Scottish Daily Mail

The REAL outrage about the Dorchester: the sick kids who’ve lost out

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To adapt an old joke, what’s the difference between a militant feminist and a palestinia­n terrorist? answer: you can negotiate with a terrorist. this gag — unrepeatab­le in its original form in the current hysterical climate — sprung to mind when modern feminism’s monstrous regiment of self-appointed moral arbiters launched into a predictabl­e avalanche of righteous indignatio­n over the alleged goings-on at a charity dinner in London.

By now, you’re probably familiar with the lurid claims about sexual misconduct towards ‘hostesses’ by wealthy guests at the presidents Club fundraiser at the dorchester Hotel. they originated from an undercover Financial times reporter and were seized upon ravenously by female Mps and the usual gaggle of #Metoo hashtag harridans.

So far, so predictabl­e. But where the plot left the planet was when the prime Minister was forced to answer questions about this sordid affair at the davos summit.

Mother theresa could have said: ‘I’ve no idea what you are talking about. I’ve never heard of the presidents Club and I’m not getting involved. I’m here to discuss Britain’s future as a global trading nation post Brexit.’ Instead, she felt it necessary to add her three-penn’orth of condemnati­on to that of everyone from the Charity Commission to the Governor of the Bank of England. Give me strength.

Most ridiculous of the lot was Labour’s permanentl­y outraged pixie BallsCoope­r, face contorted with hatred and fury in the Commons. on the same day, pictures appeared of her husband, Strictly Come dancing’s Ed Balls, embracing two of the Real Housewives of palm Beach at donald trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

HE waS there making a BBC travel documentar­y. How far the architect of Gordon Brown’s post neo-classical endogenous growth theory has fallen.

did pixie know that Ed would be consorting with the trumpettes? after all, the taint of sexual impropriet­y is never far away from the real president’s club.

If she didn’t, Ed can expect to be banished to the spare bedroom on his return — that’s if it’s not full of all those Syrian refugees pixie promised to take in.

Before we continue, in the interests of full disclosure, I should tell you that 20-odd years ago I was the after-dinner turn at the presidents Club bash. I’d been invited by the late Jeremy Beadle, MC for the evening, when we both worked for London weekend television.

From what I remember, there were plenty of good-looking women waiting on tables but I can honestly say I wasn’t aware of any of them being molested or propositio­ned.

that’s not to say it didn’t happen. who knows? I was preoccupie­d with trying to entertain a ballroom full of some of the country’s most prominent businessme­n, bankers and property developers.

david walliams said much the same thing when asked about his role as this year’s compere. I believe him. But what intrigued me was that he described it as a ‘profession­al’ gig and declared he was so horrified by the revelation­s of bad behaviour that he was returning his fee. what fee? I didn’t ask for, or receive, a fee. I’m pretty sure Beadle wasn’t paid, either.

Jeremy did hundreds of charity fundraiser­s over the years without expecting a penny in return.

turns out this was the third time in a row walliams had compered the event. presumably, were it not for the fall-out from the Ft’s sting, he’d be doing it next year, too.

Not that there’s going to be a next year. the presidents Club has been disbanded to appease the baying mob.

Great ormond Street Hospital says it won’t accept a £500,000 donation that could have paid for a cancer scanner and saved the lives of countless sick children. Still, by giving back the money, walliams has saved face with his Left-wing showbiz buddies and the bosses at Great ormond Street can claim they have struck a blow for social justice. Knighthood­s all round!

No doubt the Ft’s undercover reporter will win a slew of press awards, too. She’s the natural successor to the now-defunct News of the world’s Fake Sheikh.

But what amused me was the way in which she claimed to be shocked and surprised at what she discovered when she posed as a hostess at the event. No, she wasn’t. She found exactly what she expected to find. that’s what she was doing there in the first place. She’d been tipped off. otherwise, why bother?

this wasn’t a fishing expedition, it was a fishnet expedition.

Look, if there was genuine sexual assault on the night then it’s a matter for the police. the ‘victims’ will always find a sympatheti­c ear at the Yard these days.

and, unlike Jimmy Savile, the alleged perpetrato­rs are still alive.

these are, though, only allegation­s. where’s the evidence? I’m prepared to be proved wrong, but I find it hard to believe that one of the guests actually exposed himself to a waitress in the dorchester dining suite.

NoR am I condoning, or defending, boorish behaviour. But, as someone remarked, it doesn’t seem to have been much worse than your average rugby club dinner.

Certainly, it doesn’t justify the absurd call to ban all-male gatherings in future. otherwise, you might as well outlaw all-female parties, too. Hen nights are hardly bastions of decorum and sexual continence.

plenty of women have been known to behave ‘inappropri­ately’ towards handsome male waiters in tight trousers and hurl themselves at Chippendal­e-style dancers.

the tragedy here is that an organisati­on which has raised millions for charity feels obliged to disband because of the alleged behaviour of a handful of guests. the whole business is blown so far out proportion that even the prime Minister is compelled to interrupt an internatio­nal conference to pass comment.

we live in an absurd age of kneejerk moral outrage, fuelled by social media and 24-hour rolling ‘news’, in which everyone is expected to genuflect before the altar of militant feminism — just so that politicall­y motivated, university­educated, middle-class women with an exaggerate­d sense of their own importance can draw attention to themselves.

Suddenly, that old joke doesn’t seem so funny any more.

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