Lobster Issue 76 (Winter 2018)
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[PDF file]: […] required to save the country and God has chosen Donald Trump. He has been ‘served up by the hand of Providence’ like ‘Margaret Thatcher, George Patton, Winston Churchill and Abraham Lincoln’ before. (p. 64) No one should doubt what is at stake. ‘Satan’, he tells his readers, ‘considers taking this nation down to be […]
Lobster Issue 75 (Summer 2018)
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[PDF file]: […] was strongly anti-appeasement, and had probably been made aware just what his fellow anti-appeasers thought of the book. The demise of Chamberlain, and his replacement by Winston Churchill, also brought a new resolve to the anti-appeasement camp, along with the internment of other Fascists and fellow travellers. Bryant himself narrowly avoided this fate, and […]
Lobster Issue 74 (Winter 2017)
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[PDF file]: […] Hastings attributes this to Britain’s (and the USA’s) national ‘culture’ of ‘intellectual honesty’, which is something else for us to congratulate ourselves upon. It also helped that Churchill and Roosevelt were more openminded than Hitler and Stalin. Reinforcing this trope were the exploits of the brave ‘few’ in the Battle of Britain – ‘few’ […]
Lobster Issue 73 (Summer 2017)
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[PDF file]: […] (again, the upper classes) lost their right to a second (or multiple) vote. Cameron only managed 37% in 2015.3 Turnout, too, has declined. In 1951 Attlee and Churchill took 97% of the votes between them on an 83% turnout. Compared with this, in 2015 on a turnout of 66%, 11.3 million (24.5% of the […]
Lobster Issue 85 (Summer 2023)
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[PDF file]: […] of wine and had a an enjoyable chat. Out of which came a very good article.52 It was thus a pleasure to have his book on Winston Churchill reviewed in these columns by Simon Matthews.53 Since when Bowman has put together a website about the book on which there is a collection of other […]
Lobster Issue 85 (Summer 2023)
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[PDF file]: […] an untidy mind and sub-zero diplomatic judgement. He is an international stain on our reputation’. And to make matters even worse, he ‘thinks he is the next Churchill’. (p. 227) When Johnson eventually became Prime Minister and appointed his new Cabinet, as far as Duncan was concerned he had replaced ‘the Sensibles with the […]