My weekend viewing of films not the most cheerful

September 8th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

As regular visitors to NightHawk will know, I’m a big movie fan and enjoy a wide range of genres and styles.

This weekend. Vee and I – together for almost three and a half decades now – went to the cinema to see the new British film “45 Years” [my review here].

Then, next day, we watched on a rented Blu-ray from Lovefilm the American movie released earlier this year called ‘Still Alice” [my review here].

Both works feature outstanding acting performances but both are deeply depressing. I think I’ll go for a rom-com tonight …

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U.S. presidential election (11): who can trump Trump?

September 6th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

To the astonishment of many observers, motor-mouth Donald Trump has taken the lead – and kept it so far – in the Republican primary race to chose a presidential candidate. Now the media loves political upsets and is looking for evidence that Trump is under challenge. The current unlikely candidate is an African-American neurosurgeon called Ben Carson.

What’s the evidence? So far, a poll showing him with similar support to Trump in the first primary race in Iowa which will be the first state to vote.

But, as this profile points out:

“He has never run for elected office and never had to meet the demands of a constituency. He can be soft-spoken to the point of inaudibility. He has no foreign policy experience. He has no party support.”

Of courses, if somehow Carson won the Republican nomination and then the following general election, America would have elected two black presidents in succession. But, it ain’t gonna happen. The odds are still on the nation’s first female president.

Posted in American current affairs | Comments (1)


10 ways to manage the migration crisis

September 5th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

1) Establish a standard asylum procedure across Europe

2) Provide a safe and swift alternative to a meaningful number of refugees

3) End the war in Syria

4) Give Syrians employment rights in Turkey

5) Persuade Gulf countries to take in more Syrians

6) Provide economic alternatives in smuggling communities

7) End the war in Libya

8) End repression and extremism in Eritrea and Afghanistan

9) Increase development in west Africa

10) Learn from precedent

A complex problem like the current crisis of refugees and migrants requires a multifaceted and sustained response. These 10 suggestions are spelled out in an article by Patrick Kingsley, the migration correspondent of the “Guardian” newspaper. None is simple but all have merit.

Posted in World current affairs | Comments (0)


My 26th short story: “The Heart Of The Matter”

September 4th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

This week’s short story is really short, so give it a go. You’ll find it here.

Posted in My life & thoughts | Comments (0)


The position of China in World War Two

September 3rd, 2015 by Roger Darlington

In China today, the Communist Party mounted a massive military parade through Beijing’s Tiananmen Square (the name means ‘The Square of Heavenly Peace’) to mark the 70th anniversary of the defeat of Japan and the end of the Second World War. Except, of course, that the Japanese were not defeated in China (they capitulated after the Americans dropped two atomic bombs on Japan itself) and the Communists played a minor role in combating the Japanese invaders (most of the resistance came from the Nationalists).

The book I am currently reading – “The Storm Of War”, an  account of the Second World War by Andrew Roberts – notes:

“Western accounts of the war often minimise, to the point of sometimes ignoring it altogether, the experience of China, despite the fact that fifteen million of those who died in the conflict – a full 30 per cent – were Chinese. It was the Chinese who held down half of Japan’s fighting strength throughout the war, and around 70 per cent of the effort was undertaken by the Kuomintang (Nationalist) forces under their generalissimo, Chiang Kai-shek, based at Chunking. By contrast the Communists under Mao Zedong were, as Max Hastings has put it, at best merely ‘an irritant’ to Japan.”

Remember those figures: 15 million Chinese dead and almost a third of all the victims of the war. They don’t teach that in British or American schools, do they?

Posted in History | Comments (2)


We are all migrants

September 3rd, 2015 by Roger Darlington

Originally the only humans resided in the Rift Valley in East Africa.  Now there are people in every corner of the globe. How did they get there? Migration. So, in a sense, we are all migrants.

Some may argue that this was a long time ago, but most of us only have to go back a few generations to find family connections in another country. Many of us don’t even have to go back generations.

My mother was Italian and came to Britain in 1946 when she married my father who was stationed in Italy with the Royal Air Force. My wife’s father was Czech and married her mother in 1942 when he had fled Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia to fly with the wartime RAF.

Today, in north-west London, I live in a very cosmopolitan community. In our road, our immediate neighbours include Irish, Cypriot, Spanish, Polish, Indian, Pakistani, Lebanese and Filipino. A near neighbour was a Kenyan Asian who was expelled from his country of birth. Our postman is Nepalese, our doctor is Indian, our newsagent is Sri Lankan, our dry cleaner is Pakistani, my dentist is Iranian, my hairdresser is Greek Cypriot.

So this summer’s news about migrants and refugees from north Africa and the Middle East has deeply upset me. As one of the last tourists in Syria [see my account here], I feel especially concerned about those fleeing the civil war there. When we left Syria, we visited Lebanon [see my account here]. Today about one in five people living in Lebanon is a refugee from Syria’s civil war – giving Lebanon more refugees per capita than any other country in the world.

I know that we cannot have open borders and unlimited migration, but Europe can and should do more, a lot more. And Britain – one of the richest and most humane countries in the world – should do a lot, lot more. Especially for refugees.

Posted in My life & thoughts, World current affairs | Comments (3)


What is the wettest place on earth?

September 2nd, 2015 by Roger Darlington

Over the last few weeks, Britain has had a miserable summer with one rainy day after another and often the deluges have been severe. But, of course, this is nothing compared to many parts of the world.

So where is the wettest place on earth? According to the BBC, it is the cluster of hamlets known as Mawsynram in India. We are told:

“Moisture swept from the Bay of Bengal, condenses over this 1,491m plateau, in the Khasi Hills that overlook the plains of Bangladesh. The result is an astonishing average annual rainfall of 11,871 mm (467.35”). Even the world’s biggest statue, Rio de Janeiro’s 30m tall Christ the Redeemer, would be up to his knees in that volume of water.”

More information here.

Posted in Environment | Comments (0)


The most desperate battle in history: Stalingrad 1942-1943

September 1st, 2015 by Roger Darlington

I am currently reading the 600-page book “The Storm Of War”, an  account of the Second World War by Andrew Roberts. He writes: “The battle of Stalingrad is deservedly considered to be one of the most desperate in human history.”

The ferocity of the fighting and the scale of the casualties almost defy comprehension. Roberts gives a combined figure of 1.1 million for the deaths on both the German and the Soviet sides.

The Soviet Union alone lost 479,000 killed or captured and a further 651,000 sick or wounded, a total of 1.13 million. During the battle, the Russian secret service shot around 13,500 of their own soldiers for cowardice or desertion.

The Axis suffered 850,000 total casualties (killed, wounded or captured) among all branches of the German armed forces and its allies; 400,000 Germans, 200,000 Romanians, 130,000 Italians, and 120,000 Hungarians were killed, wounded or captured. Some 91,000 surrendered at the end of the battle, but less than 10,000 of them survived as prisoners of war.

You can read more about the battle here.

An excellent film about the battle of Stalingrad is “Enemy At The Gates” which I have reviewed here.

Posted in History | Comments (0)


When was the last time you saw a Mauritanian film?

August 31st, 2015 by Roger Darlington

Never – right? Me too – until this weekend. We rented “Timbuktu” from Lovefilm. If you like action movies and can’t stand slow films with subtitles, this is not for you. But, if you are a discerning film fan who likes something different, you should try this. I’ve reviewed the film here.

Posted in Cultural issues | Comments (0)


We would be stupid to ignore Tony Blair

August 30th, 2015 by Roger Darlington

Some people may not like Tony Blair; they might despise his inclusion of Britain in the invasion of Iraq; they may resent his warnings about the dangers of electing Jeremy Corbyn as the next Leader of the Labour Party.

But the guy is the most successful leader that the party has ever had, taking it to three successive massive victories. Whatever you think about him, he cares for the party he once led and would like to see it back in power, able to help the less advantaged in our deeply unequal society.

So it is worth listening to him when he writes in an article in today’s “Observer” newspaper:

“There is a politics of parallel reality going on, in which reason is an irritation, evidence a distraction, emotional impact is king and the only thing that counts is feeling good about it all.”

Blair compares the appeal of Corbyn in the UK to the current success of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders in American primary races. This is something I did in a blog posting a month ago.

He mentions the appeal of simplistic political messages in countries like Greek and France and, in this article, I examined the crisis in the older democracies.

As Blair puts it in his article:

“… it doesn’t alter the “real” reality. It provides a refuge from it. Because Trump and Sanders aren’t going to be president; Scotland did vote No and even if it votes Yes in the future, the pain of separation for all of us will be acute; Syriza may win but only by switching realities; and Jeremy Corbyn is not going to be prime minister of the UK.”

Posted in British current affairs | Comments (3)