Published 01/01/2001 | Paperback / softback,
Description:
‘The inimitable Quentin Letts dares to say in a new book what we’ve all been secretly thinking’ Mail on Sunday ‘Fuming and chuckling by turns’ Daily Telegraph’Underneath the jocularity of Letts’s style is a lot of real anger’ Roger Lewis, The Times Hands, face, space. Curfews. Don’t drink. Bend your knees. Conform, obey, comply – surrender. British life has become infested by bossiness.
Post Lockdown, Quentin Letts storms back with a vituperative howl against the ‘bossocracy’. They tell us what to do, what to say, how to think. Letts gives them a prolonged, resonant raspberry. He names the guilty men and women: Dominic Cummings, Prof Neil Ferguson, that strutting self-polisher Nicola Sturgeon, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Cressida Dick, Michael Gove, even the sainted Sir David Attenborough. Bang! They all take a barrel. And then there’s publicity-prone plonker Matt Hancock posing for photographs while doing his ‘Mr Fit’ press-ups. Reasonable people have had enough of being bossed about. And when reasonable people stop respecting the law, society has a problem.
‘Brilliantly critical, but always warm-hearted and fair’ Rory Knight Bruce, The Field

Unfree Speech
Adventure Revolution
Back On Track : Find Hope. Get Motivated. Succeed in School.
Yes To Europe!
On the Road
Radical Uncertainty
Mystery of the Egyptian Scroll
Dog Gone
Wild Child
What To Look For in Autumn
How To Change the World
Trees of the Celtic Saints ? The Ancient Yews of Wales
Five Rules For Rebellion


