The Bugle - (More) Sh*t Happens
Episode Date: October 10, 2023A week where Russia contemplate pacifism and China make sense. Oh. Also, the US House Speaker gets Shaboinked out of office and the British Conservative receive less than positive reviews from their c...onference.PLUS: Become the owner of an exclusive episode of The Bugle, on 12 inch vinyl! Become a premium member NOW! https://www.thebuglepodcast.com/donateThis episode was presented and written by:Andy ZaltzmanAlice FraserNato GreenAnd produced by Chris Skinner and Laura Turner Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Bugle, audio newspaper for a visual world.
Hello, Bugleers.
I am Andy Zoltzman.
It is the 9th of October 2023 and welcome to issue 4,276 of the Bugle audio newspaper
for a thoroughly f**king idiotic world. I'm
Andy Zoltzmann and I will be honest with you, I generally prefer doing this show in weeks
where wars are not breaking out and where massively complicated issues haven't just become
horrifically tragically brutal, but there you go. That is the problem with doing podcasts
in places like Planet Earth and whilst being a fully paid up member of a species like
a human race, these things happen. So welcome to this week's bugle. I am in the
shed of destiny in London and I'm joined from Belonia by Alice Fraser and from San Francisco
by NATO Green. Welcome both of you. I do hope you're going to cheer me up over the next
hour.
I hope so too, Andy. I just want one day. I would like to hear some news out of the Middle East that isn't some version of
Massive humanitarian disaster involving war crimes that's gonna make everyone on your social media timeline
Fucking horrendous. I hate so many more people than I did yesterday
Andy and none of them are in the Middle East
We're all waiting for the new that like, the breakthrough on the cutting edge, like,
kabab innovations out of the Middle East, so that we can get the futuristic horizon of
kababs and falafels to enjoy.
No, that's something to look forward to, I guess.
We also joined by a special guest this week, the 16th century Dutch King William the silent.
Hello William, still got it Bill, still got it.
We are recording, as I said, on the 9th of October 2023, 2000 years to the day, since ironically
in the Middle East, Jesus made a bench, before he got really big.
1000 years since Elon Musk's time travel machine
landed in what is now California for the first time.
And 1,000 years exactly before Elon Musk's time travel machine
lands back in California for the last time
with all the secrets he's harvested
from early third millennium planet Earth.
As always, a section of this podcast
is going straight in the bin this week, a books section.
A recent poll in Britain awarded
former Kent novelist Charles Dickens the Britain's greatest first line of a novel of all time awards
for his classic it was the best of times it was the worst of times Charles Dickens aka Chuck D thus
launched the human race headlong into an era where everything had to be either the best or the worst,
I blame him for most things. At the opening line of course came from his 1859 smash hit platinum
selling French Revolution page turner a tale of two cities and saw off competition from amongst
others Big Georgie Orwell's 1984 which was set famously in 1984 and began it was a bright cold day in April and the clocks were striking
13 as Ian both them ran into bowl summer sets first delivery of the first county championship
match of the new season on strike for Yorkshire Jeffrey Boycott and also beat the classic
1970s children's book Miffy Phil Squiffy which began Miffy dear the nice vet said I've
run a diagnosis you'd best sit down because it's bad news, you've got mix and motosis.
I also saw off one of the most famous first lines
in any novel from anywhere.
Paul Myfinger said Mr. Darcy Giggling,
outside of that remain the unpublished first draft.
And it also beat off this, a more recent novel.
My name's Liz, and I was prime minister
for like a month and a bit, and this is my book about me
and why I was right and why I was just unlucky that absolutely everything I did
went catastrophically f***ing wrong because of all the lefties running the country whilst I was
running the country that sadly missed out. As did, well my personal pick for greatest first line
of a novel the whole time. It was 4.30am, the sound of a dog barking, rent the Philadelphia skies,
Mickey Stantania opened a resentment-filled eye.
Fucking dog, he's back.
Stretching his arms and throwing his novelty doggy alarm clock at the wall.
The dog barked again, balls frowned at Stantania.
That was actually a real dog.
I'm gonna have to buy another alarm clock again.
One of the great works of literature of all time.
Also in our book section, some new AI memoirs from great historical figures
written with the help of the wondrous magic of artificial intelligence, the books, that
these great figures would have written if they'd written them, including Henry VIII's Better
Luck next time, the gentleman's guide to a mid-millony and breakup, Julia Caesar's
ouchy, how being stabbed to death by a group of conspirators can really ruin your month
of march. And this from Lucy, how to look good when you've been dead for 3.2 million years.
That's an absolutely patron of the former Ethiopia-based skeleton and
star of the Australopithecus afference is franchise.
That section is in the bin.
I mean, at least there's a book rather than Tiktok series.
In Jesus' AI Tiktok series.
Any of your friends toxic? Find out how.
And...
LAUGHTER
MUSIC
Top story this week. The Middle East still isn't fixed.
It turns out. It's very hard to know what to say
about a story like this in a show like this, as the ancient sayings go, we are where we are,
it is what it is, and shit happens, followed by more shit than happening in response to the first
shit that happened, then more shit happening, more shit happening in response to that, shit then
following a sure shit happening, follow shit happening until non-remember what the first shit that happened was who shot it and why and then to cap it all off
some more shit happens. It's uh I don't know it's quite often on the bugle I reach a point where I
almost think I'm never going to feel optimistic again and this week has been one of those weeks and
I've really needed the the cleansing power of sport in my life
as much as ever. Andy, I am here to not help. Okay, thank you,
so thanks for stepping into that breach. How are you going to not help? I'm so agitated, I'm going
to take off my lead's United's car. Oh, well, that puts everything in perspective.
So it's sort of a relief that we're having this conversation. The three of us are all Jews.
I mean, we're saddled with Chris,
who's a known anti-Semite, but other than that,
and it's like, the one of the things that's so hard
about what happens in Israel and Palestine is,
as a Jew in America, I don't know if this is your experience,
where you are, but I'm expected to have an opinion
in a different kind of, like, and I just long to be free to hate Israel like I hate literally
every other government. I hate Israel, the Israeli government, I hate the Palestinian government,
I hate the American government, I hate my mayor, I hate my governor, I hate the Australian government,
you name it. If there's some sort of seal or crest involved, I'm
against it. And somehow that's like a controversial stance in America in 2023.
Alice, you're in Italy currently, which I think makes you entirely neutral on everything
other than the Italian politics and food. How's it been reported in the Italian major? Have you
followed at all? I have absolutely not followed the Italian
media media on this issue at all. I have been I have been trying to avoid it.
Basically until I was told I was doing the bugle this week I was trying
absolutely to avoid the whole issue because I am so pregnant right now that
my response to literally all of this
news is just to start weeping and go, they're all just babies. So that hasn't really led me to
like the most incisive political commentary on the whole matter. I've been following a little bit
what the various governments around the world have been saying, the statements that the governments
have been making, none of which are at all surprising,
if you know anything about the alliances
and commercial arrangements that each nation has with the other.
I think some of my favorites were Brazil,
who just made the most limp-ristered statement
you could possibly imagine,
just a wet paper towel of a statement,
urging parties to avoid escalating the situation
and asking everyone to be nice,
which is a very sweet way to present yourself
as completely useless.
Qatar, along with Saudi Arabia and Iran,
brain-blamed Israel, surprise.
The EU and the Czech Republic have come down on the side of Israel. I think this
is the worst part of it. I have found myself really awkwardly agreeing with the Chinese
government statement, which is always slightly uncomfortable, who called for a ceasefire and
for establishing an independent state of Palestine, implementing a two-state solution
and avoiding an escalation of tensions and violence
and ending the cycle of violence.
And I am always deeply uncomfortable
when I find myself agreeing with China,
given that they recently are called Australia America's Dogs.
And I had to agree with them on that as well.
So...
The...
My favorite of the... I feel like it's it's like a competition in this
moment. As we're like the political statement to express concern without
taking a controversial stance in any way at all. My prize goes to Michigan
governor Gretchen Whitmer who tweeted, I've been in touch with communities
impacted by what's happening in the region. It is important. My heart is with
all those impacted. We need peace in this region. I'm
glad her heart is involved. I'm sure that's a big comfort to to everyone. Try to
figure it out. The context of the latest flare-up, as they say, is that there
was a possibility of a normalization
between Saudi Arabia and Israel.
And a lot of people think that Hamas wanted to
sort of provoke a crisis to stop the normalization.
And it will probably work.
And so I would say the word of the day,
everyone is Batna.
If you take a business class on negotiations,
the includes the idea of Batna,
which is an acronym,
it does not stand for
build a tiny naked Andy.
Batna stands for best alternative to no agreement.
It is how parties each evaluate the cost of a no-deal scenario, and it's based on a book
called Getting to Yes, but we're in a more of a getting to f*** you and drop dead forever
situation.
And so now everybody gets their batonah.
That's it's like a thought experiment.
Hamas and Israel get a batonah, Matt gets gets a batonah,
Saudi gets a batonah, batonahs all around,
batonahs for everybody.
The failure to anticipate the attack was perceived by Israel
as an intelligence failure.
And as we all know, as Jews,
when Israel has an intelligence failure, Israel's mom is very disappointed and Israel might not
get, and I might not get any Bobcat. Israel will never be a doctor now. Israel's
older brother didn't have an intelligence failure. It wasn't an intelligence
failure. Today the Times of Israel reported that Egypt warned Israel repeatedly that something
big was happening in Gaza and it was explosive.
So it wasn't so much an intelligence failure as a listening failure because it's Jews,
everyone was talking all at the same time, and they couldn't hear.
Netanyahu wasn't interested in the reports about threats from Gaza because he was focused
on the West Bank
And we all know that men have trouble multitasking
It wasn't it wasn't that just that they missed the plan but that the paragliders Hamas attacked Israel using paragliders
the first ever invasion by extreme sports enthusiasts
Watch out for the Hamas stockpile of strategic
unicycles, tactical budget jumpers and the dreaded parkour battalion. I think
they're coming in. I mean to better begin perspective, Russia has called for a
ceasefire. That's Russia, which you might know better as Russia, the country that's
not been big on the ceasefires for much of its recent history.
The R.H. News, by the way, israel's strongly-brained, blamed Netanyahu's serial failings for these
intelligence glitches all in all. I mean, the Middle East has been a bit tricky. Well, pretty much
since what the world was invented, what was it in 2004 BC or whenever it was?
Things have been slightly tricky, tricky there.
So anyway, best wishes to any buglers
in the affected regions.
And best wishes to the human race,
to at some point in its life, learn to get along with itself.
I mean, for me, obviously, finding an angle on this
that didn't make me weep uncontrollably
and pregnantly was difficult, but I found my solace
in looking at what influencers think about this.
The game I like to play with situations like this is,
who's going to do the best grift.
I think my two favorite takes on this online
that I've seen so far are the exciting times for evangelical Christians who see this as one step closer to the rapture.
That one was fun. It's always nice to see that someone's taking something positive out of this.
And a Russian conspiracy theory out of Russia that the Ukrainians are the ones who sent weapons in to Gaza because they've all got all these spare weapons lying around.
If you're listening to this bugleers and you have any shred of optimism left please do email it in
to hello bugleers at buglepodcast.com and we will share it around.
I'm sure the bugle audience will enjoy those jokes as much as the live comedy club audience that I inflicted them on last night.
It'll work out show. Who would like, why, we showed up for jokes about online dating. Why are you talking about work hours?
American News. Well, let's lighten the mood, Nito, with the slow death of American democracy, the latest instalment.
I mean, here in Britain, our own interim prime minister, Rishi Sunak, told us that we
have a political system that is broken, that is essentially rotten to its core and is
gnawing away at itself from within.
But compared with America, it remains in the rudest of health because over in your country our
former colonial partner of course you are still struggling with I don't know how long this
ongoing bout of political future faction has been going on now but it's been particularly
acute for the last what seven years in particular and it reached another landmark with the
outing of the Speaker of the House of Representatives,
Kevin McCarthy.
Now, he said a new record McCarthy for most times outed from job as Speaker of the House
of Representatives.
One, the previous record of zero had been jointly held by all 54 previous speakers dating
back to 1789 of all places.
So that, of course, is shortly after America straddled
its camel of freedom and started galloping it down the Bob sled track of independence.
It was never going to end well. Come back to the mothership. We'll take an application
again. So can you just explain exactly why McCarthy was booted out and why reports of just
reached us that the Statue Abraham Lincoln in the Lincoln Memorial has been weeping marble
tears.
Well, Andy, in America, it's the worst of times and the best of times.
It's the worst of times if you want a society.
It's the best of times if you are a chaos agent, hellbent on destabilizing world governments,
or you're the Joker who just wants to watch the world burn, or you crave the shot and
Freud of watching the modern Republican Party swallow itself. Today's Republicans are like naked zombies,
where when you see them you realize you've never seen a zombie movie with a naked zombie, then you
can't stop looking at the zombies undead and rotting dick even though you should be running away, and whoops, it ate your brains.
So the house needed to pass a budget, and if they didn't pass that the government would shut down in millions of federal workers would stop getting paid
On the one hand you had most Democrats and Republicans wanting a budget to be passed
They disagreed about what would be in it then on the other hand you had an extreme right wing of the Republican party
They just wanted to shut down the government. That was their demand was to shut down the government
They fundamentally don't believe in the government. That was their demand was to shut down the government. They fundamentally
don't believe in the government. And it's a very weird and pathological to sort of devote
your life to being involved with the government when you hate the government. Like I don't
like camping, but you don't find me at REI shouting at people. You know what I mean?
The sickest burn came from Alexandria Ocasioortez who said that the GOP ran around the house like a rumba until they found a door the Democrats opened.
She's comparing Republicans to a robot that exists to clean dust and is bad at it.
So then when McCarthy was voted out, the acting speaker is Patrick McKenry from North
Carolina, who's first in only acting office
was as speaker was to evict my congresswoman Nancy Pelosi from one of her offices. That's their
platform as f**king Nancy Pelosi, which I get. I once delivered her office a seven-foot foam spine.
They still don't like me. I have gotten reports. So she was evicted and now she's
homeless like 8,000 of her fellow San Francisco police department will throw her in jail
to sober up. So some people want to draft Trump to be speaker of the house instead, which
I actually support. I think that's a good rehabilitation plan because Trump is a criminal and facing trial
and sometimes people with a criminal background have trouble getting painful employment.
And productive employment is an important part of recidivism and reintegrating people into
society.
And so I did a Google search for companies that will hire ex-offenders and the list includes
McDonald's Starbucks, Amazon,
Walmart, Pizza Hut, Congress, the Supreme Court, the Navy, the Marines, the CIA, the FBI,
the Suicide Squad, and IKEA. Trump could be assembling a chair or being the chair.
So, but bear in mind that the speaker of the house doesn't actually have to be a member of the
house. So, you're up Andy.
All right, I'm happy to do it.
Absolutely.
I mean, it was a bit of an R and he was not in McCarthy being witch hunted out of his
gig.
Was there not, I mean, that must have appealed to American history fans.
It does feel like a neat answer to the question posed in the original McCarthy trials of,
have you no shame?
And the answer being a resounding no,
f**k off we don't have any shame.
Basically, I mean, I know he brought it on himself,
but I feel such sympathetic cringe
for the pain of Senator McCarthy,
who basically took 15 rounds to get himself voted in,
only was allowed to be voted in after he agreed to rules that would make it easier to get him out.
And then lasted barely nine months.
It's like you're getting someone to marry you, but they've changed the vows to be, instead
of until death do us part, it's like until death or a strong breeze do us part.
And then nine months later your wife shows up
with a ceiling fan and you know it's all over for you.
He claimed that he'd tried to be the adult in the room,
which in modern US politics is a lethally risky position to take,
to try to give off adult vibes. It's been like being the cow in an understocked McDonald's.
It's probably not going to end well for you. And also, Berrigan Mined McCarthy's previous actions in American
politics. Him claiming to be the adult in the room is somewhat akin to a Marlin claiming
to be the land-based mammal in an aquarium full of sharks. It's not a particularly impressive
claim. Britain news now and well we are in the middle of party conference season the most irritating
time of the year in this country last week was the Conservative Party conference this week
is the Labour Party conference. As I said, Rishi Sunak said that our politics is broken
in his speech at the Conservative Party conference
in which his general thrust was to try and present himself as an opposition politician,
despite being the Prime Minister, because he can't sell himself as Prime Minister because
of the 13 years of rantedly incompetent chaos that he and his party have given to the country. So it's
a very strange conference. In his speech, he basically laid out what I think he thinks he
wants people to think he thinks. And I think he thinks he said what he thinks the conservative
party faithful think they want to think they're hearing. But it's quite hard to tell with
the Tories these days. Now, obviously, it's not really fair to criticize a party conference
speech for being an acidly dressed salad of quarter-baked slogan at Confected Enemies
and Uncostored Vagnases. That is what party conference speeches are for. And at least
you did set out a bold new set of promises to be either completely ignored or openly
broken. There was just one problem with the speech,
and this was highlighted by Matthew Parris who writes for the Times and was himself a conservative MP
previously, and he said there was one small problem with Sunak's speech. He wrote,
it was all bullshit. So there we are, that's, you know, it's not the very slightest, but
someone from essentially,
although it's not, I've done a VC, even still a member of the Conservative Party, but
a well formatory MP said it was all bullshit. Now, we know how well bullshit works in politics.
Maybe this could be the turning point for the Sunak regime. He said he'd shown he was prepared
to take difficult decisions by canceling the part of the HS2 railway that goes as far as Manchester, but
that it would have been a difficult decision to stick with it as well. It was a difficult
decision either way because it has been f***ing competently done from day one, as we've
discussed at various points, on this podcast. It did make me think, though, watching
Sunak speech to the Conservative members, that these speeches are entirely pointless and
we'd all be a lot better off if leaders
had to give speeches at each other's conferences rather than at their own.
And also, if they had to tell at least a certain number of facts before they could treat
themselves to an outright lie.
I mean, it might make the speeches very long to get all the lies in that they want to
get in, but at least we'd have something to cling to. I don't know if it was again
Alice in Italy, whether the Tory conference was, I don't know, Italy's got political
issues of its own, as it generally has. But yeah, it's a horrible time of year here, to be
honest. It is a horrible time of the year. I mean, the Labour conference will have to wheel
out something extraordinarily special to manage
to the levels of self-congratulatory,
self-contradiction pulled out by the Tory conference
last week.
Rishi Suneag, as you said, he's emphasized
how difficult decisions are to make in politics right now,
longing for a time gone past,
where I assume in the past, decisions were easy to make
in politics.
He managed to roundly condemn politics, politics as usual, and all the problems caused by
whichever party has been in power for the last 13 years, while promising both change and
continuity, swearing to protect the bottom line of families' wallets, also cutting infrastructure
that would do exactly that and saying he likes the environment, but will also be walking back and net zero commitments to a fund and sustainably unsustainable
bare minimum.
Is that a great thing that people do when they treat environmental commitments as a
fun exercise in massaging numbers like your tricking test scores to get into our
squid rather than saving the fucking planet?
There were some really extraordinary things, including this bizarre new policy on smoking,
where he's going to ban 14-year-olds from being able to buy cigarettes.
And that age is going to go up every year.
So when those 14-year-olds aren't, say, 94, they still won't be allowed to buy cigarettes,
but 95-year-olds will be allowed to buy cigarettes but 95 year olds
Will be allowed to buy cigarettes if it is one of the weirdest most pointless policies
That has ever been concocted from the high mind of British political wankes. I
Can't wait for a delinquent 37 year old to be hitting up a up a 42-year-old in a car park, asking them to buy him a pack of smokes.
This is a policy that was, I think, suggested by Jacinda Ardern in New Zealand and copied
wholesale by Rishi Sunak to protect the young of the nation, but it doesn't feel like
a very Tory policy.
I feel like the party that's like very much about putting children
up chimneys should be more invested in personal freedom than this.
It also seems like the party that's worried about the solvency of the NHS would want more
people to die of lung cancer.
Well, these people are heroes. They save, smoking saves the economy so much money
in terms of pensions we don't have to pay.
Yeah, these people are heroes.
They should be getting the nighthards.
I think my favorite Tory backlash
to the Rishi Sunag proposed smoking ban was,
I think Toby Young, who said smoking has a fine
500 year tradition.
And that's why we should preserve it. Well, it used to be compulsory in some schools. smoking has a fine 500 year tradition.
And that's why we should be serving. Well, it used to be compulsory in some schools,
and in the 19th century, a lot of private schools.
Yeah, I think you had a pint of beer and a pipe of tobacco
every week to keep you keep you keep you strong.
Soon, like I also said, we've had 30 years of a political system
which incentivizes the easy decision, not the right one. So 30 years of a political system which incentivises the easy decision not the right one.
So 30 years was a curious time span because as I said he's tried to basically
savage the record of his own government to make himself look like a candidate of change.
Then that goes back to 2010, then Labour were 1997, but 30 years is 1993.
So what was the moment that changed our political system into one that basically
gave up making difficult decisions? Well, obviously what happened in 1993 was Australian
Cricket, a shame warn, delivered what is now known as the ball of the century, one of the
greatest single deliveries in the entire history of the Great Sport of Cr cricket, a ball that that that swirved and dipped through the Manchester
air, bounced and turned and hit Mike Gattings off stump and it dealt such a devastating blow,
not just to the England cricket team, but to the entirety of the United Kingdom and nation
that our political system simply gave up. It was either that or the release of the hit
single Boom Shake, the room by DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince or perhaps even I'd do anything for love but I won't do
that by meatloaf and anthem to political complacency if ever there was one.
I mean it could be that time that my grandmother said hyper-coloured t-shirts can't be safe
and maybe there was skin and washing machine safe,
but not safe for the future of the British governing system.
It's quite possible.
It's quite possible.
What the big problem the conservatives have,
as I said, is a sort of believability problem,
given all the mistakes they've inflicted on the British people.
I mean, would you trust an interior decorator
who you'd paid to spruce up your recently divorced vegan anti- Ethel's new room, and he would smear the words, I don't blame him for leaving
you in panda blood on the wall. Would you let that same decorator loose on your kids'
room? Well, no, but not unless he offered you a really cut-priced deal and some frankly
extraordinary tax breaks. So that may well be going ahead of the next election.
Aside from Sue Neck, there was another, well, frankly ludicrous speech by the
home secretary in hard-line nonsensicalist Suola Brafman. The previous week,
she had announced that multiculturalism has failed. Without going on to say,
mind you, come to think of it, monoculturism wasn't really panning out too well for
us either as a speech. She's been of a ropey century last time out for monoculturalism. She once again applied her
trademark sledgehammer of woefully provocative oversimplification to the
nations and the world's problems. Amongst other things at the conference in a
typically abilious vocal tournament, she took aim at what she called luxury
beliefs, railing against what seemed to be a computer-generated fictional trash of society.
Talking about people who have the luxury of promoting seductive but irresponsible ideas,
safe in the knowledge that their privilege will insulate them from any collateral damage.
At which point, the nation's Brexit already alarms fucking exploded simultaneously.
fucking exploded simultaneously.
The highlight of the conference was, so on a brand new threading on someone's guide dog.
Now, whether she did it intentionally or not,
let's just assume that she definitely did.
If she did, it would have been the most humane
and kindhearted thing that she did at the conference
or indeed that she's done
since taking off. She ground her home secretary and foot into the defenseless pooches dog flesh.
It's canine fur, a little match for her poison tipped
at Wellington boots. And if I'm exaggerating and using inflammatory language, she fucking started it.
But it was a truly extraordinary moment.
I mean the...
It was, I mean, generally just the speech that she gave at the Tory party conference was so cartoonishly villainous
that the only reason she has not been edged into ink as a Disney villain is because you wouldn't trust her
with one of those animal henchmen because she probably stepped on its tail.
Another curious moment was soon being introduced to the stage by his wife, which
is something we've not seen in British politics before.
And it did make me think, and I'm...
Yeah, she's the only person less elected right here.
Exactly.
But it made me think, I think we should...
It is going to happen, we should be allowed to vote for who the Prime Minister spouses.
I thought this when Johnson was in charge, and I think that even more now, if it's going
to be a public position with a public role, we should be able to vote on who the Prime Minister is married
to and sleeping with. That is not much to ask in a democratic society.
I mean, I'm deeply disappointed in the UK that they didn't force David Attenborough
to marry the Queen. Well, you and me both.
Wow. There was a brief period with that that could have been on the table. I could have been on the time that I mean patting
Sin himself was moving in
It would have made at most two people unhappy and those two people would have been David at breath and the queen
And he is an American would you explain this detail of British politics?
Just the because I read a bunch of stuff about the leveling up agenda, and in my world leveling up refers to advancing to the next level on a video game.
Yes.
So, why does Manchester care about Super Mario Brothers?
Well, leveling up was something that's been talked about by the Conservative Party for
a long time. Essentially what it means is to vaguely give the impression that they give a
even a micro percentage of a flying f*** about areas of the country that they have degraded
and run into the ground for decades. It's about equalising some of the inequalities
in British society and politics. The HS2 line was a key part of that, and they
worked out that in order to reduce urban deprivation in parts of Northern England, or in Scotland,
or Wales, the best thing to do was to make it 12 minutes quicker to get from London to Birmingham
on the train. I mean, there's not a lot has happened yet. There's been a lot of talk and no action,
which might be good because generally when the conservatives talk,
you don't want to see that put into action.
But they're failures to really do anything to level up the country.
In terms of this inequality between London and the rest of the country,
essentially, or North and South might cost them dearly at the next election. we'll have to go on a long list of things that ought to cost the conservatives
daily at the next election. He did say, though, that he thought it was time for politics to plan
more for the long term, and I mean, I've been calling for this for a long time on this podcast,
and it's good to see that Sunak is aiming for the long
term and we saw this for, you know, with this environmental policy, it's pulling out
of various environmental commitments.
Britain had to make sure that the planet is uninhabitable for millions and millions of
years.
You don't get much more long term than that.
And also, that makes sense of the bizarre smoking policy because bearing in mind the
environment that we're going to bequeath to our kids, they're going to need all the fucking lung capacity they can manage.
So, you know, there is some joined up thinking at least if nothing else. And also it shows that,
you know, he can learn, you know, he himself, when he was challenging the executive during COVID,
came up with the e-tout to help out scheme, which is possibly the most short term policy in political
history, basically saying
go and have dinner, fingers crossed, if you see a virus ask it nicely not to infect you.
So at least maybe he's a lesson to us all that we can learn from our mistakes.
A great line of merch for people that want to get more head. Just a really.
Family. Beautiful. Beautiful. It'll thought through a statement.
Just also on this note, did you know a flying f*** as a turn of phrase was invented way
further back than you think it was because it's not about banging on an airline, it's about
horseback banging.
Oh right.
This and other pieces of research brought to you by the work I've been doing on the density of the garden Reader available on unbound.com
Good plug
Good plug
This is why Edward Moibbridge invented the
Camera or whatever
So and am I understanding that there's a there's there's been doctors strikes in England and there's been a NHS staff in shortage.
And if I follow the stories correctly, the Tories want to solve the problem by relying
on international workers to staff the NHS while simultaneously stopping immigration and
labor wants to make NHS workers do compulsory overtime.
Is that what we're dealing with?
That's essentially, I think, a pretty accurate summary. I think also they are demanding
iller patients to work on because they feel that the level of illness at the moment is not
challenging enough. So that's something as well. And the government are bringing in three
brand new hours for doctors every day, going to be between 845 and a quarter to the 9,
so they can get 27, 7 rather than 24, 7 workload.
So, I mean, there is some progress in this.
My personal contribution to the overloading of the NHS
is to fly back to Australia to have my baby,
and then return to the UK, who I adore and enjoy,
and do not trust for one fucking second with my usual sauce.
On the seventh of strikes, Naito, you've got a strike update for us.
As regular listeners of the bugle will know, I am a semi-functional hybrid of comedian
and union negotiator currently in contract negotiations with the San Francisco Public School
District.
Our teachers union is voting to authorize a strike this week.
I should note that when I type when I prepare for the bugle and I type on Google Docs, whenever I'm working on the bugle, it wants to auto correct my authorized with a Z to my authorized with an S.
So, but our union voted to authorize the strike last week. Our group includes the low wage workers in the schools,
the custodian secretaries and cafeteria workers.
They haven't seen a raise in four years.
Many of them are on the brink of homelessness.
They work two and three jobs.
And in fact, many of them work for free.
The school district is so inept that they can't even run payroll
reliably.
So some schools, parents have taken up a collection so that their custodian doesn't get evicted.
Under these conditions, not surprisingly, the strike vote was 99.5% in favor of striking.
That's 99.5%. To put that in perspective, that is a better score than the Rotten Tomatoes Critics consensus
gave the cinematic masterpiece, Paddington 2, which got a lousy
99%.
99.5% is like a Stalin level of consensus, but we did it with robust democratic debate
among workers instead of gulags and show trials.
And one of the ways that we knew that our members were ready to strike is
occasionally during contract negotiations we will employ a tactic called open bargaining where we invite
We just open up bargaining to all of our members to come and observe and so we had about 50 members show up And I asked them if they wanted to introduce themselves to the management negotiating team and unproved it
They said one after another hello. My name is whatever that person name was I work hard for the students and I'd like to strike
Just set it to management. So possibly in the next month, there will be several thousand workers in the San Francisco Public Schools on strike to fill all of the
vacancies that are resulted from the not paying the workers.
Natural World News Now, well, the human world hasn't been covering itself in glory recently,
so let's look at the natural world. And while bad news for birds, over a thousand birds
were skyscraper to death in Chicago last week in a single day of avian mayhem by a single
building in the latest flare-off of bird versus architecture hostilities. They counted over a thousand birds killed by the crafty
McCormick Place Convention Centre. These birds were interrupted on their way to their winter holidays.
The Convention Centre splatted the hell out of them, striking a blow for all the buildings that
have been shat on by birds over the years by building, by, sorry, by butting to death, a selection of warbles,
thrashes, woodcocks, and other songbirds
until they quite literally fell out of the sky
like dead birds.
It's, I mean, I guess whether you think
this is a good new story or a bad new story
depends on whether you prefer skyscrapers or birds.
Who's are you on later?
I'm on the side of the guy who got a job collecting dead bird carcasses all around downtown
Chicago because they I support that guy's right to a pension and the birds didn't all die
in one place.
Some of them like they ended up being just strewn all over downtown Chicago.
So, the, and I spent probably 20 minutes trying to think about, is there a way that I can
pivot this topic into a joke about the TV series The Bear about Chicago's legendary
Italian beef sandwiches, and I could not. That's pretty sad. I do think you've put your
finger on the the real tragedy here, NATO, which is that we're living in an age where nobody's
going to eat these birds. Like imagine, even a hundred years ago, what a delicious day this would
have been for everyone involved. And now it's just a tragic and senseless waste of birds and an indictment on our entire ecosystem
and our failure to make it welcoming to the creatures
with whom we share a planet.
It could have launched multiple nursery rhymes.
So, such as, have you,
what, but we're, we're, we're,
we're, they're all those nursery rhymes about pies filled
with dead birds that had been hit by building?
Yeah, I think they're all definitely killed by buildings. Um, probably one billion, seeing a song of dead birds.
Oh, probably one billion birds around the world die every year
from, uh, fatally beaking themselves into large stationary objects around the world, which does raise questions about Darwinism
as well as questions about the need for better signposting on bird migration routes to help these
flying idiots to avoid bloody great skyscrapers. Let's also put it in perspective
75 billion chickens get eaten every year, so skyscrapers, buttings are not the bird communities biggest problem
and I think they should be focusing on chicken diets instead. Maybe we need retractable skyscrapers.
I mean, it doesn't raise so much questions about Darwinism as it gives us answers in the context
of Darwinism that we are now selecting for birds who have sudden moments of self-doubt.
We're selecting for those birds who have the presence of mind when
they're planning their migration route on Google Maps to select avoid bridge tolls and skyscrapers.
I'm actually thinking the penguins have probably got it worked out. You can't be blown out of the
sky by a skyscraper if you can't get off the ground. Some suggestions have been made as to how to mitigate the number of birds being splattered
by skyscrapers.
One is to make all skyscrapers fully retractable with motion sensors so that when they sense
a flock of birds coming they disappear underground.
Greased angled windows so that the birds simply slide off at high speed and if anything helped
on their migrations
or better managed and ticketed migration routes. So, let's hope for a better news for
the birds in future.
Well, some good news, or maybe not good news for mosquito fans, but a cheap malaria vaccine
has been recommended by the World Health Organization, which could bring about a breakthrough in the battle against malaria. Neither of you cheering that one.
That disappoints me to be honest, but obviously you're both mad at malaria fans.
This follows decades of pressure from the woke lobby to cancel the famous disease.
The vaccine has been developed by scientists, sorry boffins at the University of Oxford,
and it's developed Oxford, and has delivered
highly promising results. And we must say well done to the scientists involved, and well done
to science as a whole for once in its stupid life, concentrating on something a bit more
useful than for example researching into whether scorpions have personalities and if so whether
they'd enjoy golf, whether how many rotations terrapins can do if you flip them onto their backs and spin them on a ping pong table, and whether
dinosaurs would have been allergic to angel delight.
Or how mummy frogs remember the names of all of their spawns, what makes mountains horny
and at what point of body becomes too boot-elicious.
I mean, there are so many variables in that one, but well done science for doing something
useful.
Extra, yeah, magnificent news for science, magnificent news for effective altruists,
the effect of altruist community began
by saying the best bang for your buck
in terms of charitable donation was things like mosquito nets
in malaria-ridden countries,
and then very quickly went off into thinking
that we owe the future far more than we owe the present,
and there'll be more people in the future.
So what we really need to be doing is spending billions
of dollars into think tanks on AI
and space travel, the stuff that we were secretly always interested in anyway.
So good for them to have that taken off their plate with this malaria vaccine.
And extremely sad for everyone who argues that the reason that American healthcare prices
are so overinflated because it funds the research that they do into life-saving drugs with this sad contraindication provided by the University of Oxford and the fact
that the UK has more medical patterns per capita than the US does.
Hashtag SARS?
Well, on that's more positive news.
I mean, this is a story of not so strong.
Apparently cats glow in the dark as well. We'll have to come back to that on a future bugle. That
might be the best news for humanity that has emerged from this slightly depressing millennium
so far. And we'll leave it there for this week's bugle. We'll be back next week by which
time I'm sure the entire world will have calmed down and learned to get along fingers crossed
on that one. In the meantime, anything to plug? Alice. Yes, go to unbound.com and write in Alice Fraser,
because if you write in the Dansey Lagarde Reader, I guarantee you will spell Dansey Lagarde
incorrectly. So the Dansey Lagarde Reader is still available. I have finished writing it,
and so we're now just going through the process of getting it into your hands However long that takes also I have a podcast called the Gaggle the sister podcast to this podcast a sonic glossy magazine to the
Bugle's audio newspaper for a visual world also you can find me at patreon.com slash Alice Fraser
We do a weekly writers meeting which you can join for one dollar a month, which I think is
Sort of insultingly good value
so a month, which I think is sort of insultingly good value. So pageion.com slash Alice Fraser is the place to go for that.
I've got dates Andy. When's the October 18th? I'll be in Sacramento with the punch line.
Saturday, October 11th, I'll be in Hawaii, in Hawaii, on the island of Kauai
and November 16th to 18th at the San Francisco Pumpsign with Dana Gould.
In January, I have shows coming up for sketchfest,
political standup show and live podcast
at the Bituation Room and then February 3rd.
I'll be in Portland, Oregon at the Siren Theater.
We have some bugle live dates that will be confirmed in the extremely near future.
Early next year in the UK, do keep your eyes on the internet for those.
And it will also have a stand-up tour at some point in the middle of next year.
Dates also, TBC, but if you're contemplating buying any one of Christmas present, what
greater present could there be than a ticket to a live bugle show and or
my
Floundering return to stand up after slightly too long off
In the meantime
You can hear me on the the news quiz where five eighths of the way through the current series and
To be honest, I'm slowly slightly trepidacious about what we're going to write for this week's show.
Anyway, thank you very much for listening, buglers.
Until next week, goodbye. you