Sixty-three years ago
yesterday, a chartered plane crashed near Clear Lake, Iowa. All four on board
were killed: pilot Roger Peterson, Buddy Holly, Richie Valens and J.P.
Richardson, AKA The Big Bopper.
So it seems to me that a recording
of Don McLean’s “American Pie” is in order.
Monday I had my semi-annual
dental appointment. Though the dentist’s office is in Vienna, he lives in the
People’s Republic of Reston and it occurs to me that if you’re ever in search
of a topic guaranteed to raise the temperature of a conversation without trace
of animosity, the Reston Association is the way to go.
Although it’s long since been
taken over by untrammeled developers (looking at you, Boston Properties),
Reston began life as a planned community, where people of all income levels
would live communally—clusters of characterful townhouses or low-rise
apartments—and be able to walk to shops and restaurants along tree-lined paths.
That idyll didn’t last even about 30 years; by the time I first moved here in
the 90s, with the exception of two shopping centers, all restaurants within the
People’s Republic are part of chains, and you have your choice of Giant,
Safeway or Harris Teeter for your groceries. (Okay—Trader Joe’s, as well.) So
much for supporting local businesses.
But the Reston Association—which
guided us into the portals of this brave new world—is a special kind of
universally hated overlord. Think of the RA as an HOA with ideas way above its
station, as incompetence on steroids, as bureaucrats without portfolios,
existing to scoop up homeowner dues (which residents pay on top of county taxes)
solely for the purpose of keeping their papers pushed.
If they made everyone within
the rather loose confines of the People’s Republic pay these fees, which they
don’t—only those who fall within the original RA’s grasp have to pony up—I would
be less outraged. But no, the assessment on my 52-year-old house subsidizes all
the amenities for the $3500/month apartment dwellers who walk their designer
dogs on the paths that were meant to guide you to local shops.
Anyway—bringing up RA kept my
dentist in narratives for the time it took him to check me out and clean my
teeth. We parted agreeing that RA sucks eggs and is an abomination to God and
mankind. We’ll reconvene in August.
British Prime Minister Boris
Johnson has got himself into a bit of a pickle.
Well—again. He’s in a
(self-inflicted) predicament again. This time over holding a string of boozy
parties at No. 10 Downing Street—the PM office and residence—during periods in
the pandemic when his own government was imposing draconian restrictions on how
many Brits could gather for any occasion. Those restrictions put paid to
christenings, bar mitzvahs, weddings and even funerals. Thousands of Britons
died without the presence of loved ones in compliance with these lockdowns.
Apparently starting in May
2020, No. 10 was the scene of more social gatherings than an Olive Garden event
space. Birthdays, leavings, Christmas, the premises indoors and out flowed with
gaiety and pinot grigio; at least several with BoJo himself in attendance. (He
does love a good piss-up.) According to reports, staff installed a 34-bottle
wine fridge and took turns on Fridays wheeling a suitcase down to the Tesco
Express to load up with wine.
The afternoon before Queen
Elizabeth II sat alone in Saint George’s Chapel at Windsor at the funeral of
her husband last year, Prince Philip (in full compliance with lockdown regs), there were actually
two bust-ups at No. 10, celebrating the departure of staff members; evidently, it’s
not the done thing to have a single party when there are two honorees.
BoJo, a narcissistic blowhard who has built a career
out of lying and buffoonery, at first denied there were any such parties. Then,
in the time-honored manner of pols the world over, he claimed to have been
unaware that his worker bees were violating the regulations and of course he wasn’t
there, but gave assurances that [worker bee] heads would roll. When photographic
evidence emerged that he, in fact, was in attendance (one of them, FFS, was a
surprise birthday party for him, held in the Cabinet Room at the conclusion of
a cabinet meeting, organized by his wife), he sputtered that he “honestly”
thought they were work meetings.
Look—here’s what I keep
wondering: leaving aside the flaunting of policies his own government enacted, the
continuous flow of booze and pub quizzes at No. 10 may explain the preponderance
of Tory policies. Man—they’re all always three sheets to the wind; no wonder the
nation is a shadow of its former self.
Well, the perpetual
opportunist has had to answer some pointed questions in both the press and
Parliament about the parties, although he’s doing his best impression of an
overstuffed eel in his responses. Seems that the country that was okay with committing
economic suicide with Brexit as long as it kept all the wogs out sticks at the double
standard of lockdowns for the hoi polloi while the Oxbridge set party like it’s
1999.
A heavily-redacted version of an inquiry by a high-ranking civil servant into "partygate" was released yesterday; even the expurgated version says there's no defense for the activities at No. 10. There's an ongoing criminal investigation by the Metropolitan Police into same. We may never get the full report from Sue Gray, because it's within BoJo's gift to withhold it. But it’s got to the point that
former (Conservative) PM Theresa May (a woman of whom I would be hard-pressed to say anything
positive) got up on her hind legs yesterday, jammed a shiv between BoJo’s ribs
and twisted it.