleared his bar tab— nearly £800, and in real terms you could double that in 2026 money.
I think that, as with the Mafia in the USA, descendants of the original criminals in the UK tend to be, not infrequently, entirely respectable people with (if they have money) business interests untainted by crime.
Brighton is hugely different now as compared to the 1970s; maybe less pleasant. I drove through, a few months ago. Far too busy, far too much traffic, far too many restrictions, far too built-up.
Late tweets
This whole “cut benefits” stuff is a ridiculous dog-whistle. Something like half or even two-thirds of the whole UK population get some form of state benefit, depending on definitions. Legally, the State Pension is a “benefit”, as in Pension Credit (topping up income of the over-65s to a minimum extent. Also, Child Benefit given to virtually all parents.
There is no “essential” immigration, unless there is an Einstein or Sakharov out there.
As for saving this country via elections, particularly involving parties completely in the Jewish lobby/Israel lobby pocket, forget it.
The UK harbours an alien “fifth column” of Israel loyalists, working away largely concealed, within our society.

Late music
I have seen on YT and the Internet articles about the rising anti-Ukrainian sentiment among the Polish people. Apparently, there are more than one million Ukrainian exiles/refugees living in Poland, and many Poles are not happy with their new neighbours.
As it was to be expected, the vile Western media is talking about “sharp rise of hate crimes in Poland”. First of all, “hate crimes” do not exist; it is a f… invention of the Jews to defame and smear White nationalists, who, by the way, are the only people capable of committing those “crimes”.
I am sure that many Ukrainians who fled the war are good people, but I am also sure that many of them are crooks or petty criminals. No wonder many Poles are sick of them.
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Claudius:
The fact is that most Ukrainians in Poland and the UK, and Germany, and Monte Carlo (etc) are not really refugees. Most are from Kiev and other places where (despite some missile attacks), until recently, dangers have been few. In the UK, they have been given all sorts of privileges and monies etc, but many are actually quite affluent, some arrived in expensive cars, and some even go back to Ukraine on holiday!
Also, most are entirely ungrateful to Britain (and no doubt other “refuges” such as Germany).
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Thank you for the information. I gather then that most of these “refugees” are middle- or upper-middle-class people who thought (perhaps, quite rightly) that Kiev would be destroyed by the Russian air force or the Russian artillery.
On the other hand, an article that I read said that many Poles were angry because the Ukrainians were willing to work for less money and, as always, many greedy Polish bastards would employ them instead of their own countrymen; therefore, many Poles cannot find a job. I am quite sure that, in many cases, this might be true.
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Claudius:
Some may not be affluent, but many are, and came to the UK and elsewhere in expensive cars, taking advantage of the fact that barriers to work, business and also State benefits, were dropped for them.
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Claudius:
Further to earlier reply, Kiev has not been destroyed by Russian firepower in the past 3.5 years. Not really hit much at all, bearing in mind it is one of the largest cities in Europe (certainly in the top 10). However, I concede that, the way things are going, the gloves may be coming off.
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Your comment about Brighton is very interesting. What you said about Saffron Hill and Clerkenwell reminded me of a video about Clerkenwell made by a man called Julian McDonnell, who has a channel on YouTube under the name “Joolz Guides”. He has produced hundreds of videos about London, and I find them very interesting and informative. Here is his video about Clerkenwell:
London Fun Facts Walking Tour – Clerkenwell & Smithfield
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Claudius:
Thank you.
Strangely, though Saffron Hill had a very evil reputation in Victorian times, it is walking distance from Gray’s Inn, and indeed from bustling High Holborn.
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We watched a bit of the match between the African teams masquerading as “France” and “England”. It was really shameful. In the “French” team, 9 players out of 11 were black. In the “English” team, the proportion was very similar: 7 gollywogs and 4 Englishmen.
You may be wondering why did I bother to watch it? Well, my wife, for sentimental reasons, wanted to watch it, but when she realised that most of the players were not English, she said: “No, thank you”.
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Claudius:
These kind of televised sporting pleb-fests are usually like that. I have not been following the World Cup, and am not a football “supporter” anyway. I do sort-of understand your wife’s attitude (though it is not my own); I recall a German aristocratic lady I once knew whom I found lying in bed watching a football match, I think Germany v. England on TV. Sometime in the 1980s, I think. I had never known her to do that, but she explained that she just wanted to watch “our Deutsche boys“! To me, a strange thing to do, but people have varying habits.
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