As I said yesterday, we do live in interesting times. In the last 5-and-a-bit years we’ve seen …
In the UK
- Three Prime Ministers: Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss
- Two General Elections in 2017 and 2019
- 2016 to 2020: just how are we going to leave the EU?
- June 2017: Grenfell Tower fire
- May 2018: Royal wedding of Harry & Megan
- Prince Harry & Megan relinquish royal duties and abscond to California
- January 2020: finally leave the EU
- March 2020 to date: SARS-CoV-2 and Covid-19 (in UK) including lockdowns, an over-stressed NHS etc.
- March 2021: census
- April 2021: death of Duke of Edinburgh
- Late 2021 to date: seriously escalating energy prices
- February 2022: Queen’s Platinum Jubilee
- February 2022 to date: discovery of polio in London’s sewage
- May 2022 to date: monkeypox
- September 2022: death of Queen Elizabeth II and accession of King Charles III
Worldwide
- Three Presidents of the USA: Barak Obama, Donald Trump, Joe Biden
- October 2017: ‘Oumuamua, the first known interstellar object, identified
- November 2018: Gilets Jaunes protests in France
- April 2019: fire almost destroys Notre Dame
- May 2019: Naruhito becomes Emperor of Japan on the unprecedented abdication of his father Emperor Akihito (who had ruled for 30 years)
- December 2019: US President, Donald Trump, is impeached
- January 2021: US President, Donald Trump, is impeached for a second time
- March 2021: container ship Ever Given blocks Suez Canal for a week, causing massive disruption to trade routes
- December 2021 to January 2022: eruption of Hunga Tonga–Hunga Ha’apai volcanic island in Tonga, currently the largest eruption of 21st century
- 2022: attempted invasion of Ukraine by Russia and resultant war
That’s what I can remember. And we haven’t even mentioned climate change, or a rash of celebs being arraigned for sexual abuse!
I challenge anyone to find me a more “interesting” 5 years, excepting around WWI and WWII.
Interesting times, indeed.








Greater London has thousands of pubs – so many that probably no-one had counted them; and in any event the list would change daily. In 136 pages the authors of this slim volume describe the origins of over 650 of the more unusual or interesting pub names in Greater London – all the way from “Aces & Eights” (Tufnell Park) to the “Zetland Arms” (South Kensington). As one can imagine, at an average of about 5 pubs and a photograph per page, the descriptions are not very detailed. This is a shame, as there is undoubtedly more to be told about most of these names, and many others.