xenophanean: (Default)

[personal profile] xenophanean 2019-01-10 12:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Corbyn's deal appears to be either:

"Fuck it, let's just join the EEA, but can we call it something else so we don't look crap".

Likely EU reaction: (resigned) "Sure, why not, but you'll get a slightly crappy version so it doesn't piss off Norway"

or

"Can we have *some* of the 4 freedoms, but not all of them?"

Likely EU reaction: (fury) "FFS, read the last, like, 300 memos where we have said WE WILL NOT FUCKING DO THIS! FFS We just can't even!"
mair_in_grenderich: (Default)

chefs

[personal profile] mair_in_grenderich 2019-01-12 02:57 pm (UTC)(link)
The chef thing reminded me of Nevil Shute on aircraft designers:

"There is, of course, a good explanation in psychology for this universal characteristic of the greatest aeroplane designers. A beautiful aircraft is the expression of the genius of a great engineer who is also a great artist. It is impossible for that man to carry out the whole of the design himself; he works through a design office staffed by a hundred draughtsmen, or more. A hundred minds, each with their own less competent ideas, are striving to modify the chief designer's original conception. If the design is to appear in the end as a great artistic unity, the chief designer must be a man of immensely powerful will, capable of imposing his idea and his way of doing things on each of his hundred draughtsmen, so that each one of them is too terrified to insert any of his own ideas. If the chief designer has not got this personality and strength of will, his original conception will be distorted in the design office and will appear as just another, not-so-good aeroplane. He will not then be ranked as a good chief designer.

All really first-class chief designers, for this reason, are both artists, engineers, and men of a powerful and an intolerant temper, quick to resist the least modification of their plans, energetic in fighting the least infringement upon what they regard as their own sphere of action. ... "

(https://www.fadedpage.com/books/20120814/html.php)