Archive for the 'tyger the moblogger' Category

Chinese Whispers

Yesterday I spent the day visiting a new business contact in Suffolk. It was a very interesting and rewarding day. I went with two female associates, who will remain nameless (but they know who they are…).

It was interesting day. I drove while the two friends rattled on as women do. I had a very enlightening insight into the discourse of the woman. It scared the shit out of me.

Another interesting insight was a discussion regarding the Chinese supply-chain and the sheer scale of their operations. We have no idea - although this may change. I may be part of a business trip to China later in year…

I’m in Hertfordshire on business for the rest of this week, so blogging will be irregular. I’m contactable 24/7 via email, though.

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When I grow up I want to be a spaceman

It has to be one of the biggest fabrications we instil into our children: what do you want to be when you grow up?” We ask this question relentlessly, and one can be sure that grandparents and loving aunts will similarly badger our offspring about their future plans too.

But when do we every really grow up?

Only the other day a prominent Conservative blogger demanded that I should “grow up,” and maybe he has a point. As someone whose day job is a thoroughly unrewarding career in finance, I do regularly ask… what do I want to be when I grow up?

Reading across the blogosphere it’s increasingly apparent that many, many fellow bloggers feel just as directionless, and that their talents are wasted. I suppose this disillusionment has its roots in consumerism and our education system. Kids go through school being told that they can be anything they want to be, and they base their subject choices on dreams rather than making pragmatic decisions based on market opportunities.

Few kids choose to be engineers; yet working in construction or in industrial design is one of the most rewarding careers out there. When every teenager dreams of being a journalist or a TV presenter, it’s no wonder so many are disappointed when they end up selling ad space in The Wilbury Chronicle or processing invoices for Widget Inc. This is one of the reasons why so people in the UK define themselves as unhappy.

It is because of this that I admire America and Americans themselves. They genuinely have a can-do attitude and are prepared to work to achieve their dreams. In Europe we do suffer the canker of dependency. Too many people just sit and wait for someone else to knock on their door with an envelope containing their dreams. It just doesn’t happen.

This is why I’m in process of taking several risks. I am involved in a couple of projects that, if they come off, will ensure I don’t have to endure the drudgery of the nine-to-five for much longer. It’ll be hard work and no doubt this blog will suffer, but it’s something that I feel I must do. I’m 29 tomorrow and I have already had one mid-life-crisis under my belt – I don’t want another!

There is no use waiting. If you act like a sheep, then you’re a sheep. Opportunities do exist, but they can also be created. Be a creator. Decide what you want to achieve. Write it down and determine what you need to do to make it happen. Not everything can be achieved. It would be rather silly, if I decided to take on Pepsi and Coca-Cola by making cola-based soft drinks in my garage. So settle on something possible yet rewarding. Every moment you’re not working for yourself, you’re working for someone else. Now isn’t that silly?

On Saturday our little boy is two, and landmark dates always make me ponder the future. What will the little scamp do? Will he go to university? Will it be here in the UK or will he, as his mother would no doubt prefer, study in Russia? What will he study? And where will he live? It makes little difference to me. I’m apprehensive about the next 30-years, so as long as he’s safe, I’ll be happy. But I do wonder…

I have an idea! As soon as he’s old enough, I’ll ask him what he wants to be when he grows up?

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The Politics of Gipper

I have just finished catching up on the news from the first Republican ‘08 presidential nominee debate (yeah, I have been that busy – and you thought blogging was about instant reactions to the breaking news. Shows how wrong you can be, doesn’t it?). The debate was held at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in California.

All ten GOP hopefuls pretty much broke their neck to pay homage to Old Gipper and his politics, and this got me thinking about the dangers and reasons for the Republican Party’s almost religious veneration of The 40th President of The United States of America.

I suppose the first place to start would be the ruinous presidency of the current White House incumbent, George W. Bush. It must be hard to run on a Republican ticket right now. With Bush’s approval ratings similar to those of a prison snitch, it’s nigh on impossible to build on his legacy.

Of course John McCain has it hardest, being so identified as a supporter of the War in Iraq and a defender of the President’s recent surge strategy. Yet, over the last year or so, even McCain has tried to put clear blue water between him and Bush, going on record to describe Donald Rumsfeld as one of the worst Secretaries of Defense in history and himself as a Reaganite Republican.

What Bush has achieved is pretty spectacular. When he took office, Bush ‘43 enjoyed GOP control of both Houses of Congress, and was supported by a loyal party base with deep pockets. Now, over halfway through his second term, the Dems control both Houses, he is defined by a failed war, and his domestic reputation is in tatters. For a Republican hopeful, it’s probably politically safer to be caught having full-sex with a chicken, than to be caught praising the President.

Such disillusionment with its own sitting President has forced the Republican Party to look back to better times. During Reagan’s presidency the GOP was defined by economic confidence, low taxes, and an inflexible foreign policy. The Soviet Union represented a unifying threat and a tangible enemy. Compare and contrast this to America’s current nemesis: the nebulous and constantly morphing menace of Islamic-fascism.

A rose-tinted lurching back to the past is also further evidence of the intellectual vacuum that has followed the collapse of Neoconservatism. With violence in Iraq still escalating and the Neocon dream of nation building in disarray, conservatives are without a clear political ideology to pin their hopes to. By hankering back to a more lucid geopolitical landscape, the GOP is proving that it doesn’t have the answers for the problems America faces today.

Ronald Reagan has been raised to a saint-like position in modern Republican folklore. His administration is considered the vanguard of the glory-days of conservatism, a time when being described as a Liberal was considered a slur, and anyone who argued against conservative values was dismissed as godless or un-American. Only a couple of years ago, Bush won his second term as President, and Republican rule seemed dynastical.

Now with The Democratic Party again in the ascendancy, Republican hopefuls are thrashing around for something solid on which to lay their new foundations on. The fact they are looking back to the nineteen eighties, tells you everything you need to know about the House of Bush and the current state of Conservative Politics in America.

Conservatism will have its day in the sun again, but now it is up to a generation of Liberal politicians to provide leadership to a rudderless America. With Conservative politics offering no solutions to the major threats to the US (globalisation, perilous levels of consumer borrowings and terrorism), the Democrats have the opportunity to seize control of The White House and steer America to more prosperous waters.

Carpe Diem, Mr. Obama, Carpe Diem…

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