Sydney Morning Herald - August 17, 2013
"I think people should do all sorts of things": Mayor of London Boris Johnson. Well, Boris - and, given he is probably the only living politician in Britain who is enough of a celebrity to need only one name in headlines, that is what I shall call him - is having none of that.'
''Writing is just politics by other means, isn't it?'' he says snappily. ''To adapt Clausewitz, or someone like that, it's just a way of continuing one's activity and bringing what you've got to say to the widest possible audience.'' (Carl von Clausewitz, by the way, was a German military theorist who died in 1831; I looked that up.)
''People now have a very kind of 1970s demarcation approach, like a British Leyland factory circa 1978,'' he says. ''There is a very strict view that some people should write and some people should do politics … I think people should do all sorts of things. Indeed, there was a very good manual of rugby union football I found from the 1920s that went even further and explained how props should be perfectly prepared to be wing three-quarters and so on and so forth. And I think that would be a good thing.''
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/what-lies-beneath-boris-johnson-on-why-gaffes-are-good-20130815-2rxez.html#ixzz2cIGwzWNW

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