So much going on these days it is scarcely worth bothing to opine on it all.
The Nigel Lawson call for the UK to think seriously about leaving the EU is a huge shift. The Unthinkable is being Thought.
The US and Russia are trying to get the warring factions in Syria to talk to each other. What could go wrong?
North Korea’s threats to blow us all to smithereens have subsided for a while. Phew. I was getting worried.
Slowly but surely the Obama administration’s terrifying performance in Benghazi is being exposed. Watch in amazement if not horror as Clintonian cynicism combined with Obamistic cynicism in front of the families of the victims to blame the murders of the US Ambassador and others on “an awful Internet video” when all concerned – above all Hillary Clinton herself – knew that this was just not true.
And then there’s the Cleveland House of Horrors. Watch closely this beyond wonderful interview with the man who kicked down the door to help Amanda Berry and the other two women finally escape: Charles Ramsay.
This interview stands out for several reasons. First, the vivid language he uses to describe what happened and his relationship with the man keeping the women locked up. No speechwriter on Earth with the possible exception of Quentin Tarantino could have written those words down.
Then watch his gestures as he brings the story to life. At one point in the interview a nearby police or ambulance siren goes off. Is it my imagination, or does he give the slightest hint in his eyes of teasing panic that they might be coming to arrest him?
And finally, behold how the interviewer quickly ends the interview in panic as Mr Ramsay gives his forthright views on the amazing unlikelihood of a little white girl running to a black man for help:
‘I knew something was wrong when a little pretty white girl runs into a black man’s arms, I said, “Something is wrong here”. Dead giveaway’
Only ‘blacks’ can do scathingly politically incorrect racial wit at this high level of art. Fame and fortune await him. Already happening in fact.