Sewage, patents, and post-truth politics: it’s the news from Britain

In these days of post-truth politics, it shouldn’t surprise me that someone paid a polling company to ask what percent of the British public thinks one of our many former prime ministers, Boris Johnson, was telling the truth in his memoir. It shouldn’t surprise me but it does. Just when I think I’m cynical enough to keep up with reality, something like this comes along.

What did they learn? For the sake of simplicity, let’s focus on two questions: only 25% of the people polled believed Johnson’s claim that Buckingham Palace asked him to convince Prince Harry not to leave the UK and 31% believed his claim that Britain was able to get Covid vaccines faster because it had left the European Union. 

A baffling number of people gave answers that fell in the probably zone, saying a claim was probably true or probably false. I understand that they didn’t have inside information, and some of the questions asked what they believed Johnson believed, which leads us onto wobbly ground indeed. But come on, people. I wouldn’t believe the man if he told me today was Friday. 

In fact, as I write this, it’s not Friday. It will post on Friday, and you’ll read it on whatever day you damn well please, if at all. I’m typing it, though, on Monday and editing on Tuesday. You see how slippery truth can be? Muddy the waters enough and everyone will stop caring what’s true–or so the theory goes. Still, no matter what day of the week Johnson tells me it is, I’ll check my phone or today’s newspaper. 

Or possibly my phone and today’s newspaper. 

Irrelevant photo: An azalea blossom

If you get past the list of questions, the poll offers some hope for people’s political sanity: 72% of Britons describe Johnson as untrustworthy. True, that’s down from the 76% when he was just about to slither out of office, and I’m not sure Johnson would consider their low opinion a problem–he’s built a career out of convincing people that whatever he gets up to is cute–but it does let me think three-quarters of the population is paying some minimal attention.

I’d love to tell you who paid for the poll and why, but I have no idea. What I do know is that no poll–yea, no breath–gets taken without somebody paying for it.

 

Okay, we know politicians lie. Private companies tell us the truth, though, right?

Of course they do, dear. Now go to sleep or Santa won’t bring you any presents.

*

If the kids, having despaired of ever getting a straight answer, are asleep, let’s tell secrets: Britain’s privatized water companies cheated on thousands of pollution tests.

Did I mention that they got to monitor themselves on those tests? Because all that red tape we used to have was bad for us. 

How’d they rig the tests? They stopped the outflow of effluent–a polite name for liquid waste or sewage that gets discharged into rivers or seas–when they were about to test the outflow. And guess what: everything was fine! Isn’t that wonderful? Then they opened the taps and the sewage poured forth.

Britain has a serious water-pollution problem. To quote the BBC, “The amount of raw sewage spilling into England’s rivers and seas doubled in 2023, with 3.6 million hours of spills compared with 1.75 million hours the year before.”  A different BBC article says just 14% of Britain’s rivers are in good ecological health, and the problem comes not just from untreated waste (we have a lot of that) but also from sewage that’s only partially treated. The final stage of treatment, sand filtration, is optional. (See above for how red tape is bad for us.)

Meanwhile, in the 2021/22 financial year, water companies paid their shareholders a total of £965 million and their CEOs took home £16.5 million. Thames Water, the biggest of the water companies, was almost £15 billion in debt as of last March. In July, it asked the regulator to increase annual bills by 23% between 2025 and 2030. Since then, it’s said it needed to raise them by 53%. 

Pay up, folks. You get what you pay for–with sewage on top.

There’s talk of renationalizing Thames Water, but that will stick the government with its debt (it just got a £3 billion loan that will help it survive past Christmas), along with its other problems. I think I see why the government’s hesitating.

 

Yes, but what’s Britain really like?

Well, you can tell a lot about a country from its patent applications. Here are a few inventions Britons patented in 2023:

  • A flatpack coffin
  • A robot dog that vacuums and can go up and down stairs
  • A computer table that lets you lie under your desk and work looking up (it can also work as a conventional desk)
  • A plywood cow–useful if you want to practice lassooing cattle
  • Smart gloves that record a goalie’s performance data
  • Cheese made of potatoes
  • Shoes that can be worn on either the left or right foot 

and most practical of all

  • A machine that vibrates the mucus out of your nose

What does this tell us about Britain? I’m at a loss. You tell me.

29 thoughts on “Sewage, patents, and post-truth politics: it’s the news from Britain

    • I have a box where I store my shreds of hope for our species and our fellow planetary inhabitants. It’s not empty but the shreds are taking up less space than they used to. Worse yet, I don’t drink wine. Have one for me.

      Liked by 2 people

  1. Umm…until the mid 1800’s shoes were made that could be worn on either foot. Then the left/right idea came in.

    Cheese made of potatoes ? We are getting potato substitutes (and pizza ) made of cauliflower.

    Various tack shops already market steer heads (you stick the spike in a bale of hay) to practice roping. https://s7d5.scene7.com/is/image/PetsUnited/TE039620?wid=750&hei=750&fmt=webp&qlt=75,0&op_sharpen=0&resMode=sharp2&op_usm=0.9,1.0,6,0&iccEmbed=0

    The vacuuming robot dog seems to have promise !

    I don’t feel qualified to comment on the trustworthiness of your politicos, considering Der Drumpf just laid out a plan to form a firing squad to take care of Liz Cheney (one of his prominent dissenters.)

    Liked by 2 people

    • Back in the dark ages–say around 1970-something–when tofu was all the rage, enthusiasts were trying to substitute it for everything: noodles, cheese, ice cream, hair ties. My feeling was, it’s very good as tofu but it just won’t hold your hair in place and it doesn’t taste particularly good as a noodle. Ditto cauliflower, although if you could find a way to hold it in place it might look nice tucked behind someone’s ear. And if it didn’t look good, it would at least be an interesting way to open a conversation.

      As for Trump, let’s hope we don’t get to find out what he’d have done.

      Liked by 2 people

  2. So them marvellous green islands are drowning in their own shit ? Seems that sewage plants are not a big deal, you simply can not make money from shit.
    Even years ago Thames Water and the whole “privatisation” of waterworks were seen as bad examples here. People here are very very concerned about their drinking water and the waste water treatment. The idea of selling the waterworks of a city to some entrepreneur brings even the last philistine on the barricades. And rightly so.
    I remember them Tofu days. Then there was this damn mushroom growing anywhere, forgot the name. Many things them kids rediscover are old hats. So let them sit in their old, cold country houses where all is so natural, goodness, let them make their own mistakes … all good as long as they use rubber.
    I firmly believe that Trump has already lost. He is a goner.

    Liked by 2 people

Leave a reply to Ellen Hawley Cancel reply