I've resisted mentioning The Idiotic One for a while, but I can do so no longer. Here he is on his favourite topic: [S]ince the US sponsored coup-d'etat against President Milosevic in 2000 and the decapitation of the Serbian Socialist Party, life has become much harder for the people of Serbia... But of course, the enforced changes of October 2000 were not about improving the life of the majority of Serbs. They were about installing a quisling government that would line up obediently to join the EU and NATO and sell of [sic] the nation's assets to foreign capital.
The Idiotic One (aka Neil Clark) wrote an article for the Guardian recently about Bernard Kouchner's position on the Iraq War without first troubling to read - or even being capable of reading* - such specialised, technical and obscure material as the previous Friday's edition of France's leading newspaper.
Yesterday's post displays similar perspicacity. Four years is clearly insufficient for facts to permeate his brain:
A controversial privatisation arranged by the sometime British foreign secretary Lord Hurd with Slobodan Milosevic unravelled yesterday when the Serbian government said it was buying back a hefty share of its national telecommunications network from Italy. The Serbian prime minister, Zoran Djindjic, said Belgrade was buying back the 29% stake in Telekom Serbia sold to Telecom Italia in 1997 in a deal mediated by Lord Hurd, then deputy chairman of NatWest Markets. Although there has never been any suggestion of impropriety on Lord Hurd's part, the deal attracted fierce criticism. It presented Mr Milosevic with a $1bn (£625m) windfall a year before his campaign to drive Kosovan Albanians from their homes and at a time when as Serbian leader he was facing down huge protest demonstrations in Belgrade.
The Guardian, 30 Deecmber 2002
How did he ever get to teach at Oxford Tutorial College?
*Do read this from my old blog - I think it's very funny, if I say so myself:
I tried googling his nonsense-phrase "C'est ne pas France" in inverted commas to see if he might have got it from somewhere. It's difficult to believe, but there is literally not a single hit. This means that every single person who has ever written a word of French that has ended up on the internet is less stupid than Neil Clark.