The Spectator

Letters: What Hong Kong really needs from Britain

[Getty Images]

Already a subscriber? Log in

This article is for subscribers only

Subscribe today to get 3 months' delivery of the magazine, as well as online and app access, for only £3.

  • Weekly delivery of the magazine
  • Unlimited access to our website and app
  • Enjoy Spectator newsletters and podcasts
  • Explore our online archive, going back to 1828

Hong Kong was never going to make China more ‘democratic’, but it has certainly made it more capitalist. The best we can do for the people of Hong Kong is to make sure they remain a key part of this. Trump and Pompeo may have their own motives for wanting to throttle HK. But is it really in our interest — and is it our moral duty — to follow them?
David Howell (Lord Howell of Guildford)
London SW7

Matron Sturgeon

Sir: Dr Max Pemberton (‘Nothing to applaud’, 30 May) is right to counsel against obsessing about a Covid apocalypse. Here in Scotland, it is troubling to see how Nicola Sturgeon’s embracing of ‘matron to the nation’ has encouraged a general torpidity. This is anecdotal, but shops in my area of Scotland that could be reopened have remained closed, while small businesses that would legally be able to carry out work classified as essential instead seem content to stay in lockdown.
Mick Wharton
Hawick

Neigh-saying

Sir: Regarding Melissa Kite’s lockdown book proposal about keeping a horse (Real Life, 23 May), I am reminded that many aspects of horse care ‘people do because people have always done’. It is my duty to point out certain limitations. For instance, Sudocrem allows skin exudate to accumulate, with the consequence that bacteria can proliferate — thus prolonging mud fever. Secondly, I must be a bad vet by Melissa’s definition, as I only issue prescriptions for ‘Bute’ analgesic for specific conditions following a proper diagnosis. Indiscriminate use of Bute disables a horse’s ability to show the clinical sign of pain, which condemns patients with conditions such as joint infection, laminitis, non-displaced fracture and certain colics to a much poorer prognosis, as treatments are time critical. Here’s a thought. Perhaps the builder boyfriend could release me from the endless DIY tasks I have found to do between calls, and in exchange I will help proof-read Melissa’s book to give an element of evidence-based medicine?
Graham Fowke
Cotts Equine, Narberth, Pembrokeshire

Home arrest

Sir: While large numbers of the populace look forward to the easing of many restrictions, my wife and I will continue with life in a care home (‘Who cared?’, 6 June). We chose to move here last year, due to a combination of factors, although we are youngsters compared with our fellow residents. Until the lockdown we enjoyed visits from family and friends; the home laid on a range of services including a regular church group, hairdresser and library; and we enjoyed occasional outings to local shops and the pub.

All this came to an end with lockdown, and looks set to continue, as residents are deemed to be in need of special protection. It would appear that we are controlled by the diktats of the Care Quality Commission and the NHS. We pay a lot of our own money for the excellent care and services provided by the home, but cannot help but feel that we are enduring a very expensive form of house arrest — for life. The only facility not offered by the home, its ruling quangos and the government is the choice of euthanasia.
James Dent
Brent Eleigh, Suffolk

Get a wood

Sir: With reference to Rory Sutherland’s query (The Wiki Man, 6 June), I believe it was Lord (Victor) Rothschild (1910–1990) who is said to have asserted that: ‘No garden, however small, should be without at least two acres of rough woodland.’
Gerard Sproston
London SE16

On Hinton Manor

Sir: In his tribute to the American-born business tycoon James Sherwood (30 May), Martin Vander Weyer ignores a fact that might be of interest. Sherwood and his wife Shirley’s Oxfordshire home, Hinton Manor at Hinton Waldrist, had previously (till 1979) belonged to Nicholas Davenport, whose weekly commentary on financial matters graced the pages of The Spectator for 25 years from the 1950s. His widely regarded City column was a precursor to Mr Vander Weyer’s ‘Any Other Business’. Mr Davenport wrote a history of the manor, a delightful Tudor property adjacent to the churchyard where Airey Neave is at rest.
Christopher Gray
Osney Island, Oxford

Write to us letters@spectator.co.uk

Comments

Join the debate for just $5 for 3 months

Be part of the conversation with other Spectator readers by getting your first three months for $5.

Already a subscriber? Log in