“I Wish I Didn’t Know That” – A fun trivia game to keep Anas and Jackie amused when they are hiding from THEIR media

FUN FUN FUN A fun trivia game to keep Anas and Jackie amused when they are hiding from THEIR media. Not just a HIT in The British Labour Party offices in Scotland but it is fantastic at keeping the kids quite in the back of the car while waiting for those ferries that always seem to turn up on time. You can also be the LIFE of the party when you invite friends around….you’re party will go off with a BANG!!! From Union of Concerned Scientists a spin the wheel game called “I Wish I Didn’t Know That”……. https://www.ucs.org/resources/i-wish-i-didnt-know Spinning “The … Continue reading “I Wish I Didn’t Know That” – A fun trivia game to keep Anas and Jackie amused when they are hiding from THEIR media

Dramatic fall in possession of knives in Scottish schools and 50 times as many English teachers see a student with one

Professor John Robertson OBA According to Sky in February 2025: Almost one in five teachers have seen students with knives in England’s schools, Sky News survey finds I wonder what ratio of Scottish Teachers will have seen students with knives? From Police Scotland: Having in a school an article with a blade or point Source: Crime data – Police Scotland So, each incident might mean more than one teacher sees the knife possession – say, 4? There are 54 000 teachers in Scotland and if say, every knife possession incident is seen by 4 of the staff, we can divide … Continue reading Dramatic fall in possession of knives in Scottish schools and 50 times as many English teachers see a student with one

Spare us the shoddy journalism: Scotland got Covid quite a bit better

Professor John Robertson OBA Former Tory Spad, Andy Maciver, is in the Herald today with the above, and: Largely ineffective? Oh, really? A 36% lower death rate than the UK, saving nearly 2 000 lives? The above table from the UK Covid Inquiry report, posted today by https://x.com/ammacj makes clear that Scotland had a 14% lower Covid death rate than UK and a 36% lower excess death rate than UK. The second table, above, make clear the scale of loss not at first apparent in percentages. Had Scotland’s pandemic response strategy been managed by the UK Tory government, 14%, 1 867, more … Continue reading Spare us the shoddy journalism: Scotland got Covid quite a bit better

How Orkney islanders fought off a lung cancer risk, nearly 100 times the normal rate

Professor John Robertson OBA Many thanks to Frances McKie for alerting me to this. In 1975, not much reported at the time, as far as I can remember, the residents of the Orkney Islands faced and fought off a dark threat. From Beyond Nuclear International in April 2021: The Orkneys were being surveyed for a potentially valuable deposit of uranium ore. The South Scottish Electricity Board had already persuaded local farmers, unaware of the health risks, to allow bore hole drilling on their land. By 1977, the entire local population on Orkney opposed uranium exploitation there. Among those opponents was … Continue reading How Orkney islanders fought off a lung cancer risk, nearly 100 times the normal rate

115 year-old ferries crashing and injuring passengers in affluent Toronto

Professor John Robertson OBA The oldest CalMac ferry is the MV Isle of Cumbrae at 49 years in 2025, serving the short Largs to Cumbrae route. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caledonian_MacBrayne_fleet In Toronto, Canada, one of the most affluent cities on the globe, from the Toronto Star today:: Toronto’s five ferries are between 62 and 115 years old — decades past their expected lifespans. The boats transport about 1.4 million people a year on 17,000 trips to the Toronto Islands. In recent years there have been several ferry collisions, mechanical failures and emergency stops.  A recent investigation found: An external review has found Toronto’s ferry services are being … Continue reading 115 year-old ferries crashing and injuring passengers in affluent Toronto

There are no ‘UK rape conviction cases’ only ones for England and Wales OR for Scotland and though the latter are still not remotely good enough, I know, they are very different these days

Professor John Robertson OBA, former Faculty Research Ethics Committee Chair In the Guardian today: Stacey Dooley on the UK’s shocking rape conviction statistics [sic] – Prosecuting rape is notoriously difficult in the UK [sic], with an estimated 5% of cases making it to trial, and only about 45% [of those so 2%?] resulting in a conviction. Amid such discouraging headlines, four young women have allowed Stacey Dooley to tell their difficult, complex stories about reporting being raped by someone they know, in the three-year run-up to trial. https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2025/mar/13/tv-tonight-stacey-dooley-on-the-uks-shocking-conviction-statistics There are no UK rape conviction statistics. There are statistics for England & Wales … Continue reading There are no ‘UK rape conviction cases’ only ones for England and Wales OR for Scotland and though the latter are still not remotely good enough, I know, they are very different these days

In desperate attempt to solve A&E crisis, UK Labour quietly cuts 95% target to only 78% and damages the life-saving triage system but still has TWO to THREE times as many waiting longer in NHS England than in NHS Scotland

all the focus is on people who can be sent home easily. Professor John Robertson OBA BBC Breakfast this morning has a nursing union rep telling us that the A&E waiting time target in NHS England has been reduced under pressure from the Labour Government, from 95% to only 78% and that, as a result, to try to hit it, easier cases are being prioritised over more difficult, serious cases. That’s doubly shocking. First, how and when did that cut from 95% to 78% happen and why has Jackie Baillie not been asked about that situation in Labour-led England? Second, … Continue reading In desperate attempt to solve A&E crisis, UK Labour quietly cuts 95% target to only 78% and damages the life-saving triage system but still has TWO to THREE times as many waiting longer in NHS England than in NHS Scotland

As BBC England reports a crisis in teacher recruitment and retention, how Scotland pays better and has stunning 36% more teachers to manage workload

Professor John Robertson OBA, former school teacher, teacher education lecturer and Associate Dean for Quality Assurance, 1980 to 2016 In December 2022, the Times could report the above stunning facts but Scottish media seemed reluctant to make much of it. From BBC England, today: The government faces a “now or never moment” to hit its target of recruiting 6,500 new teachers in England by the end of its term, a new report has suggested. Analysis by the National Foundation of Educational Research (NFER) says unfilled vacancies are at a record high and recruitment into teacher training remains “persistently low.” The … Continue reading As BBC England reports a crisis in teacher recruitment and retention, how Scotland pays better and has stunning 36% more teachers to manage workload

‘Ferry cost stopped us booking a holiday to the Isle of Wight’ due to costs nearly FOUR TIMES times as much as a CalMac equivalent

Professor John Robertson OBA, Honest Ferry Correspondent From MSN today: I’ve read that the number of visitors to the Isle of Wight staying in overnight accommodation during July, August and September last year fell by 14 per cent. Is that due to the poor weather last summer or other factors? The cost of the ferries must be one of them. Having found a reasonably priced property to rent for all of us, we expected to pay around £150 to £180 per car, and we need three. But we were shocked – it was going to cost a total of around £750. This was … Continue reading ‘Ferry cost stopped us booking a holiday to the Isle of Wight’ due to costs nearly FOUR TIMES times as much as a CalMac equivalent

Despite computerised systems, DNA evidence from Nicola’s hairbrushes, mobile phone records and a big blue tent, the police investigation into ‘SNP fraud’ will soon take longer than the Yorkshire Ripper case

The SNP CE and the Yorkshire Ripper Professor John Robertson OBA, Crime Correspondent The Yorkshire Ripper investigation ran from August 1975 to January 1981, 5 years and six months, before Peter Sutciffe was charged with the murder of thirteen women. The excessive length of the investigation is attributed to the lack of a computerised system, DNA evidence or mobile phone evidence. Several tents were employed to cover the scenes of the bloody murders. Yorkshire and national media were extremely critical of the police performance. Operation Branchform, an investigation into possible fundraising fraud by the SNP began in July 2021 and … Continue reading Despite computerised systems, DNA evidence from Nicola’s hairbrushes, mobile phone records and a big blue tent, the police investigation into ‘SNP fraud’ will soon take longer than the Yorkshire Ripper case