Who is the Real Romney? We Have Still to Find Out

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Who is the real
Romney? We have
still to find out

Stalinism is alive
and well on the
Glasgow underground

2SR anthology

Sit back, decide within five seconds that there’s nothing worth watching on the box, and relax instead with the Scottish Review, the new paperback anthology of pieces from Scotland’s online current affairs magazine.
     Among the 42 selected gems:
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     My journey of love and loss
     Anthony Silkoff
     Kicked out of the mosque
     Mike MacKenzie
     The night I nearly drowned
     Bill Jamieson
     Grand Grossartia
     Katie Grant
     The age of disillusion
     Gerry Hassan
     The trouble with being a Scottish man
     George Chalmers
     First day in prison
     Walter Humes
     Tribal nation
     Marian Pallister
     The people crushers
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Spring lambs, Ayrshire
Photograph by
Islay McLeod

How many of us

are really

fit for purpose?

Robin Downie

He argues: ‘Iniquity in action is the very same as falsity or contradiction
in theory, and the very same that makes one absurd makes the other unreasonable’.

     Of course, it is possible for a soldier to be able climb walls and swing on ropes but still to lack another sort of fitness for the job – summed up by the word equanimity or the ability to remain calm and in control in the face of danger or provocation. It may well be that Major Eric Joyce was physically fit – although he managed to punch only three Tories in the Strangers’ Bar – but equanimity was lacking. And there are many more worrying stories of soldiers who were physically fit – or perhaps because they were physically fit and exuding testosterone – abusing the weak and vulnerable.
     The same applies to the police. Fitness for purpose in the police surely involves more than the ability to chase neds and yobs round corners. Self-control and equanimity are required in the face of often considerable provocation.
     Some philosophers have even tried to depict other moral qualities in terms of fitness and unfitness. For example, Samuel Clarke, an 18th-century English philosopher and champion of Newton, claimed that moral judgements can be as certain as those in mathematics. Among many interesting examples he argued that gratitude is ‘fitting’ to the situation where someone has done us a favour, just as triangles can be shown to be congruent. He argues: ‘Iniquity in action is the very same as falsity or contradiction in theory, and the very same that makes one absurd makes the other unreasonable’. Clarke’s position was criticised by our own Francis Hutcheson. Basically Hutcheson points out that whereas a generous or kind action is fit to make someone happy, a cruel or selfish one is equally fit to make someone miserable. Fitness is relative to the purpose and is not an absolute term.
      So too in the police there are many purposes. Chasing yobs and neds is one for which physical fitness might be required, but interviewing suspects is another purpose and controlling aggressive marchers yet another. There must be different kinds of fitness for different purposes. If Morse had been made to spend more time in the gym and less in the pub it would have been fit to end him.