Although you might have thought that we had had enough rain to last a lifetime, it is still remaining as I got up yesterday morning and the prospect is actually for more rain and for the weather to become colder. So although we are practically half way through the month of February, we still have some weeks of wintry conditions to endure. That having been said, I am relieved in a strange kind of way that Meg, my wife of nearly sixty years, died when she did last May because trying to push her out in the wheelchair in these wet conditions had she lived would have been miserable for both of us, As it was, I managed to push her out every day in her wheelchair protected by a huge Russian manufactured heavy weight blanket and we managed it several times a week so the weather must have been more clement at this time last year. In fact her last trip out was exactly a week before she died and she was asleep much of the time but when I look back on events, I am amazed that we (both) managed to achieve these trips out. Although the weather is gloomy, I have a couple of social visits in store for the morning one of which is to reconnect with my University of Birmingham friend and we are scheduled to have a coffee together in my favourite little coffee bar which I frequent at the end of the week before I go to have lunch with my Irish friends. There is some shopping which urgently needs to be done in the morning so I have the prospect of quite a busy day. Yesterday, I pointed out the ‘cri de coeur’ that Sky’s political correspondent had made regarding the non-regulation of the internet to which her teenage daughters were exposed. But after the example of Australia, it does now appear that several European countries are now appreciating the potential harm offered to adolescents. I read this morning that France and Spain are promising laws to ban child access to social media as early as this year whilst Austria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Italy, and Slovenia have proposed similar legislation. So it now appears that a head of steam is building up in favour of a ban on the use of social media for the under 16’s (although, once implemented, no doubt a way will be found round it) Nonetheless, the signs of encouraging although I suspect it is a sign of ‘too little, too late’ After all, the combined financial power of big tech is enormous. As of late 2025 and early 2026, the combined financial power of top US tech companies—(Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Tesla)—significantly exceeds the nominal Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of most nations. Together, these seven firms have a combined market capitalisation of roughly $22.4 trillion, which is about four-fifths the size of the entire U.S. economy and larger than China’s GDP. These figures are absolutely staggering once one stops to contemplate them and even if most nations on earth tried to take collective action against ‘big tech’ they would not be able to match them in terms of sheer financial muscle.
In the late morning, although it was pretty cold and miserable, I took to the High Street in order to buy two pairs of trousers, one of my trusty pair having a tear in on of the legs and I thought that the trousers 8-10 years old were not worth repairing. So I went to my usual outfitters on the High Street and was fortunate to buy two pairs of cargo trousers, one colour a kind of dark olive green which is officially described as ‘Moss’ and the other being black. I did have a cursory search for shirts but only found one in my size not worth purchasing Then I popped off to the ‘Gifts of Love’ cafe where I was greeted as always by the proprietor and we exchanged some stories with each other whilst indulging in coffee and cake until my University of Birmingham friend turned up, all by prior arrangement. After we had engaged in an entertaining morning in which I brought my University of Birmingham friend up to date with all my news of my comings and goings and then went home. I had been invited out for lunch with my Irish friends and so I popped down the hill and spent a very happy time with them, having both a lunch and then an extended chat for most of the afternoon. We have not had the opportunity of an extended chat like this since the Christmas break and the bad weather that we are experiencing means that I see them less often by chance than I used to do when I was pushing Meg up and down the hill in her wheelchair.
The campaign group Palestine Action have had a victory of sorts in the High Court. The Court ruled that on two criteria the ban on the groups demonstrations could have been said to have been disproportionate. We did see the bizarre spectacle of the police having to arrest hundreds of supporters who were holding up signs saying indicating their opposition to genocide as such an act was said to be in support of a terrorist organisation. The sight of elderly and sometimes members of religious groups being labelled as terrorists and liable to up to 40 years of imprisonment certainly appeared to be disproportionate to members of the liberal population. However, the government will certainly appeal and the ban on Palestine Action’s activities continues until an appeal is heard by the Court of Appeal and this case will probably end up in the Supreme Court and will perhaps take months to resolve. One powerful argument is that the normal criminal law should be utilised for evident acts of violent protest and that therefore labelling Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation is itself disproportionate. But to many people, including myself, it seems odd that the state feels the need to label the holding of a placard as support for a terrorist group but this is the way that the legislation has been framed. One is left with the distinct impression that the action taken against protestors seems to be an attack upon political opinions held by group members with which the government disagrees and evidently the Court judgement today indicates that it had come to the view that the human rights of Freedom of Expression and Freedom of Association was threatened by labelling Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation.