Election time?
dalebassett.com (Free subscription) | 03/11/2008
Lord Rees-Mogg speculates in the Times today that a Labour win in Glenrothes on Thursday could prompt a snap general election.
dalebassett.com (Free subscription) | 03/11/2008
Lord Rees-Mogg speculates in the Times today that a Labour win in Glenrothes on Thursday could prompt a snap general election.
Wheat & Weeds (Free subscription) | 03/06/2008
Lord Rees-Mogg thinks Euro-Parliamentarians ought to read the Federalist papers . The American Constitution has succeeded in providing the US with a stable democratic framework that has survived the great changes of the past two centuries, including - in the 20th century - two world wars, a Cold War and a slump. The US Constitution is 221 years old.... [snip] Surely, Europe should be asking this question:...
normxxx ruminates... (Free subscription) | 03/06/2008
Are We Facing Another Great Depression? By William Rees-Mogg | 15 April 2008 As the IMF releases a frankly gloomy world economic outlook, veteran luminary of broadcasting and media, Lord Rees-Mogg asks if we are facing an economic threat similar to that of the 1930s. Could the world be on the brink of another Great Depression such as the slump of the early Thirties? The managing director of the International...
Prophecy Fellowship Forums (Free subscription) | 27/05/2008
I love these articles written by brits! They are always so much more hoenst then our US media. SO what are your current feelings on the economy? Heres the read.. As the IMF releases a frankly gloomy world economic outlook, veteran luminary of broadcasting and media, Lord Rees-Mogg asks if we are...
Radio 4 - Today (Free subscription) | 20/02/2008
Barack Obama's speeches have brought the art of rhetoric back to centre stage but does a good speaker make a good leader? We speak to historian Andrew Roberts and journalist Lord Rees Mogg.
John Hemming's Web Log (Free subscription) | 13/02/2008
THERE are extreme occasions on which public law and private conscience collide. Some of them, as in the cases of Socrates or Charles I, end in martyrdom. Some lead to imprisonment, though it is a terrible thing to imprison a man for doing what he believes is his duty.Almost invariably, this collision of law and private duty tends to discredit the law and the judges concerned.No one now defends the...