Best Of
Re: Wes Streeting displays absolutely no subtlety as he goes on manoeuvres – politicalbetting.com
I had to do that too ... 'hora fere septima' is about I can recall of the Latin. But quite so. IIRC Pliny's comparison of the smoke plume to a pine tree (of the Italian kind) also turns out to be spot on for the pyroclastic clouds before they collapse down onto the slopes.The one I loved was Pliny's letters which I spent a year translating from the Latin. In them he described being in the bay of Naples as Vesuvius erupted and engulfed Pompey and Herculaneum. He described this vividly as a flow of molten rock pouring down the volcano at incredible speed. This was thought to be some artistic embellishment for centuries until in relatively modern times a pyroclastic flow was observed in either Canada or Alaska and it was appreciated that the description had been entirely factual.If you know 'thalassa' you know something worth knowing. One of the most famous of all Greek quotations is 'θάλασσα θάλασσα' from Xenophon's Anabasis, which is an extraordinary, and first hand, account of the journey out, battle and return of a bunch of Greek soldiers to help out in an internal Persian conflict.I did 2 or 3 weeks ancient Greek at the end of 5th year at school. I was supposed to be studying it the following year but I didn't go back and went to University instead. I can remember thalssa meant sea and that's about it. I regret not getting a better education before I focused on law.Me, I'd like to take up Ancient Greek. My school performance wasn't good enough to get to grips with the middle pluperfect or the stylistic issues of the [edit] men/de dichotomy.Ah yes, that's true, and I plan to. A craft, I think. I've been watching Bronowski's Ascent Of Man for the first time, what a beautifully written and presented work, and it made me feel downright unworthy. Need to get these hands working. Owe it to my species.You could take up something new, then you'll be better over time.I was just musing to myself the other day, is there anything, anything at all, physical or otherwise, that I'm getting better at? The answer is no (unless you count musing to myself, which I don't think you can).Most of us cannot even go for a jog as easily in our 30s and 40s as in our 20s, seems pretty common sense that many things come with more physical and other risks.Many years back, an eminent specialist in maternity published an article saying that the medical profession was, in effect, lying to women. That by not making clear the effects of age to the wider public, they were led to believe that having children at… advanced ages was risk free and easy.My recollection is that the survey evidence shows that women, on average, want one more child than they have.I’m delighted to have triggered a multi-hour PB thread derailment with my posting of the Paul Johnson article on birth rates.We've had a few conversations on the topic which have never really got properly going.
Now we’ve lost the SeanTs the rest of us need to step up and do more thread derailing.
My take is its not down to one specific thing, its a multitude, but doesn't have much to do with religion or uni professors. Saying that, the TFR among my friends who went to uni is way lower than those who didn't.
There is no quick fix, some people just don't want kids
So we don't have to worry about the people who don't want kids. We have to worry about the people who want kids, and then don't, or don't have as many as they want.
A new language for instance.
I've taken up bouldering as the kids got into it and in the future, when snowboarding is looking less sensible, I intend to be much better at skiing than I am currently
They shout 'the sea the sea' on sighting the Black Sea, after an extraordinary arduous return from the desert. It's a great story from a totally forgotten bit of Greek/Persian history of about 400 BC. There's a decent Penguin Classics edition.
Xenophon knew Socrates, which makes you think.
It also gives Iris Murdoch a book title.
1
Re: Wes Streeting displays absolutely no subtlety as he goes on manoeuvres – politicalbetting.com
When I first got involved in software development many years ago I was told by a wise old programmer that most coders can't write good quality code for more than 2 hours per day. Their brains just get tired and start making mistakes or get distracted by time wasting activities.I suspect that we are not well suited to a steady "7 or 8 hours a day at a steady pace, week in week out, for years". My mental image of a hunter gatherer lifestyle seems much more to have ups and downs at multiple timescales: seasons where there's lots to do and off seasons where life is slower paced, weeks when you're busy and weeks with less exhausting chores, and intense hours and hours spent idling.It depends. When I have a complex case I can step up the work rate remarkably and get prodigious amounts done in very little time. But it is exhausting and for short bursts only. I could not possibly work at that rate most of the time. Most of the time we potter along, doing enough to keep the emails answered, the engagements met, the routines followed. It's dull and I can't deny I feel more alive when genuinely pushed. I would just make myself ill if I kept it up for too long.I know I've said this before, but I work 24-7.Labour tells councils not to adopt 4 day week workingHmm. Depends if it’s about clockwatchers or getting the job done. My contracted week is 36.5 h, over 5 days. But realistically, as an academic, (a) no one is checking and (b) I do more than that most of the time and fail to take all my leave, plus working weekends for recruitment events.
Sounds like common sense in this economy
I genuinely think if you set someone their tasks and they have achieved it in four days, then that’s fine.
That's 24 minutes an hour, 7 hours a day.
I may jest, but I don't think that is too far off the mark for many of us, once you factor in coffee breaks, loo breaks, chats to colleagues, the odd domestic chore when wfh, and of course dipping in to an online discussion site every so often.
I've found this to be broadly true, but flexible depending on the difficulty of the task. These days I write hardware description language, which is much harder than writing software, and I struggle to do one hour of useful work. The rest of the day is spent on less demanding things like writing documentation or arguing with people on the internet.
Re: Wes Streeting displays absolutely no subtlety as he goes on manoeuvres – politicalbetting.com
Being incompetent is a *requirement* - these people live in fear of someone who knows what’s going on.Only if you know the right sort of people.To be fair, the two seem to be not merely not mutually exclusive but positively a sine qua non for many companies and government positions.If memory serves they all basically say they were completely useless and know nothing and it's not their fault, despite being the sorts of people who naturally fall into high profile jobs paying hundreds of thousands a year.The danger, as I am sure Ms Cyclefree would attest, is that too many prosecutions are pursued and the whole thing gets unwieldy. It would be better to focus on a hndful of slam dunk cases.Who's surprised?Inconthhhheivable!
An agreement was in place in 2006 for errors caused by bugs in the software to be corrected, or for Fujitsu to pay the Post Office up to £150 per transaction if it failed to do so.
The revelation directly contradicts the Post Office's claims during criminal prosecutions - which led to hundreds of wrongful convictions and civil cases that destroyed livelihoods - that no bugs existed capable of causing accounting shortfalls. It also shows the Post Office knew almost two decades ago that Horizon could not always be relied upon to record transactions accurately
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cqlkx6n15ero
Don’t worry, no one senior will be prosecuted.
These should of course be aimed at the more senior staff. I would definitely start with a couple of chief execs.
Nonetheless it is infuriating when they deploy the two bits simultaneously. I'd bet good money most of the top people at the Post Office are doing just fine or even better now than they were before, as consequences are for the proles.
So incompetence and a “safe pair of hands”, a “team player”. As in someone who will join the wagons, when they start circling them.
#NU10K
Re: Wes Streeting displays absolutely no subtlety as he goes on manoeuvres – politicalbetting.com
The one I loved was Pliny's letters which I spent a year translating from the Latin. In them he described being in the bay of Naples as Vesuvius erupted and engulfed Pompey and Herculaneum. He described this vividly as a flow of molten rock pouring down the volcano at incredible speed. This was thought to be some artistic embellishment for centuries until in relatively modern times a pyroclastic flow was observed in either Canada or Alaska and it was appreciated that the description had been entirely factual.If you know 'thalassa' you know something worth knowing. One of the most famous of all Greek quotations is 'θάλασσα θάλασσα' from Xenophon's Anabasis, which is an extraordinary, and first hand, account of the journey out, battle and return of a bunch of Greek soldiers to help out in an internal Persian conflict.I did 2 or 3 weeks ancient Greek at the end of 5th year at school. I was supposed to be studying it the following year but I didn't go back and went to University instead. I can remember thalssa meant sea and that's about it. I regret not getting a better education before I focused on law.Me, I'd like to take up Ancient Greek. My school performance wasn't good enough to get to grips with the middle pluperfect or the stylistic issues of the [edit] men/de dichotomy.Ah yes, that's true, and I plan to. A craft, I think. I've been watching Bronowski's Ascent Of Man for the first time, what a beautifully written and presented work, and it made me feel downright unworthy. Need to get these hands working. Owe it to my species.You could take up something new, then you'll be better over time.I was just musing to myself the other day, is there anything, anything at all, physical or otherwise, that I'm getting better at? The answer is no (unless you count musing to myself, which I don't think you can).Most of us cannot even go for a jog as easily in our 30s and 40s as in our 20s, seems pretty common sense that many things come with more physical and other risks.Many years back, an eminent specialist in maternity published an article saying that the medical profession was, in effect, lying to women. That by not making clear the effects of age to the wider public, they were led to believe that having children at… advanced ages was risk free and easy.My recollection is that the survey evidence shows that women, on average, want one more child than they have.I’m delighted to have triggered a multi-hour PB thread derailment with my posting of the Paul Johnson article on birth rates.We've had a few conversations on the topic which have never really got properly going.
Now we’ve lost the SeanTs the rest of us need to step up and do more thread derailing.
My take is its not down to one specific thing, its a multitude, but doesn't have much to do with religion or uni professors. Saying that, the TFR among my friends who went to uni is way lower than those who didn't.
There is no quick fix, some people just don't want kids
So we don't have to worry about the people who don't want kids. We have to worry about the people who want kids, and then don't, or don't have as many as they want.
A new language for instance.
I've taken up bouldering as the kids got into it and in the future, when snowboarding is looking less sensible, I intend to be much better at skiing than I am currently
They shout 'the sea the sea' on sighting the Black Sea, after an extraordinary arduous return from the desert. It's a great story from a totally forgotten bit of Greek/Persian history of about 400 BC. There's a decent Penguin Classics edition.
Xenophon knew Socrates, which makes you think.
It also gives Iris Murdoch a book title.
DavidL
2
Re: Wes Streeting displays absolutely no subtlety as he goes on manoeuvres – politicalbetting.com
And in olden times lots of Thalassocnus aquatic giant sloths paddling around on the Pacific coast of South America.There are a great many Thalassotherapy spa/hotels on the Breton coast.Also the word thalassocracy. Athens; Venice; and the UK, in part.If you know 'thalassa' you know something worth knowing. One of the most famous of all Greek quotations is 'θάλασσα θάλασσα' from Xenophon's Anabasis, which is an extraordinary, and first hand, account of the journey out, battle and return of a bunch of Greek soldiers to help out in an internal Persian conflict.I did 2 or 3 weeks ancient Greek at the end of 5th year at school. I was supposed to be studying it the following year but I didn't go back and went to University instead. I can remember thalssa meant sea and that's about it. I regret not getting a better education before I focused on law.Me, I'd like to take up Ancient Greek. My school performance wasn't good enough to get to grips with the middle pluperfect or the stylistic issues of the [edit] men/de dichotomy.Ah yes, that's true, and I plan to. A craft, I think. I've been watching Bronowski's Ascent Of Man for the first time, what a beautifully written and presented work, and it made me feel downright unworthy. Need to get these hands working. Owe it to my species.You could take up something new, then you'll be better over time.I was just musing to myself the other day, is there anything, anything at all, physical or otherwise, that I'm getting better at? The answer is no (unless you count musing to myself, which I don't think you can).Most of us cannot even go for a jog as easily in our 30s and 40s as in our 20s, seems pretty common sense that many things come with more physical and other risks.Many years back, an eminent specialist in maternity published an article saying that the medical profession was, in effect, lying to women. That by not making clear the effects of age to the wider public, they were led to believe that having children at… advanced ages was risk free and easy.My recollection is that the survey evidence shows that women, on average, want one more child than they have.I’m delighted to have triggered a multi-hour PB thread derailment with my posting of the Paul Johnson article on birth rates.We've had a few conversations on the topic which have never really got properly going.
Now we’ve lost the SeanTs the rest of us need to step up and do more thread derailing.
My take is its not down to one specific thing, its a multitude, but doesn't have much to do with religion or uni professors. Saying that, the TFR among my friends who went to uni is way lower than those who didn't.
There is no quick fix, some people just don't want kids
So we don't have to worry about the people who don't want kids. We have to worry about the people who want kids, and then don't, or don't have as many as they want.
A new language for instance.
I've taken up bouldering as the kids got into it and in the future, when snowboarding is looking less sensible, I intend to be much better at skiing than I am currently
They shout 'the sea the sea' on sighting the Black Sea, after an extraordinary arduous return from the desert. It's a great story from a totally forgotten bit of Greek/Persian history of about 400 BC. There's a decent Penguin Classics edition.
Xenophon knew Socrates, which makes you think.
It also gives Iris Murdoch a book title.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thalassocnus
"The generic epithet Thalassocnus derives from the Greek word thalassa "sea" and Ocnus, an allegorical deity from Greek and Roman mythology that represents the wasting of time, or slothfulness."
2
Re: Wes Streeting displays absolutely no subtlety as he goes on manoeuvres – politicalbetting.com
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cd74lyr094voThey do have a major windbag problem!
US pauses offshore wind projects over security* concerns
(*Yeah right)
Foxy
2
Re: Wes Streeting displays absolutely no subtlety as he goes on manoeuvres – politicalbetting.com
It appears that we may have found good use for AI after all… 
https://spectator.com/article/ai-will-kill-all-the-lawyers/
https://spectator.com/article/ai-will-kill-all-the-lawyers/
Sandpit
1
Re: Wes Streeting displays absolutely no subtlety as he goes on manoeuvres – politicalbetting.com
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cd74lyr094voIt used to be that those on the left were seen as having their head in the clouds, with no experience of the real world, while conservatives were solid, pragmatic types who knew how to get things done.
US pauses offshore wind projects over security* concerns
(*Yeah right)
But today’s conservatives are fundamentally unserious. It’s all bitter academics convince women not to have babies, wind power is woke, and tariffs don’t cause inflation.
Re: Wes Streeting displays absolutely no subtlety as he goes on manoeuvres – politicalbetting.com
When I went from being a solicitor to an advocate I had to pass exams in European law, Roman Law and Procedure. I had been a solicitor for nearly 20 years by then.Sometimes I feel that education is wasted on the young and we should do more of it later in life when we can appreciate why we're doing it.I did 2 or 3 weeks ancient Greek at the end of 5th year at school. I was supposed to be studying it the following year but I didn't go back and went to University instead. I can remember thalssa meant sea and that's about it. I regret not getting a better education before I focused on law.Me, I'd like to take up Ancient Greek. My school performance wasn't good enough to get to grips with the middle pluperfect or the stylistic issues of the [edit] men/de dichotomy.Ah yes, that's true, and I plan to. A craft, I think. I've been watching Bronowski's Ascent Of Man for the first time, what a beautifully written and presented work, and it made me feel downright unworthy. Need to get these hands working. Owe it to my species.You could take up something new, then you'll be better over time.I was just musing to myself the other day, is there anything, anything at all, physical or otherwise, that I'm getting better at? The answer is no (unless you count musing to myself, which I don't think you can).Most of us cannot even go for a jog as easily in our 30s and 40s as in our 20s, seems pretty common sense that many things come with more physical and other risks.Many years back, an eminent specialist in maternity published an article saying that the medical profession was, in effect, lying to women. That by not making clear the effects of age to the wider public, they were led to believe that having children at… advanced ages was risk free and easy.My recollection is that the survey evidence shows that women, on average, want one more child than they have.I’m delighted to have triggered a multi-hour PB thread derailment with my posting of the Paul Johnson article on birth rates.We've had a few conversations on the topic which have never really got properly going.
Now we’ve lost the SeanTs the rest of us need to step up and do more thread derailing.
My take is its not down to one specific thing, its a multitude, but doesn't have much to do with religion or uni professors. Saying that, the TFR among my friends who went to uni is way lower than those who didn't.
There is no quick fix, some people just don't want kids
So we don't have to worry about the people who don't want kids. We have to worry about the people who want kids, and then don't, or don't have as many as they want.
A new language for instance.
I've taken up bouldering as the kids got into it and in the future, when snowboarding is looking less sensible, I intend to be much better at skiing than I am currently
I really enjoyed going back to studying and got far more out of it than I had the fist time around, partly because I had a much clearer idea of how a legal system worked in the real world. I had some excellent debates with a Roman law tutor as to what the phrase "iudex qui litem suam facit " meant (basically a judge who makes a case his own by becoming partisan in it for one side or the other). It was an interesting intellectual problem for an academic but a practical reality for someone who had been dealing with a highly variable quality of judges, sheriffs and Tribunal chairman for more than 15 years. It is the key to understanding judicial immunity and how essential that is for our legal system to work (as I am sure Sandy Kemp will appreciate). My perspective was very different and I found it genuinely enjoyable after spending most of my undergraduate degree bored and poorly motivated.
DavidL
5
Re: Wes Streeting displays absolutely no subtlety as he goes on manoeuvres – politicalbetting.com
There are a great many Thalassotherapy spa/hotels on the Breton coast.Also the word thalassocracy. Athens; Venice; and the UK, in part.If you know 'thalassa' you know something worth knowing. One of the most famous of all Greek quotations is 'θάλασσα θάλασσα' from Xenophon's Anabasis, which is an extraordinary, and first hand, account of the journey out, battle and return of a bunch of Greek soldiers to help out in an internal Persian conflict.I did 2 or 3 weeks ancient Greek at the end of 5th year at school. I was supposed to be studying it the following year but I didn't go back and went to University instead. I can remember thalssa meant sea and that's about it. I regret not getting a better education before I focused on law.Me, I'd like to take up Ancient Greek. My school performance wasn't good enough to get to grips with the middle pluperfect or the stylistic issues of the [edit] men/de dichotomy.Ah yes, that's true, and I plan to. A craft, I think. I've been watching Bronowski's Ascent Of Man for the first time, what a beautifully written and presented work, and it made me feel downright unworthy. Need to get these hands working. Owe it to my species.You could take up something new, then you'll be better over time.I was just musing to myself the other day, is there anything, anything at all, physical or otherwise, that I'm getting better at? The answer is no (unless you count musing to myself, which I don't think you can).Most of us cannot even go for a jog as easily in our 30s and 40s as in our 20s, seems pretty common sense that many things come with more physical and other risks.Many years back, an eminent specialist in maternity published an article saying that the medical profession was, in effect, lying to women. That by not making clear the effects of age to the wider public, they were led to believe that having children at… advanced ages was risk free and easy.My recollection is that the survey evidence shows that women, on average, want one more child than they have.I’m delighted to have triggered a multi-hour PB thread derailment with my posting of the Paul Johnson article on birth rates.We've had a few conversations on the topic which have never really got properly going.
Now we’ve lost the SeanTs the rest of us need to step up and do more thread derailing.
My take is its not down to one specific thing, its a multitude, but doesn't have much to do with religion or uni professors. Saying that, the TFR among my friends who went to uni is way lower than those who didn't.
There is no quick fix, some people just don't want kids
So we don't have to worry about the people who don't want kids. We have to worry about the people who want kids, and then don't, or don't have as many as they want.
A new language for instance.
I've taken up bouldering as the kids got into it and in the future, when snowboarding is looking less sensible, I intend to be much better at skiing than I am currently
They shout 'the sea the sea' on sighting the Black Sea, after an extraordinary arduous return from the desert. It's a great story from a totally forgotten bit of Greek/Persian history of about 400 BC. There's a decent Penguin Classics edition.
Xenophon knew Socrates, which makes you think.
It also gives Iris Murdoch a book title.
boulay
1


