Thursday 26th June 2025
Blog Page 1354

Review: Collaborators

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When John Hodge’s Olivier-award-winning debut play, The Collaborators, was first staged in 2011, critics praised the gripping, faintly disturbing aura that imbued its central relationship, between playwright Mikhail Bulgakov’s and Soviet dictator, Joseph Stalin. The interpretation currently being performed in the Oxford Union’s debating chamber is just as worthy of praise for its subtly disquieting air, distilled brilliantly by the two protagonists, played by Jordan Reed and Timothy Coleman.

The Collaborators tells the story of Bulgakov’s attempt to construct a play about Stalin for the dictator’s 60th birthday celebrations. Torn between his counter-revolutionary instincts and his safety, Bulgakov agrees to the task and begins to explore Stalin’s life with help from the man himself. As the two become friendlier, Bulgakov begins to question his own political standpoint, to sympathise with the difficulties of leading a communist state, and to understand the motives of the infamous autocrat. Reed’s portrayal of Bulgakov is laced with a commendable realism; he embodies the world-wearied playwright superbly as he sighs, protests, and achieves an emotional depth that is entirely believable.

Coleman’s unsettlingly gleeful Stalin is equally understated. He is paradoxically likeable, almost endearing, whilst retaining a degree of menace. However, it is Reed and Coleman’s interaction, their chemistry, which is most engaging. Their developing relationship is entirely convincing and one can easily understand Bulgakov’s growing sympathy for Stalin’s regime as a result of the dictator’s persuasive, appealing manner. Adam Diaper is absorbing as Vladimir, the intimating secret policeman with artistic pretensions

who gradually becomes disenchanted with the oppressive administration, Duncan Cornish is darkly comic as a sexually-deprived doctor, and Hannah Kelly is adept as Yelena, Bulgakov’s despairing wife. Bridget Dru and Saskia Lumley direct with confidence and dynamism.

The Collaborators is staged on three levels and action transitions between these areas. Scenes overlap, a mutable pace only sporadically transgresses into dawdle or rush, and a sense of potential volatility is generally maintained throughout. Some group scenes are decidedly clunky, but as the play’s themes grow darker, this unsettling atmosphere draws one in and the denouement little short of captivating. At a running time of around two and a half hours long, The Collaborators is a decidedly heavy drama, yet its gritty plot, refreshingly under- stated acting and self-assured direction rarely fail to hold one’s attention. On the surface, it is the story of one man’s attitude towards an oppressive communistic regime, yet at heart it is a compelling and profound account of the relationship between two fundamentally opposed individuals. 

Interview: Luke Harding

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I meet Luke Harding in Blackwells’ first floor café on a muggy May afternoon. His sitting position (jaunty, legs hooked over arm of leather chair) is reminiscent of a supply teacher a good decade younger than his Twitter handle ‘@lukeharding1968’ – would suggest. His choice of refreshment, a box of organic apple juice drunk through a straw, completes the look of an irreverent thirty-something.

Harding is in Oxford to give a talk on Edward Snowden for the International Relations Society in the wake of his book, The Snowden Files: The Inside Story of the World’s Most Wanted Man. He is an Oxford alumnus himself, having read English at University College, and edited Cherwell.

His third book, Mafia State, was an account of the monitoring and intimidation he sufferered over the course of his stint as The Guardian’s Russia correspondent, which culminated in his expulsion from Moscow in 2011, in the most extreme example of aggression towards the Western press since the Cold War. Harding has been home for just three days after a three week stint in Donetsk, where he witnessed the chaotic inception of the ‘People’s Republic of Donetsk’ in a pro-Russian pocket of Ukraine which looks set to follow in Crimea’s footsteps as Putin’s latest acquisition.

When I ask Harding about the situation in Ukraine, his response is unequivocal. “There’s nothing good to report. Essentially, what’s happening in Ukraine is not civil war; it’s a multifaceted Kremlin operation to create mayhem.”

His analogies span the bulk of the 20th century and his predictions for the future are equally far-reaching. “This is the biggest crisis in Europe since the Cold War. It’s not the break-up of Yugoslavia, but the strategic consensus since 1945 has been ripped up. We now have an authoritarian state, with armies on the march.” What next?

“It’s clear to me that Putin intends to dismember Ukraine and join it up with Transnistria, then perhaps he’ll go as far as Moldova in one way or another,” Harding says. This is part of what he deems Putin’s over-arching project: an expansionist attempt to gather Russo-phones together under one yoke, which he terms ‘scary and Eurasian-ist’, and which he notes is darkly reminiscent of “another dictator of short stature” who concocted “a similarly irredentist projecting the 1930s”.

Comment pages have been filled with pieces linking Putin’s annexation of the Crimea to Hitler’s 1938 Anschluss for months, and the impact of such comparisons – as well as their validity– is wavering. Harding checks himself, saying “I think we should avoid these 1930s analogies because they aren’t very helpful”, but the temptation to see a pattern, and to make predictions for the future based on analogies of the past, permeates our conversation.

Another dictator crops up, again predictably: according to Harding, the techniques used by Stalin to consolidate power in Soviet states are now being implemented across Crimea and eastern Ukraine. “Sham referendums, local clone dictators, eliminating political competition – all these methods were rolled out across the USSR after World War II. The Crimean Tartar parliament is currently being rounded up on the grounds of extremism and their leader’s been banned. In Donetsk, Russian forces are working with local criminals, the mafia, and the unemployed, creating this kind of orc army”.

In a situation as fraught and pivotal as Ukraine, a foreign correspondent is expected to consult a crystal ball to give the press the predictions that they crave. Harding’s references to the past and future are tied together with conviction and assured rhetoric, but he admits that the situation is both unique and difficult for anyone to get a handle on. “When there’s a bunch of foreign correspondents sitting around in Donetsk trying to work out what the hell’s going on, these analogies help to make sense of it all. They’re going around Donetsk with baseball bats and rods and they’re beating up anyone carrying a Ukrainian flag until they’re on the verge of death.”

It’s these scenes that sparked the Anschluss comparison, but analogies to the past imply that there is a method to Putin’s madness. In fact, remarks Harding, when it comes to Putin, the surest way to predict the future is to abandon reason entirely. “If you want to predict what he’s going to do next, and you’ve got a sane option or an insane option, pick the crazy one and you’ll never be disappointed.”

The only certainty is uncertainty, and his voice shifts up an octave to impersonate a UK diplomat despairing at the Russian psyche: “They don’t think the way we think they should think.” At one point, at the end of a fairly damning indictment of Cameron’s mercantile foreign policy, Harding sums up the differences between the Russian Duma and the British Parliament. “The British system works, and the politics are all about how to best manage rather than ideology. Russia doesn’t work — it’s crime-ridden and dysfunctional, so life there is more vivid. It’s a wonderful place to be an intellectual or a writer – the arts have been constrained in many senses, and they’re all the richer for it.”

This vivifying of life, especially in the face of illiberalism, seems to be one of Harding’s preoccupations. The breathless prose of The Snowden Files has been picked up on by critics of the book as both one of its strongest and weakest points, since fast-paced excitement frequently takes over from dispassionate analysis. Mafia State and The Snowden Files share a common theme, namely, a narrative that places one man against a giant and relatively faceless governmental machine.

The two books also dovetailed perfectly in April, when Snowden appeared on Putin’s weekly Q&A session on state television to ask the Russian president how Russian surveillance of private citizens compared to that of the UK or USA. Putin’s answer was classic of the man, and the episode reflected badly on Snowden, who went from a freedom-fighter to a puppet of the Kremlin in the eyes of many. The incident spawned conspiracy theories (supported by circumstantial rather than concrete evidence) which paint Snowden as a double agent working for the Russians, rather than the solo agent he has always claimed to be. I ask Harding whether the trajectory of The Snowden Files would have changed, had all this happened while he was still writing. “Well, we’re releasing an updated version later this year” .

And what about Snowden’s credibility? Some have criticized Snowden for claiming asylum in a country with such a poor human rights record; not to mention, a lack of freedom of the press. “Well, it would have been better if he’d gone to Iceland, or Ecuador, or anywhere but Russia, really. The TV appearance wouldn’t have been his idea; it would have been his lawyer’s.

 “You have to remember this is a regime which is adept at video propaganda, and Snowden popping up during a bladder-testing four hour broadcast makes for great TV.” We part ways. He is off to Quod, to wine and dine members of the International Relations Society. However, before we go, the conversation turns to journalism. The doom-and-gloom of Putin’s stranglehold on Ukraine, of Britain’s inaction, of the NSA – all this is temporally forgotten as Harding talks in effusive terms about his career as a correspondent so far. “It’s been great. I’ve been round the world, I write books. I honestly can’t think of any of my contemporaries who have had more fun than me.”

Review: Frank

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★★★☆☆

Three Stars

As an exploration of humanity’s creative capacities, Lenny Abrahamson’s Frank, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January, is a brilliantly thought-provoking triumph. As a film, however, it is disappointingly lacking, wavering between compelling profundity and inescapably dull self-indulgence throughout, saved by Michael Fassbender’s uniquely laudable performance.

Domhnall Gleeson stars as Jon, a floppy-haired loner living with his parents in some hellishly suburban coastal town in the north, whose desire to achieve musical enlightenment , despite his seemingly boundless enthusiasm, always boils down to re-hashed Madness songs with laughably banal lyrics (‘Woman in the blue dress, what are you doing with that bag?’ and the like).

When a dysfunctional indie band with an unpronounceable name (‘Soronprfbs’) arrive in town in need of a keyboard player, Jon jumps at the chance and finds himself locked away with them in a commune-type camp in Ireland, where they attempt to broaden their creative limits and finally record that life-changing album. Michael Fassbender plays Frank, the band’s leader and the film’s eponymous enigma, who wears a large papier-mâché head at all times. As band manager Don (Scoot McNairy) portentously advises both Jon and the audience, ‘just go with it’.

Gleeson is adept as the loveable fish-out-of-water Jon, but his meekness and compliance are at odds with his strident aim of making the band more ‘likeable’, rendering his character slightly unbelievable. Maggie Gyllenhaal is equally proficient, if unpersuasive, as the irritatingly unwelcoming Clara. The intended chemistry between these two polar opposites is apparently demonstrated sufficiently by annoyingly meaningless terse remarks.

It is Fassbender though, who provides the film’s most memorable performance, despite having his face hidden for the vast majority. His body language and intonation are somehow enough to express a great depth of character. With a hunching of the shoulders, or a tilt of the giant head, Fassbender implies convincing emotion, so much so that the static features of the head’s painted face seemingly come alive on occasion. This is a lesson in subtlety; Frank is paradoxically the most believable and engaging character and his presence provides a much-needed centrality to the film. His habit of speaking his facial expressions (‘flattered grin followed by bashful half-smile’) is a rich seam of humour.

For all Fassbender’s commendable skill, however, the film suffers from a lack of coherence and vagueness brought on by self-indulgence. Too much feeling is left unsaid, too much resentment left implicit. One is never sure whether Jon is liked or not, whether Frank is entirely deranged or not, and what exactly the Abrahamson is trying to do. At first, any disinterest as a result of this flaw is staved off by the film’s inherent quirkiness, but as it progresses, disinterest sporadically materialises as boredom and the captivating novelty wanes away.

That said, several thought-provoking motifs continue to be explored with estimable elegance. The well-known fine line between genius and insanity is prominent, along with the need for anonymity for true creative freedom. The audience’s slow realisation that Gleeson’s patently mediocre yet eternally enthusiastic Jon is the unwitting villain of the piece is delightfully drawn out. It raises questions as to the morality of forcing oneself on more-talented others and neatly crystallises the ‘integrity versus likeability’ debate (whether to ‘sell out’ or not) that underlies the whole film.

Ultimately, Frank suffers from a crisis of identity. It is at times hysterically bizarre, at times remarkably profound and at times regrettably tedious. The originality of the film fades fast, and it is left without much to hold it together, besides Fassbender’s exceptional performance and some compelling, at times emotive central themes. 

‘Clegg off campus’ protest planned

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Students are planning on protesting outside of a speech being given by Nick Clegg, on Tuesday. The Deputy Prime Minister and leader of the Liberal Democrats will be in Oxford to deliver the 2014 European Studies Centre Annual Lecture. The subject of his talk shall be ‘Britain’s Place in the EU’. Tickets for the event are now oversubscribed.

The European Studies Centre is dedicated to the interdisciplinary study of Europe and seeks to bring together economists, sociologists, social anthropologists and students of culture. The Centre was established in 1976 with funding from the Volkswagen Foundation.

Previous givers of the European Studies Centre’s Annual Lecture include German Minister of Finance Wolfgang Schäuble, in 2013, and in 2006, the then Prime Minister Tony Blair.

The protest is being organised by the Oxford Activist Network (OAN), which was founded in January. The group seeks to bring together Oxford students, staff of the University, local councillors, Oxford Brookes students and Ruskin College students. The time and location of the protest is to be decided on Monday.

Clegg’s visit will come two days ahead of the City Council and European Parliament elections being held on May 22nd. The Deputy Prime Minister is also participating in a question and answer session with readers of the Oxford Mail, on the same day.

Clegg has attracted controversy for signing the NUS’ ‘Vote for Students’ pledge prior to the 2010 general election, promising to oppose any increase in student tuition fees, before tripling tuition fees in government. Clegg apologised for breaking the pledge in a party political broadcast, in September 2012. The apology was later remixed into a song.

Xavier Cohen, who is a member of the Oxford Activist Network and is helping to organise the demonstration, commented, “No one has forgotten Nick Clegg’s betrayal of the student movement in 2010 — he promised us free education, then with the Tories, tripled our tuition fees. Now he expects to be welcomed onto our campus. If we take the NUS’s support for free education seriously, which we should, then we need to show mass opposition to Clegg on Tuesday and show everyone that students haven’t forgotten the stab in the back, and will fight against the marketisation of education.”

A spokesperson for the Liberal Democrats commented, “Nick Clegg is the only party leader standing up for Britain’s place in Europe; protecting jobs, helping fight climate change and cross border crime, as well as millions of pounds of EU funding for our universities and the right for our students to take advantage of the Erasmus scheme.”

The Magnificence of Miyazaki

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Animation and international films are perhaps the two hardest genres to try and get out to a wide audience. Animation has always been perceived as too childish for big success, and foreign films are seen as solely the interest of cinephiles and critics. It’s for those reasons that the international success, acclaim and adoration for the films of Hayao Miyazaki is all the more remarkable. This extraordinary Japanese filmmaker, who works entirely in animation, has carved a reputation worldwide for crafting films with such beauty and such gifted story-telling that foreign cinema and animation are finally losing their reputation of being juvenile or exclusive genres of film.

Miyazaki’s most famous work is probably Spirited Away, an extraordinarily original and visually mesmerising tale of a young girl trapped in a fantasy world, trying to save her parents. Although a stunning work in itself, it was when Disney bought the film and marketed it as a real Oscar contender that it got the international audience it so deserved. It went on not only to be the first anime film to ever win an Oscar, for best animation, but was also hailed as one of the greatest animations of all time, up there with even the most canonical Disney works. It remains the most successful Japanese film of all time, and introduced the wider world to the mastery of Miyazaki’s writing and aesthetic vision.

Miyazaki’s previous work was the equally inspired Princess Mononoke, a period drama about a battle between supernatural guardians of the forest fighting the humans seizing and exploiting its resources. As outstandingly beautiful as all of Miyazaki’s films are, the artistry of the hand-drawn animation shone through in the lush, edge-to-edge natural vistas and the elegance of the wolf protagonists. Once bought and marketed by Miramax, this was the first Japanese animation to be widely realised abroad, and was the best advertisement for the quality of Japan’s film industry.

Purely in terms of imagination, his 2005 feature Howl’s Moving Castle is enthralling in its creation of an engrossing fantasty world. The eponymous castle is a masterclass in design and creativity; a hybrid of steampunk fortress, cartoon pirate ship and anthropomorphic detailing. This castle also changes over the course of the film to mimic the changes of the protagonist Howl himself, all eighty plus parts, including a wagging tongue and bird feet, morphing as the film progresses. 

Thanks to Spirited Away, Princess Mononoke and his numerous other films, the work of Miyazaki and his company, Studio Ghibli, has become synonymous with storytelling and imagination of an almost unparalleled quality and consistency. But his films are not simply a beautiful visage with little depth. Miyazaki’s work has always confronted poignant and often difficult themes, like man’s relationship with nature, the difficulties of pacifism and feminist issues. Indeed, that his films often star strong, independent female characters shows the pre-eminence of the thematic concerns he raises.

Unfortunately for film fans everywhere, Miyazaki announced he was retiring last year, and his last film, The Wind Rises, was released last week. Very much a farewell masterpiece, The Wind Rises has been labelled by critics as one of the most beautiful films ever made, whilst simultaneously tackling perhaps the most controversial of any themes in Miyazaki’s films. Centred around flight, and the possibilities of aviation, the film shines the spotlight directly on one of the most difficult and challenging periods of Japan’s history; its role in World War II. A perfect example of the intelligent and gorgeous work that Miyazaki has always produced, if you’re going to see just one film this month, make it this – you won’t be disappointed.

Though his retirement is a loss to the worldwide cinematic community, Miyazaki leaves behind a legacy as important for the history of animation as Walt Disney himself or John Lasseter’s work at Pixar. A true director-artist, Miyazaki proved that animation and foreign cinema could not only be as good as other genres, but, as the quality of his films demonstrates, they could, in many ways, be so much better. 

Kate Moss Topshop Collection

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The launch of Kate’s new collection for Topshop, a renewal of the collaboration that first began in 2007 and the first collection for the 40 year-old model in 4 years, is now in full swing. Topshop certainly succeeded in making it feel like the second coming, with Vogue offering exclusive ‘first look’ pictures of the collection at the beginning of April and Topshop Instagram accounts, worldwide, counting down the days until the launch. There was even a live stream of the collection’s big reveal, not to mention the thousands of shoppers who flocked to the Oxford Circus store for the global launch on Tuesday evening.

It is an expensive high-street collection, with dresses beginning at £60 and one of most expensive pieces being the split gold lamé maxi dress (£295), which the icon herself wore to the launch dinner at Connaught Hotel (the pictures are well worth checking out, including a line up which includes Naomi Campbell, Cara Delevingne, and Sienna Miller). But it is not surprising that hours after the Oxford Circus store opened their doors, there were items already appearing on eBay: the gold dress itself is being sold for up to £650.

However, if you missed out on the getting your hands on one of the coveted pieces – Kate told her fans, ‘I just want everyone to find something from the collection that they love’ – then there are close, cheap copies (see links below). ASOS offer gorgeous scallop shorts; Urban Outfitters have several floral summer dresses which are serious contenders to Kate’s sundresses; and the Topshop own brand silky camis are more readily available alternatives. And the gold dress? Well, I couldn’t find a cheap alternative for that; but then again, you may think the same as I do: although you may be able to find alternatives to her clothes, there is no real alternative to Kate Moss. And when it comes to the key autobiographical pieces of the collection, I’d rather the original: it’s the closest anyone of us will get to being Kate…

PS. We’re also LOVING her new make-up collection with Rimmel London!

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ASOS Shorts with Scallop Hem, £20.00. Available here.

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Kimchi Blue Betty Dress (Daisy Print), £48.00. Available here.

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Black Double Layer Cami, £22.00. Available here.

 

Local Lib Dems aren’t in the Coalition

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I am proud to be a Liberal Democrat and am proud of Liberal Democrat policy. No, I am not proud of some things the Coalition has done but yes, I am proud of the many things LibDems have achieved in government, despite having less than 10% of commons seats and 15% of government seats. No income tax for those earning less than £10k, ending detention of asylum-seeking children, delivering £2.5bn of pupil premium, and protecting freedom of speech are just some of those achievements. I should say also that Oxford LibDems are not in coalition with the Tories.

There are no Tories on Oxford City Council. It is run by Labour with a LibDem opposition.
So what have we LibDems done and what do we care most about in Oxford? We totally oppose the Council’s cap on the numbers of shared houses and its financial penalties on Colleges and University building purpose-built student accommodation. Both these things just make your rents higher and I believe damage the city for everyone. We believe students, as residents just as much as anyone else, have every right to equal housing access. They are an essential part of Oxford’s life and economy.

On homelessness, an issue I know many care deeply about, I believe Labour missed a huge opportunity by rejecting a LibDem City Council budget amendment recently to give its support more money following the Tory County Council’s cuts. I am proud that two of our LibDem candidates, Jean and Conor, nominated the Chair of Oxford Homeless pathways for a Lord Mayor’s Certificate of Honour – which she received.

The Covered Market is a jewel in Oxford’s crown and we’ve been appalled at how the Council has tried to bleed it dry with incredibly high rent rises and has reneged on its promise to set rent at the rate recommended by an independent arbitrator recommended. LibDems think the covered Market is much more important than that and support it fully.

We also have a good track record of pushing hard for safer cycling in Oxford – we want more cycle safety boxes and much better road surfaces and cycle lanes for cyclists.

On detention of LGBTQ asylum seekers, and indeed detention of any asylum seeker, I think my views are clear that human rights are being abused; asylum seekers come to the UK because they are running for their lives, they are not lazy!

It is just not acceptable to send an LGBTQ person back to a country where their liberty or even the life would be at risk because of the sexuality or gender identity.

On immigration, again, I see diverse groups of people and people coming to work in the UK as a really good thing. It boosts our economy and gives much better world-vision and harmony to our country. I abhor the sense that some people are more valid or welcome than others just because of their nationality – that’s absolutely wrong. I note that LibDems are the only party that have pinned our flag clearly to the mast on EU membership too. Labour and the Tories are still dithering.

The full C+ investigation into the local elections can be found here.

 

Why Oxford needs a loony candidate

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The sight of the Mad Hatter standing on Broad Street offering tourists the opportunity to visit Oxford colleges is well-known. However, this eccentric guide is also standing for election.

The Mad Hatter tells Cherwell that, “The point is to use humour to highlight social issues like housing. For example, it’s absurd that we live in a country where we impoverish or indebt most people by permitting the banks to bankrupt us all in an unproductive capital-drain of investment away from productive industries to a false economy of buy-to-let mortgages, which makes people rich from undermining everyone else – while the state subsidises or guarantees the banks. In my view, housing shouldn’t ever be a business – shelter is a basic human right and need. If elected, I would focus foremost therefore on housing.”

The Hatter also feels strongly that the current council has many flaws. He told Cherwell, “Locally, the city council has demonstrated to me that its executive team make decisions without taking any regard for their huge effects on people’s livelihoods, like mine. Sometimes the decisions they make lack sense too – such as following central government’s cutting of essential services, yet still agreeing to spend more than £9 million on a pool!”

The Hatter’s thoughts on a national politics in England are scathing. “Unless you recognise the Green party (which is the only party in England that I would vote for), the choices are to vote for parties of different shades of blue which imagine that bankrupting us all via housing price growth is the way to pretend times are getting better. Fortunately, Scotland is led by a different type of vision and so that’s why I’d like to forewarn you that if Oxford elects Mad Hatter on May 22nd, I would like to offer the good citizens of Oxford, the opportunity to secede from England and to join Scotland!

“England seems to be mired in right wing choices fueled by a xenophobic media narrative which says, ‘Lets blame foreigners instead of blaming our Westminster parties’ for their decades long mismanagement. I am so fed up with this divergence technique being played out. I used to canvas for two of those parties – one sold out in 2011 and the other sold its own soul in 1997.”

The Hatter emphasises that voting in local elections does matter. He told Cherwell, “Your vote counts more than in a national election and although local councillors don’t have a large influence, they can resist vested big business interests and try and stand up for protecting local services.”
Undoubtedly, the Hatter’s key point seems to be about standing up for small businesses.

“My standing as a candidate is the result of a genuine frustration that the (Labour held) City Council continually is undermining small traders like myself and placing completely unnecessary and often expensive obstacles in the way of our being able to trade.

The Mad Hatter will be lucky to be elected, but even so, his criticisms of governance are worth absorbing.

The full C+ investigation can be found here.