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haiiiiiiiiii goobnorming (we are very politely ignoring the fact that it is not morning for me anymoreeee~ don't test me) HOW ARE YOU ILY HAVE NICE DAY
today you get bug kaeya <3 so baby so litol so cutie mhm may he bless your day with many cool happenings
HELp he is a nightmare to draw, but very pretty glowy
The language of the lost pouring from their open mouths.
Software update, reinstall, scary things I canāt recall.
Surrounded by the bodies,
As Iām tugging on my chains, Iāll be swallowed by the flames.
I donāt need forgiveness.
Am I robot or a doll? Am I anything at all?
Maybe a thing like me doesnāt even need to know.
Do you know who I pretend to be?
Of whom am I a copy?
Crying out for somebody, there is no one to reply.
Ones and zeros, true or false? Reset system to default.
Faking the rest of it, but I canāt remember why.
But these fingers and these palms, full of love despite the scars,
They show indisputably, I have so much more to grow.
Oh, I can change, I can evolve, I can get up when I fall.
Iāll live contentedly, I donāt need a reason why.
In the arms of somebody, there is no more need to cry.
ā V1
Warm-up for upcoming matches! While driving through Umbria and stopping only occasionally for a tower or a ruin, I had plenty of time to think about artificial intelligence. I wanted to test my analog camera on a series of ruins, and this initiated a complex process - exhausting and requiring considerable time. Aside from technical uncertainties and bad weather, the challenge was finding the right ruin. Taking a halfway satisfying analog photo depends on many unpredictable factors. Both the condition and the location of the ruin play a crucial role. I.e. its place in a possible overall composition. If the lighting conditions are okay and the extensive camera settings have been adjusted, one can retrieve a few somewhat blurry pictures weeks later - an altogether inefficient method. The images at the end of this series are created within a few minutes⦠minutes! But there is one thing we have ahead of AI: the joy of taking pictures
Private Sector Good, Public Sector Bad?
The reigning ideological economic theory within the Conservative Party is, and has been ever since Margaret Thatcher came to power, that āmarkets know bestā
This was made abundantly clear when Kwasi Kwateng, the Chancellor of Liz Trussās short-lived government, dismissed anything resembling a āplanned economyā. Rather, growth and economic success depended on:
āā¦the power of our treasured free-market economy to leverage private capital and unleash Britainās unique entrepreneurial spirit to grow new industries." (The Conversation: 13/04/22)
The key words here are āto leverage private capitalā. What this means in ordinary speech is to encourage private investors to participate financially in āprojects that benefit the economy, society or the environmentā.Ā This has resulted in private investors running (and in many cases, owning) most of our public utilities and services. But rather than ābenefit the economy, society and environment" these private investors have devastated it.
Over the next few blogs I intend to look at various British/English public utilities and services and to see how they have fared under the private sector.Ā First up are the railways.
Britainās railways are organised within a mishmash of private and public ownership, and has been described as ābroken" and no longer fit for purpose.
āThe UK's train network is not only one of the worst in Europe, it is also one of the most expensive.ā (euronews: 20/05/21
This is no surprise given its complex and chaotic structure.Ā Ā The railway tracks and rail network are owned and operated by Network Rail, which is a ānon-departmental public body of the Department for Transport, (DFT) with no shareholders"
Ā Non-departmental public bodies are a strange entity. They are national or regional bodies that work independently of government, are not staffed by civil servants, and yet are still accountable to government ministers. It is the Secretary of State for Transport who sets the strategic direction of the railways, allocating funding, and it is the secretary of stateĀ who has to approve major investments in the railway system.
The companies that operate the trains are privately owned and are either awarded franchises from the DFT, or they are āopen accessā operators that provide passenger services on a particular route or network, but with no exclusive rights enjoyed by franchise holders.
To complicate matters further, the actual trains, passenger carriages and railway wagons, known collectively as ārolling stockā, are owned by the rolling stock leasing companiesā (ROSCOs) who lease out their stock to the privately owned rail operating companies.
Freight train operators are totally separate from passenger trains, have no contracts with government but do need permission from Network Rail to run their services.
For year 2022/23 the railways received £11.9bn of government funding and Network Rail has secured £27.5 bn of government funding over the next five years. In short, we the taxpayer invest heavily in our rail network which the private passenger, rolling stock and freight companies use to make a profit.
A 2019 report by the TUC found that:
āRail firms have paid over Ā£1bn to shareholders in the last 6 years.ā (TUC: 02/01/2019)
In 2022 Avanti West Coast received a taxpayer subsidy of Ā£343m, despite having the worst punctuality record amongst train operators and paying out Ā£12m to its shareholders. Avanti West Coast is owned by First Group, who also own Great Western Railway and South Western Railway. Great Western paid out the largest dividend in 2021/22, Ā£33m, while South Western paid out £13m.Ā
More recently:
āUK rail operator Govia awards $79m in dividends amid UK rail dissatisfaction.ā (Railway Technology: 08/01/24)
Govia is largely foreign owned, the three largest shareholder companies being Australian, Spanish and French. In 2022 it was fined Ā£23m āover financial irregularities" having failed to return Ā£25m in taxpayer funding. Why on earth any government would want to go on subsidising such a company is beyond understanding, especially as the Transport Minister at the time said the company had:
āā¦committed an appalling breach of trust...behaviour was simply unacceptable and this penalty sends a clear message that the government, and taxpayers, will not stand for it." (BBC News: 17/03/22)
Clearly the minister (Grant Shapps) didnāt mean what he said as Govia is still operating trains two years later and still courting controversy
Turning to the train-leasing companies, we find:
āProfits of UKās private train-leasing firms treble in a year. More than Ā£400m paid in dividends in 2022-23 while rest of railway faced cuts and salary freezes.ā (Guardian: 18/02/24)
These companies saw their profit margins rise to 41%, a profit that we as taxpayers and passengers pay for. It is estimated that "taxpayers are now effectively paying the Ā£3.1bn spent last year on leasing trains.ā To actually run a passenger rail service yet not own a single locomotive or passenger carriage is bazaar to say the very least.
Finding overall profit figures for freight train operators is a little more difficult but Colas Rail UKās revenue in 2022 was Ā£15,529m, up 17% on the previous year, an operating profit of Ā£460m.
Ā Overall, taxpayer subsidies to the rail industry run at Ā£6bn per year. However, these massive subsidies have not led to lower fares, an end to over-crowed trains, or an efficient service. According to TaxPayers Alliance 02/01/23) "rail subsidies cost taxpayers Ā£1300 each by March 2023.ā Meanwhile the private companies that operate the highly fragmented and disjointed system continue to reap profits and pay out dividends.
Maybe this would not be so bad if the British taxpayer subsidised dividend payouts went to British owned companies, but this is far from the case:
āAccording to the Rail, Maritime and Transport Union, 70% of Britainās railways are now under foreign ownership to some degree.ā (CityA.M.: 11/01/17)
The figure of 70% foreign ownership is disputed, not least because some companies have gone bust since 2017, with five lines now being effectively run by the government as āoperators of last resort.āĀ As the 1993 Railways Act forbids the UK state from running the railways these lines are likely to be franchised out to private firms in the future.
āā¦many foreign state-owned enterprises of the Netherlands, Germany, France, Italy and Hong Kong now run rail franchises in the UK." (The Standard: 11/05/23)
While other countries have no philosophical problem with running railways for the benefit of their citizens, and clearly have no qualms about investing state money in foreign ventures, the Conservative Party is ideologically opposed to state intervention in running UK public services and is vehemently opposed to setting up a UK sovereign wealth fund.
In summary, successive Tory governments have continued to pay taxpayers money into the coffers of private enterprise regardless of how efficient, honest or effective these firms are at providing an essential public service. Clearly, where the railways are concerned, they are not run to ābenefit the economy, society and environment" but for the benefit and interests of private investors, in the mistaken Tory belief that private enterprise is always better than public stewardship despite evidence to the contrary.Ā Ā
Life is one of those washing machines where stuff goes in the top instead of the side.
Sometimes, victory is not about being able to defeat your opponent; itās about making it too inefficient for your opponent to even try to win.
Andrew Rowe, Sufficiently Advanced Magic (Arcane Ascension, #1)