Rod Liddle
Stories and Songs on today's free French CD, with The Times
What shall we do with our young women, do you suppose? Two surveys out last week suggest they are increasingly prone to acts of criminal violence and, worse, have become among fattest girls in Europe. This follows earlier surveys which indicated that they are also the most stupid, ill-mannered, flatulent, drug-addicted and sexually incontinent girls in Europe. Perhaps as a consequence of this, they are the girls with whom Europe’s men would least like to have sexual intercourse. Also perhaps as a consequence, the girls with whom most of Europe’s men have already enjoyed sexual congress. British girls are a cinch, although not, it would seem, a very desirable cinch.
The obesity business is puzzling; I find it hard to believe that British girls are more grotesquely obese than, say, their Austrian counterparts. I saw a gaggle of Austrian girls making their way to school recently and thought at first that it was a queue for auditions for the Viennese stage version of Babe. It may be the case that British girls are on average fatter but that the statistics are skewed by the huge number of very thin Austrian girls locked away in cellars. Who knows? The criminal violence stuff is a worry, too; there has been a 25% rise in cases of female wrongdoing and a dramatic increase in girls kicking each others’ heads in, or stabbing one another. The gender roles have been reversed: these days it is the boys who shriek from the sidelines, “Leave ’er, Minette, she ain’t wurf it,” as the blows rain down. The “ladette” culture of the 1990s has been blamed for this development, but I am not sure this entirely explains the phenomenon.
In both cases it’s more likely a result of the law of unintended consequences. For a long time now we have been told that it is important not to stigmatise fat people - and especially fat girls - in case we traumatise them. But the point is that unless we upset them by calling them lard-arses, there is no incentive for the girls to remain thin. They may as well eat up that KFC party bucket with supersize fries because no social ill will befall them as a consequence. Remove the stigma and what you get is huge pasty-skinned porkers, each armed with a Stanley knife.
Similarly, for years feminists told us that women were constrained by society to behave in an inhibited and modest manner in public; this, we were told, was a bad thing - the product of an inherently sexist society. Well, the change has come; these days they waddle drunkenly from Wetherspoons to the kebab house, pausing only to vomit, stab a friend and engage in a desultory act of love in a shop doorway.
This is presumably the sunlit upland that 1970s feminists would entirely approve of. Fat, remember, is a feminist issue; so is the right to act like a bloke.
-Tour companies may well whack a surcharge on your summer holiday this year because of “the strong euro and, er, expensive fuel”. On the BBC news yesterday they interviewed a little monkey from some organisation which represents travel agents – I missed her name, probably Karen Goebbels, or something – who said that these surcharges were “important” because – and get this – “they protect our customers”.
She reminded me of the woman from the Post Office interviewed on the Today programme a few years back who said they intended to stop second deliveries “in order to improve our service to the customer”. And the spokesbint from one of the hopeless train franchises who announced that they would be ripping out the seats on some commuter routes “in order to enhance passenger comfort”. Presumably there is some sort of media training institute somewhere in the country which schools perfectly normal people in the art of spewing out this sort of disingenuous rubbish without so much as batting an eyelid.
Meanwhile, if anyone anywhere has ever booked and paid for a holiday and then later had the tour company ring up and say, “the pound is very strong at the moment so we’re giving you back a couple of hundred quid”, I’d be interested to know.
Barack’s left with a sour taste
When is it permissible to call an American woman an affectionate diminutive – such as sweetie, honey lamb-chop, sugar-pumpkin toes or pretzel-breath? The future of the free world depends on your answer.
Presidential candidate Barack Obama deflected an unsolicited question from a female hack by calling his interlocutor “sweetie” – and as a consequence the USA is in uproar, the most angry it has been since the Tet offensive. You don’t call middle-class women that, unless you are looking to be peremptorily spayed, without anaesthetic. Obama has apologised, of course.
His detractors, though, have suggested that this is evidence of his inherent misogyny, which, frankly, they’d suspected all along. Others – conservatives, mainly – have suggested that he was just being nice and that calling the awful woman “sweetie” was preferable to ignoring her altogether, which really would have been misogyny.
Somewhere between these two poles, the rest of us, men of a certain age, flail around ineffectually, not quite knowing which side to back; not certain if we should chivalrously hold the door open, or in the modern manner, let it slam straight back in the face.
Bad case of Night Fever at No 10
So Gordon Brown is a fan of the Bee Gees and believes their music to be “timeless” – in much the same way, I would imagine, that tuberculosis is “timeless”. One of the castrati disco-lite trio, Robin Gibb, has revealed that How Deep is Your Love? is on the prime minister’s iPod. So the one thing Gordon had going for him – our perception of a high-minded and serious individual – is undermined and we are forced to imagine him in a white suit dancing, à la Travolta, to Night Fever.
Politicians – here are 10 things not to do: (1) never wear a baseball cap; (2) never tell Piers Morgan how many women you’ve shagged; (3) never be photographed dancing at the Notting Hill carnival; (4) never attempt to excuse a sexual indiscretion by claiming you were worried about going bald; (5) never wear a Chelsea strip when playing away from home; (6) never have sex at Balmoral, even if you’re sure the Queen is asleep; (7) never put a pointless eco-friendly device on the roof of your house; (8) no matter how irritating someone might be, never have their dog shot dead; (9) don’t let your wife tell people you like it five times a night; and (10) never, ever, tell anyone what music you enjoy, unless it’s Thomas Tallis or Mozart.
- Part 349 of the increasingly popular series Why You Should Never Shop at Tesco. Store bosses have decided that customers who arrive at the checkout with children in tow will not be allowed to buy alcohol, in case they give the alcohol to the children later rather than drink it themselves. So here is your starter for 10: Tesco is acting out of a sense of corporate responsibility and moral conscience, worried by the rise of teenage binge drinking. Or Tesco is acting on a fatuous directive dreamt up by some pious, hypocritical monkey in its PR department.
Sheesh. Hard one to call, isn’t it?

Rod Liddle left his post as editor of the BBC's Today programme in 2002, after a row about impartiality in an article he wrote for The Guardian. He was formerly a speechwriter for the Labour Party. As well as writing for The Sunday Times, he contributes to The Spectator and Country Life and presents current affairs documentaries on television
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As ever, Mr Liddle, you are spot on - a necessarily 'angry article'. Shame on you ladettes of Britain. I think there is also a case to be made for the correlation between the disproportionately large number of men emigrating and the quality of the nation's fairer sex.
Amos, London, UK
I think Brenda from Dublin has got it right. Yes obesity is a problem but not a specifically female one! and yes its terrible that theres been such in increase in crime by young women but they still arent anywhere near the figures of similar crimes committed by men.
Ines, Paris,
What an incredibly angry article. For every woman that is fat and unattractive, there are two men - why aren't you talking about the ugly, fat and obnoxious men falling out of kebab shops? This is a UK culture problem, not a female problem. And calling us fat is incredibly constructive. How Clever.
Brenda, Dublin, Ireland
Re. comment from... Elizabeth Griggs, Solihull,
It's far deeper than that sweetie.
It has nothing to do with just plain & simple sexual gratification.
Pondlife, Thonon-les-Bains, France
In Texas the rule of thumb was you stuck with the first thin girl who took a liking to you as they were few and far between. Now that I'm in California, it seems there is still hope for the men in this country. As for England, any self respecting single man would IMMEDIATELY move to Spain.
Cristancho, San Diego, California
I had one fat friend when I was a teenager in the 70s, they were rare then. Do these lardarses like walking around with a brace of cold pork hanging out above their trousers ? Its depressing to say the least. Feminism and sexism has nothing to do with it, YOU JUST STUFF TOO MUCH DOWN YOUR THROATS
Deb, Surbiton,
Weight is cited and observed unfairly with women far more often than with men. Why not do an equally trenchant and worthwhile piece about fat British men?
George, London, U.K.
Each and every British girl is offensively fat and violent. Quite right. It's not the obesity or the violence that's the main problem, though, but the fact that we think that we have the right to act "like blokes." Gosh, Rod Liddle, remind me, why is it that you're not running the country?
Lorna, Oxford, UK
I have been baffled for years by the vision of lardy chics in skimpy clothing. I had always assumed that vanity would be a greater driver than fashion but, one sunbeam and the horrid, pink, wibbly, pasty tide floods.
Don't these girls have friends?
Liam, Dublin, Ireland
-employed boyfriend and father of their child who is safely tucked up at home unemplyed.
i am all for social commentary on the demise of our country but at least make it fair ... I'm curious as to where british men landed in this great poll.
Charlotte, London, England
Rods got this one spot on(as usual).We are in a social quagmire, and all the feminists can do is bleat sexism(as usual).Its not they are just overweight and act like football hooligans philosophically/physically ,its the complete vacuousness.
More of what the Romans called 'sine ira et studio' pls.
Glen Oglethorpe, Workington, 'United Kingdom' (sic)
Don't worry we'll be able to impose Islam on the British women within a generation. Its what they deserve.
Keith Bentham, wigan, uk
Isn't it odd that most civilized governments think it's O.K. to mandate seat belts where there's a slight chance you could damage your health... but let's allow nicotine and drunkenness where there's overwhelming evidence.
Makes as much sense as everything else that's going on...
D Griffing, Naples, Long Beach
I'm in agreement with Rod on this one. There are too many of these salad-dodging Sandras about. It only takes a stroll up the Newcastle quayside on a summer' evening (or any other evening) to spot the spare tyres hanging out between their boob tubes and miniskirts. Standards up north have fallen.
John , Newcastle, UK
Anyone violent and aggressive, male or female, should be condemned utterly and have some punishment that fits the crime. The problem of years of permissive society and no personal responsibility but plenty of human rights has bought this situation to a head. Come back discipline and respect.
Sally Greenwell, Wallingford, UK
Perhaps some of the people who believe that they have a right to be fat should take a moment to consider the damage that they are doing.
No fat people seem to consider the incredible strain that they put on their health and consequently the NHS, which we all pay for.
TC, London, UK
The fact is that fat drunken girls are unattractive to the majority of men. Just for the sake of our sanity and libido they should get on a bloody diet and get some bloody manners.
Jacques, Paris, France
its a measure of whats is wrong with our society - not just females. people in general have rights but no responsibilities these days - whether it is to themselves, their children or society as a whole.
sanjay, london,
Yes, let's have a go at fat women- no columnist has ever done that before. I think men's hatred of fat women stems from the fact that they represent a woman whose existence isn't there for his sole enjoyment- not thin enough for his sexual jollies, to show off to his friends like some trophy, etc.
Elizabeth Griggs, Solihull,
If you spend an afternoon in any town centre you can see the consequences of what Rod describes, legions of fat girls pushing prams.
jasper, chelmsford,
Patricia, darling, sweetie, hunnybun, why is it that when women are sentenced to a period in prison commensurate with that given to men for the same offence, people like you claim that it is unfair to give such punishment, because women are different?
Bill, Belfast, N.I.
You have called British girls fat perhaps because you haven't recently met American girls. Here in the USA, every day I see women built like pudgy truck drivers, walking around often with a large cup of Pepsi in hand. And you won't see any slim girl coming out of a McDonald's either.
Yesh Prabhu, Plainsboro, NJ, USA
20 years ago in the US, bought a ticket from DC to LA return. A week before the flight I got a new ticket (same flight) and $30 in the mail. The travel agent had spotted a sale, cancelled my old ticket bought a new one. OK, it was not a tour company but I was (pleasantly) surprised nonetheless
Alfie, Edinburgh, UK
Beneath the exaggeration, RL makes a valid point, about calling attention to things that are wrong. Think: Teen pregnancy, now tolerated with little more than a what-are-you-gonna-do shrug. Think: every opinion is equally worthy (please). And Patricia, since when have men not been chastised?
Paul, Perth, Australia
As someone who worked for the Emergency services I've always been appauled at the level of violence young women dish out to each other, Shoe heels to the face is far from uncommon on a Friday or Saturday night after 25 breezers.
john, Aberdeen,
Crikey! really stuck on the tesco conumdrum. its a hard one to call call with arguments for both sides. Sorry i will have to lie down now and think about it.
bill40, blackpool/nanning, uk/china
Thoroughly enjoyed this. Unfortunately life has become an increasing concern about increasing statistics(where these actualy become known) and it would be fair to say that ever since politicians have ruled our lives matters have not improved.
geert van Koersveld, cape town, south africa
Dear me, women behaving as men have for years, of course it's not the behaviour we should chastise but the fact that it is women partaking.
It's worrying that rascism of this nature wouldn't be tolerated but extreme, and offensive, sexism is.
Patricia, Salisbury, UK