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Whenever the LDs have issued data like this they’ve won – politicalbetting.com

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Comments

  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,792
    Stocky said:

    kinabalu said:

    Stocky said:

    Farooq said:

    Paper candidate pact between the Lib Dems and Labour is clearly happening.

    Big problems for the Tories next round, IMHO

    It's one thing in a couple of by elections. It won't happen in a GE
    It did in 1997.
    Yes but then there was Blair and now, unlike then, there are serious reasons to be repelled by the party.
    If you mean "the Left" I'd say they have no more power in the party now than they had back then.
    Well, kind of. Starmer has IMO done a first-rate job in many ways. I don't think anyone could have done better. But it's illiberal aspects; I mean the ease at which the party accepts state restrictions on liberties and the identity politics-cancel culture stuff. I sense that many are on a knife-edge about changing their Tory votes but are very conscious of these two things.
    Spot on. See my post above.

  • Paul Waugh
    @paulwaugh
    ·
    49s
    Starmer sounds onto something with this spin document that urges staff to call "refurbishment" of hospitals "new hospitals".
    Would be interesting to see the actual document
    #PMQs

    This is truly stupid politics from the Tories. People know what a hospital is. They believe, I think, that a new hospital does not equal a new ward/facility at an existing hospital. Calling it a new hospital doesn't make it one.
    Just like levelling up nonsense, it's all bullshit, there is nothing this Government and in particular, the liar in chief, will not lie about
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,544
    edited December 2021

    theakes said:

    This fits in with my pretty close observations of the scene.
    People are talking about the election in shops and win or lose you get the firm impression the Lib Dems are doing well, borne out by the betting which still has them coming in well.
    However anything can happen, bad weather on polling day, a Labour win tomorrow to stiffen their vote, a Conservative hard campaign in the last week, many factors at play.

    The media seem to be in full lock everyone down mood today and apart from undermining thousands of small businesses at their busiest time of the year they will only be content when everyone is kept at home

    Then when they succeed they will be asking why is the economy tanking and it is time to get things back to normal
    Jenny Harries' unguarded comments on Monday were absolutely stupid: she has probably cost the hospitality trade several millions of pounds, and possibly thousands of jobs, just by opening her mouth. Boris and Javid's attempts to roll it back will probably only have had a limited effect, judging by the anecdotal evidence.
    I think that's overegging it.

    I expect those who've been spooked would surely be those who were already guarded and easily spooked and so probably weren't going to be engaged much with hospitality anyway.

    I expect those who were keen on hospitality would quite rightly be taking her comments with the pinch of salt they very much deserve.
    I don't know. The public seem to lurch from one extreme to the other. We seem to go from lockdown all down yesterday, its a disgrace the government haven't done it yet, they are killing everybody, to what Boris said the pubs can reopen, sporting events are able to have crowds, but please try and be responsible....NAAA NAAA DOWN THE PUB, DOWN THE PUB, DOWN THE PUB...TIME TO HUG EVERYBODY IN THE PUB.
    Yes, you keep saying this, but I see no evidence that that's the case. What exactly do you have against pubs by the way? You seem obsessed with them Francis!
    You didn't have to look very hard to see what I am talking about at the cricket and football. Everybody just totally went nuts and forgot any semblance of being just being a bit cautious. Even the Piers Moron let his guard down, hugging 100s of people at the footy and got COVID.

    We also have seen this consistently when we have had hospitality shut down / open up. One last big night out, everywhere rammed, before they close, then the same when they open.

    Nothing against pubs, just saying many people don't seem to go for the happy medium during this pandemic. Its an all or nothing.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,236
    Thinking about the stick @Dura_Ace got yesterday it occurs to me that environmentalists like DA who are refusing to get vaccinated for animal-rights reasons are acting in a counter-productive way for the planet.

    I mean the virus, by attacking the unvaccinated, is disproportionally wiping out those who take this environmentalist stance leaving a higher proportion of non-environmentalists still standing.

    Therefore, DA should get vaccinated for the good of the planet.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,792
    edited December 2021

    [snip]

    I stayed away because I'm prioritising my trip to Bath, and I don't want to catch anything that would put that at risk beforehand. Completely bizarre, but necessary precaution in the circumstances, while we're still doing mass testing.

    [snip]

    Actually I think that is a key point: people do, very sensibly, want to try to avoid putting at risk the highest priority events and trips they've got planned. So it's entirely natural to ditch the less important ones if they might be a bit risky in terms of getting infected, even mildly.
    My issue is people accepting invitations then dropping out at very short notice, which has happened to me (as an organiser of Christmas parties). You are at liberty to decline an invitation – but don't accept then cry off at short notice because you have a better offer within ten days.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118

    SKS going on " did you have a Christmas Party last year" as his first question with everything else thats going on.

    I think that was a bad call by Starmer. Be serious. Of course they had an illegal party last year. So what? I suspect most people did not fully comply with all the regulations in the last 18 months. Big deal.
    Exactly right – I have said before that Labour has too be very careful not to side with the joyless and judgmental.
    They are the joyless and judgemental
  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375

    SKS going on " did you have a Christmas Party last year" as his first question with everything else thats going on.

    I think that was a bad call by Starmer. Be serious. Of course they had an illegal party last year. So what? I suspect most people did not fully comply with all the regulations in the last 18 months. Big deal.
    Exactly right – I have said before that Labour has too be very careful not to side with the joyless and judgmental.
    SKS's first question had to be on Omicron, another sign of him being a bad politician
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,792

    theakes said:

    This fits in with my pretty close observations of the scene.
    People are talking about the election in shops and win or lose you get the firm impression the Lib Dems are doing well, borne out by the betting which still has them coming in well.
    However anything can happen, bad weather on polling day, a Labour win tomorrow to stiffen their vote, a Conservative hard campaign in the last week, many factors at play.

    The media seem to be in full lock everyone down mood today and apart from undermining thousands of small businesses at their busiest time of the year they will only be content when everyone is kept at home

    Then when they succeed they will be asking why is the economy tanking and it is time to get things back to normal
    Jenny Harries' unguarded comments on Monday were absolutely stupid: she has probably cost the hospitality trade several millions of pounds, and possibly thousands of jobs, just by opening her mouth. Boris and Javid's attempts to roll it back will probably only have had a limited effect, judging by the anecdotal evidence.
    I think that's overegging it.

    I expect those who've been spooked would surely be those who were already guarded and easily spooked and so probably weren't going to be engaged much with hospitality anyway.

    I expect those who were keen on hospitality would quite rightly be taking her comments with the pinch of salt they very much deserve.
    I don't know. The public seem to lurch from one extreme to the other. We seem to go from lockdown all down yesterday, its a disgrace the government haven't done it yet, they are killing everybody, to what Boris said the pubs can reopen, sporting events are able to have crowds, but please try and be responsible....NAAA NAAA DOWN THE PUB, DOWN THE PUB, DOWN THE PUB...TIME TO HUG EVERYBODY IN THE PUB.
    Yes, you keep saying this, but I see no evidence that that's the case. What exactly do you have against pubs by the way? You seem obsessed with them Francis!
    You didn't have to look very hard to see what I am talking about at the cricket and football. Everybody just totally went nuts and forgot any semblance of being just being a bit cautious. Even the Piers Moron let his guard down and got COVID.

    We also have seen this consistently when we have had hospitality shut down / open up. One last big night out, everywhere rammed, before they close, then the same when they open.
    'everyone' or a few people? I think you'll find it's the latter.
  • CorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorseBattery Posts: 21,436
    edited December 2021
    Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,544
    edited December 2021

    SKS going on " did you have a Christmas Party last year" as his first question with everything else thats going on.

    I think that was a bad call by Starmer. Be serious. Of course they had an illegal party last year. So what? I suspect most people did not fully comply with all the regulations in the last 18 months. Big deal.
    Exactly right – I have said before that Labour has too be very careful not to side with the joyless and judgmental.
    I reckon Starmer is the sort to love a good Zoom party....
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,792
    isam said:

    SKS going on " did you have a Christmas Party last year" as his first question with everything else thats going on.

    I think that was a bad call by Starmer. Be serious. Of course they had an illegal party last year. So what? I suspect most people did not fully comply with all the regulations in the last 18 months. Big deal.
    Exactly right – I have said before that Labour has too be very careful not to side with the joyless and judgmental.
    They are the joyless and judgemental

    They (as in the Labour Party) really are not. They love a knees-up. But the leadership, and the line, can certainly present as if they are.
  • theakes said:

    This fits in with my pretty close observations of the scene.
    People are talking about the election in shops and win or lose you get the firm impression the Lib Dems are doing well, borne out by the betting which still has them coming in well.
    However anything can happen, bad weather on polling day, a Labour win tomorrow to stiffen their vote, a Conservative hard campaign in the last week, many factors at play.

    The media seem to be in full lock everyone down mood today and apart from undermining thousands of small businesses at their busiest time of the year they will only be content when everyone is kept at home

    Then when they succeed they will be asking why is the economy tanking and it is time to get things back to normal
    Jenny Harries' unguarded comments on Monday were absolutely stupid: she has probably cost the hospitality trade several millions of pounds, and possibly thousands of jobs, just by opening her mouth. Boris and Javid's attempts to roll it back will probably only have had a limited effect, judging by the anecdotal evidence.
    I think that's overegging it.

    I expect those who've been spooked would surely be those who were already guarded and easily spooked and so probably weren't going to be engaged much with hospitality anyway.

    I expect those who were keen on hospitality would quite rightly be taking her comments with the pinch of salt they very much deserve.
    I don't know. The public seem to lurch from one extreme to the other. We seem to go from lockdown all down yesterday, its a disgrace the government haven't done it yet, they are killing everybody, to what Boris said the pubs can reopen, sporting events are able to have crowds, but please try and be responsible....NAAA NAAA DOWN THE PUB, DOWN THE PUB, DOWN THE PUB...TIME TO HUG EVERYBODY IN THE PUB.
    Yes, you keep saying this, but I see no evidence that that's the case. What exactly do you have against pubs by the way? You seem obsessed with them Francis!
    You didn't have to look very hard to see what I am talking about at the cricket and football. Everybody just totally went nuts and forgot any semblance of being just being a bit cautious. Even the Piers Moron let his guard down and got COVID.

    We also have seen this consistently when we have had hospitality shut down / open up. One last big night out, everywhere rammed, before they close, then the same when they open.
    'everyone' or a few people? I think you'll find it's the latter.
    The summer, it was absolutely not a few, hence why we got a big spike in COVID.
  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375

    Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.

    12 years into a a Tory Government and being tied midterm in the polls is impressive?

    Labour should be 10-15 clear at this stage

  • Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.

    12 years into a a Tory Government and being tied midterm in the polls is impressive?

    Labour should be 10-15 clear at this stage

    If I’d told you after 2019 Labour would be in this position you would have laughed at me. Then we were talking about extinction
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 17,700

    Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.

    Although to turn the Johnson only beat Corbyn argument on its head, Starmer is only up against the disaster that is Johnson...
  • Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.

    12 years into a a Tory Government and being tied midterm in the polls is impressive?

    Labour should be 10-15 clear at this stage

    Jeremy Corbyn's Labour on multiple times recorded a 10 point lead over the Tories in 2019.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,544
    edited December 2021
    Looks like SAGE is on same page as me. There's so much riding on knowledge we won't have for 2 weeks. So we should act now as if it will be bad and relax if it isn't.

    https://twitter.com/chrischirp/status/1465969113822601217?s=20

    If we followed her advice we still be in the same lockdown that started last Christmas....
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,925
    Andy_JS said:

    Labour were miles ahead of the LDs at the last election in North Shropshire. Why are they almost certainly going to come third this time? Seems like an interesting question to me.

    Because the Lib Dems seem to have woken up after the 2019 general election and started campaigning properly again, perhaps. The result was at the last round of local elections they came within a whisker of winning half a dozen county/unitary seats in the North Shropshire constituency, and then just carried on campaigning. And this has continued seamlessly into the byelection, with the Westminster candidate from last time standing as the candidate this time too, and almost winning a county/unitary seat on the way.

    In contrast, Labour dropped their candidate who stood at the last three Westminster elections - seemingly not without a measure of ill-will. And Labour are busy fighting things out among themselves even at the highest level of the party, as today's news stories show.

    The results of the 2019 general election are now ancient history. And I hear tell that a lot of people who voted Conservative then did so only because they were afraid of a Corbyn government. This is no longer the case.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,544
    edited December 2021
    'Time to think about mandatory vaccination' across the entire EU. How we can encourage and potentially think about mandatory vaccination within the European Union - this needs discussion. This needs a common approach.' - Ursula von der Leyen
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 49,235

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


  • Looks like SAGE is on same page as me. There's so much riding on knowledge we won't have for 2 weeks. So we should act now as if it will be bad and relax if it isn't.

    https://twitter.com/chrischirp/status/1465969113822601217?s=20

    If we followed her advice we still be in the same lockdown that started last Christmas....

    If we followed her advice we would still be in the same lockdown that started March 2020.
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254
    edited December 2021
    Ba4 surely
  • Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


    That data is cumulative since eight years ago and doesn't come close to "tens of thousands".
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,591

    Looks like SAGE is on same page as me. There's so much riding on knowledge we won't have for 2 weeks. So we should act now as if it will be bad and relax if it isn't.

    https://twitter.com/chrischirp/status/1465969113822601217?s=20

    If we followed her advice we still be in the same lockdown that started last Christmas....

    If we followed her advice we would still be in the same lockdown that started March 2020.
    I'm not sure it would be called a lockdown if she were in charge - it'd just be normal life, never to change.
  • Looks like SAGE is on same page as me. There's so much riding on knowledge we won't have for 2 weeks. So we should act now as if it will be bad and relax if it isn't.

    https://twitter.com/chrischirp/status/1465969113822601217?s=20

    If we followed her advice we still be in the same lockdown that started last Christmas....

    If we followed her advice we would still be in the same lockdown that started March 2020.
    We might have just managed 2 weeks release from lockdown in summer 2020 under her approach....
  • Looks like SAGE is on same page as me. There's so much riding on knowledge we won't have for 2 weeks. So we should act now as if it will be bad and relax if it isn't.

    https://twitter.com/chrischirp/status/1465969113822601217?s=20

    If we followed her advice we still be in the same lockdown that started last Christmas....

    If we followed her advice we would still be in the same lockdown that started March 2020.
    We might have just managed 2 weeks release from lockdown in summer 2020 under her approach....
    It'd be like what they call summer in Canada: The third Thursday in July, from 12 noon to 2pm.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,760
    eek said:

    kinabalu said:

    eek said:

    kinabalu said:

    Here's a more positive spin on the SKS reshuffle. Notable for the sentiment that Lab think the election will be May 23:
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/nov/30/keir-starmer-reshuffle-general-election-2023-labour

    In which case they are completely useless - Boris / no Tory leader is going to hold an election under the existing boundaries. And they don't change to October 23.

    I can see the logic for May 23 but only because they are missing a fundamental fact.
    I agree with you. May 24 for me. Outsider late 23. May 23 - No.
    November 23 is my favourite - waiting until May 24 just adds extra risk that you wouldn't want to take.
    Tempting with a good poll lead but I more see the risk the other way. Only way BJ stops being PM is by calling and losing an election so I think his default will be to carry on into 2024. Bank that extra 6 months.
  • Video has emerged of a group of men spitting at a bus full of Jewish teenagers in Oxford Street where the group were celebrating the first night of Chanukah.

    https://twitter.com/JewishChron/status/1466022171143245832?s=20

    I presume under twitter new rules this sort of thing will be banned, as the individuals spitting and hitting the bus with their shoes haven't given written consent to have their faces shown.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,580

    Eabhal said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    "Cancel your big Christmas party and have a couple of small ones instead"

    "Avoid 'making merry', don't hug your relatives"

    Holy shit these people have gone completely power mad.

    This is Sarah Pitt btw.
    There was a piece in one of the sundays about how Whitty is very worried that if they do have to lock us all down and so on again this xmas, the public will just raise two fingers and ignore them.

    He has said that he was misquoted. He was discussing a hypothetical, but said that he thought the public will follow new guidance. This BBC article covers what he said more accurately: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-59434196
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 49,235

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


    That data is cumulative since eight years ago and doesn't come close to "tens of thousands".
    These are the ones that actually were detained overseas. Many more never were, generally on medical or family grounds, and were kept in Australia.

    Per capita, Australian asylum numbers are not very different to ours.

  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,792

    Looks like SAGE is on same page as me. There's so much riding on knowledge we won't have for 2 weeks. So we should act now as if it will be bad and relax if it isn't.

    https://twitter.com/chrischirp/status/1465969113822601217?s=20

    If we followed her advice we still be in the same lockdown that started last Christmas....

    If we followed her advice we would still be in the same lockdown that started March 2020.
    We might have just managed 2 weeks release from lockdown in summer 2020 under her approach....
    You reckon? She would have agitated for 'caution' and retaining the 'precautions', with autumn just around the corner!!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,760
    isam said:

    SKS going on " did you have a Christmas Party last year" as his first question with everything else thats going on.

    I think that was a bad call by Starmer. Be serious. Of course they had an illegal party last year. So what? I suspect most people did not fully comply with all the regulations in the last 18 months. Big deal.
    Exactly right – I have said before that Labour has too be very careful not to side with the joyless and judgmental.
    They are the joyless and judgemental
    Is that meant to be a joke? If it is I suggest you keep the next one to yourself. Your posts are those of an utter plonker quite frankly.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,547

    We do have to laugh at the stupidity of the Tories continuing to claim 40 new hospitals.

    https://twitter.com/Davewwest/status/1430868484104368128

    A new building at an existing hospital is not a new hospital no matter how stupid the government think people are.

    Well, that does depend on definition.

    A year or so ago, Papworth Hospital near me was shut, and moved next to the site of the Addenbrookes Hospital. This was, IMO, a bad move. But that is two hospitals on essentially one site; and depending how you define the Rosie Maternity Hospital, more than two. But Addenbrookes and Rosie are run by the same trust; Papworth is independent.

    So are two hospitals run on the same site (e.g. Addenbrookes and Rosie) by the same trust independent hospitals? They are treated as such (friends say they had their children at 'Rosie', not 'Addenrbookes').

    This has been made worse by hospital centralisation over the last thirty or forty years.
  • VerulamiusVerulamius Posts: 1,550
    ClippP said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Labour were miles ahead of the LDs at the last election in North Shropshire. Why are they almost certainly going to come third this time? Seems like an interesting question to me.

    Because the Lib Dems seem to have woken up after the 2019 general election and started campaigning properly again, perhaps. The result was at the last round of local elections they came within a whisker of winning half a dozen county/unitary seats in the North Shropshire constituency, and then just carried on campaigning. And this has continued seamlessly into the byelection, with the Westminster candidate from last time standing as the candidate this time too, and almost winning a county/unitary seat on the way.

    In contrast, Labour dropped their candidate who stood at the last three Westminster elections - seemingly not without a measure of ill-will. And Labour are busy fighting things out among themselves even at the highest level of the party, as today's news stories show.

    The results of the 2019 general election are now ancient history. And I hear tell that a lot of people who voted Conservative then did so only because they were afraid of a Corbyn government. This is no longer the case.
    Two of the reasons for the improvement in LibDem campaigning, I think, are the election of Mark Pack as president of the LibDems and the extra donations received during the 2019 general election.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 49,235

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


    That data is cumulative since eight years ago and doesn't come close to "tens of thousands".
    "Between November 2011 and 30 June 2020, a total of 37,026 bridging visas were granted to asylum seekers who arrived by boat. As at 30 June 2020, 12,450 asylum seekers who arrived by boat remained in the community (10,245 with a current BVE and 2,205 awaiting grant of a further BVE). The remaining 24,576 asylum seekers who were granted BVEs were granted a substantive visa, departed Australia, returned to immigration detention or passed away. "

    From: https://www.kaldorcentre.unsw.edu.au/publication/bridging-visas
  • rural_voterrural_voter Posts: 2,038

    Looks like SAGE is on same page as me. There's so much riding on knowledge we won't have for 2 weeks. So we should act now as if it will be bad and relax if it isn't.

    https://twitter.com/chrischirp/status/1465969113822601217?s=20

    If we followed her advice we still be in the same lockdown that started last Christmas....

    On 99% of reports, this variant is a severe cold. It's been around for weeks. You ought to read more widely. It's clearly not an emergency so stop complying with illegal measures, as Lord Sumption said

    https://truthunmuted.org/top-uk-judge-calls-for-civil-disobedience/

    One can't get much more senior than a former Supreme Court Justice.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,544
    edited December 2021

    Looks like SAGE is on same page as me. There's so much riding on knowledge we won't have for 2 weeks. So we should act now as if it will be bad and relax if it isn't.

    https://twitter.com/chrischirp/status/1465969113822601217?s=20

    If we followed her advice we still be in the same lockdown that started last Christmas....

    On 99% of reports, this variant is a severe cold. It's been around for weeks. You ought to read more widely. It's clearly not an emergency so stop complying with illegal measures, as Lord Sumption said

    https://truthunmuted.org/top-uk-judge-calls-for-civil-disobedience/

    One can't get much more senior than a former Supreme Court Justice.
    That's wasn't me saying that, it was a direct quote from the most lockdowny lockdowner among the zero covid lot. The equivalent of somebody who thinks we should ban all cars because no speed limit is too low to stop deaths on the road and we must eliminate all of them.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,760

    Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.

    12 years into a a Tory Government and being tied midterm in the polls is impressive?

    Labour should be 10-15 clear at this stage
    That is grade A bollox. We are just 2 years after a landslide Con election victory.
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254
    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254
    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
  • MattWMattW Posts: 24,002
    edited December 2021
    FPT:

    Yes indeed a much warmer morning than recently.

    OT, Monbiot is bracingly and completely correct this morning that the extra amendments bolted on to the policing bill, and completely missed by the media, as well as parts of the original bill itself, are a threat to all of us and our basic democratic rights.

    Most concerning of all, among many concerns, is the open door to making any noisy, rather than violent, protest - and even helping to publicise such a protest online, by retweeting it, for instance - an arrestable offence.

    Very concerning stuff, and as so often in the last two decades, the British media, claiming to be fearless, is asleep at the wheel .

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/dec/01/imprisoned-51-weeks-protesting-britain-police-state

    Hmmm. I'll go as far as strong scrutiny is required.

    As for "locking on" and similar, that is a declaration by an individual or group of individuals that their personal opinions are so important that it is OK to prevent members of society, whether people or organisations, going about their lawful business.

    Of course it's correct that such behaviour should have a penalty, and I hope that those who choose to cause disruption are held personally responsible for the damage and costs they choose to impose on others. They of course have the option of holding a demonstration that does not wreck others' lives; they choose not too and there should be consequences.

    ER/IB are one stage worse in that they are willing to cause serious harm to vulnerable individuals by blocking access to hospitals etc. I would term that sociopathic, as someone who would be dead now except for a rapid life-saving journey to A&E some years ago - of exactly the type being blocked by IB.

    On a more general front, Monbiot is completely out of his tree at present.

    He broadcast films of himself weeping for the poor ickle narcissists of IB, and seems not to give a toss for the lives or welfare of their victims. He needs to get back to planet earth.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005

    We do have to laugh at the stupidity of the Tories continuing to claim 40 new hospitals.

    https://twitter.com/Davewwest/status/1430868484104368128

    A new building at an existing hospital is not a new hospital no matter how stupid the government think people are.

    Well, that does depend on definition.

    A year or so ago, Papworth Hospital near me was shut, and moved next to the site of the Addenbrookes Hospital. This was, IMO, a bad move. But that is two hospitals on essentially one site; and depending how you define the Rosie Maternity Hospital, more than two. But Addenbrookes and Rosie are run by the same trust; Papworth is independent.

    So are two hospitals run on the same site (e.g. Addenbrookes and Rosie) by the same trust independent hospitals? They are treated as such (friends say they had their children at 'Rosie', not 'Addenrbookes').

    This has been made worse by hospital centralisation over the last thirty or forty years.
    Sometimes more than one trust will run different departments of the same hospital. Is that one or more hospitals? It is all a complete mess really with this smorgasbord of departments, hospitals, trusts, CCG and nation NHS's. How it manages to operate at all is a mystery to me.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,547

    Looks like SAGE is on same page as me. There's so much riding on knowledge we won't have for 2 weeks. So we should act now as if it will be bad and relax if it isn't.

    https://twitter.com/chrischirp/status/1465969113822601217?s=20

    If we followed her advice we still be in the same lockdown that started last Christmas....

    On 99% of reports, this variant is a severe cold. It's been around for weeks. You ought to read more widely. It's clearly not an emergency so stop complying with illegal measures, as Lord Sumption said

    https://truthunmuted.org/top-uk-judge-calls-for-civil-disobedience/

    One can't get much more senior than a former Supreme Court Justice.
    That's wasn't me saying that, it was a direct quote from the most lockdowny lockdowner among the zero covid lot. The equivalent of somebody who thinks we should ban all cars because no speed limit is too low to stop deaths on the road and we must eliminate all of them.
    TBF you should have put quotes around the quoted para: on first reading I thought you were saying it, even though it conflicted with your last line.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,760
    edited December 2021

    isam said:

    SKS going on " did you have a Christmas Party last year" as his first question with everything else thats going on.

    I think that was a bad call by Starmer. Be serious. Of course they had an illegal party last year. So what? I suspect most people did not fully comply with all the regulations in the last 18 months. Big deal.
    Exactly right – I have said before that Labour has too be very careful not to side with the joyless and judgmental.
    They are the joyless and judgemental
    They (as in the Labour Party) really are not. They love a knees-up. But the leadership, and the line, can certainly present as if they are.
    Joyless and judgemental! - What tosh.

    We're a broad church and our services are destination events.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited December 2021
    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


    That data is cumulative since eight years ago and doesn't come close to "tens of thousands".
    These are the ones that actually were detained overseas. Many more never were, generally on medical or family grounds, and were kept in Australia.

    Per capita, Australian asylum numbers are not very different to ours.

    Again its not about asylum numbers, its about the numbers coming via boats.

    Australian boat numbers collapsed to near-zero following their offshore processing. Asylum through other means continued and there's nothing wrong with that, indeed its a good thing.

    You claimed tens of thousands from boats were in Australia on BVE visas. Do you have any figures to support that, or would you like to withdraw that comment?
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254
    My main take away from PMQs was Rachel Reeves sad eyes as it seemed to dawn on her that no matter how well SKS did she'd be on the losing side next GE.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,650
    kinabalu said:

    Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.

    12 years into a a Tory Government and being tied midterm in the polls is impressive?

    Labour should be 10-15 clear at this stage
    That is grade A bollox. We are just 2 years after a landslide Con election victory.
    That’s very rudely put Kinny. That Conservatives can’t see or acknowledge how much more of a threat libdems and Labour will be to them next time and how much less potent Boris and his promises will be next time is actually very funny.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,261
    edited December 2021

    The Labour leadership was branded “pathetic and childish” after it issued an invite for a drinks party jointly hosted by Sir Keir Starmer and his Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves - but not his deputy Angela Rayner

    Deep divisions have emerged at the top of the Labour party at a time when speculation is rife over a fresh civil war within party ranks.

    Labour source: “It’s idiotic, pathetic and childish to send that invite out today, in that way, to 200 lobby hacks hungry for gossip.”

    SKS really is a useless nonentity

    I think its the opposite. He's realised that he can bin off and ignore the left. Hence the removal of their remaining element from the Shadow Cabinet and the utter marginalisation of the deputy leader.

    Before anyone says "how beastly" in reference to the leader's treatment of the deputy, think back to the conference where they tried to remove Tom Watson and failed miserably.

    If the hard left don't want to vote Labour there are a plethora of splinter groups out there, including the laughably named "left unity".
    He can't entirely ignore the left. It's not 1997. If he does, he'll lose.
    I think he can - "the left" are still foaming on about the Forde report, Jezbollah and witchhunts. Irrelevant to the real needs.
    Rayner and Miliband represent a broad soft-left constituency in the party. If he consciously antagonises them, as he appears to be doing in at least one case, and possibly at the behest of some of his team with links to a 1990's approach, he could have big trouble.
    What's he doing to Ed? I agree that both are soft left, and frankly they aren't the target. The reality is that Rayner - a proud Blairite remember, just listen to her passionate description of how His government transformed her life chances - is the remaining totem of the hard left.

    She seems to enjoy that role as she indulges in mouth-foaming rants about Tory scum which cause the Labour party considerable harm. That one speech alone was enough for Starmer to bin her off.
    The makeup of the party is such that Starmer just can't do that. The membership is still further to the left than in the late 1990's, quite clearly, and she and Miliband link the left, the soft-left and Starmer. He antagonises them at his party's, and electoral prospect's, peril.
    Naah. The people who do all the work are in the centre or the right of the party. So its no cost to activists. And the members elected Starmer on a huge majority so the job is his as long as he wants to keep it.

    The voters - the people who matter - do not back hard left lunacy. Elections are always won from the centre ground.
    No, I don't agree with that at all. Many of the current younger membership are on the left, without being on the old machine-politics hard left. The number of 60+ members of that generation is diminishing.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 49,235

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


    That data is cumulative since eight years ago and doesn't come close to "tens of thousands".
    These are the ones that actually were detained overseas. Many more never were, generally on medical or family grounds, and were kept in Australia.

    Per capita, Australian asylum numbers are not very different to ours.

    Again its not about asylum numbers, its about the numbers coming via boats.

    Australian boat numbers collapsed to near-zero following their offshore processing. Asylum through other means continued and there's nothing wrong with that, indeed its a good thing.

    You claimed tens of thousands from boats were in Australia on BVE visas. Do you have any figures to support that, or would you like to withdraw that comment?
    As posted:

    "As at 30 June 2020, 12,450 asylum seekers who arrived by boat remained in the community (10,245 with a current BVE and 2,205 awaiting grant of a further BVE). The remaining 24,576 asylum seekers who were granted BVEs were granted a substantive visa, departed Australia, returned to immigration detention or passed away"

    From https://www.kaldorcentre.unsw.edu.au/publication/bridging-visas#:~:text=health care system).-,Bridging Visa E (BVE),to reside in the community.
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254
    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Two Bishops getting involved now - this is a lot more exciting than Kasparov V Short on Ch 4
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,650
    JBriskin3 said:

    My main take away from PMQs was Rachel Reeves sad eyes as it seemed to dawn on her that no matter how well SKS did she'd be on the losing side next GE.

    Might just have been up all night in front of spreadsheets trying to work out all the sneaky ways Rishi is building a huge tax take. 😆
  • TimSTimS Posts: 13,228

    Eabhal said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    "Cancel your big Christmas party and have a couple of small ones instead"

    "Avoid 'making merry', don't hug your relatives"

    Holy shit these people have gone completely power mad.

    This is Sarah Pitt btw.
    There was a piece in one of the sundays about how Whitty is very worried that if they do have to lock us all down and so on again this xmas, the public will just raise two fingers and ignore them.

    He has said that he was misquoted. He was discussing a hypothetical, but said that he thought the public will follow new guidance. This BBC article covers what he said more accurately: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-59434196
    People will apply what they see as common sense, with a dollop of peer pressure-induced conformity. Just as they always have done. So they'll happily don masks in shops and on the tube, with a few exceptions, because it's not hard to do and seems reasonable. But they'll keep meeting family and friends socially over Christmas.

    Let's face it there is also this amusing, completely unscientific but deep rooted belief among the general population that they are more likely to catch Covid off strangers than people they know well. Even though the opposite is largely true. A Covid version of children's stranger-danger. Even JRM seemed to buy it when justifying the Tory MPs mixing maskless.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,760

    kinabalu said:

    Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.

    12 years into a a Tory Government and being tied midterm in the polls is impressive?

    Labour should be 10-15 clear at this stage
    That is grade A bollox. We are just 2 years after a landslide Con election victory.
    That’s very rudely put Kinny. That Conservatives can’t see or acknowledge how much more of a threat libdems and Labour will be to them next time and how much less potent Boris and his promises will be next time is actually very funny.
    Yes, I'm not one to underestimate the Magnificent but I'm slowly growing in confidence that it will be close.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,733
    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Nah. Those pawns on e4/e5 are holding both sides positions together and neither can afford to do much. I reckon black will put a bit of pressure on with Bb7 but there's no big attack coming.

    But what do I know...
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,650
    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Is everything all right John?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,760
    DavidL said:

    On a slightly tangential note I had a small bet with @rkrkrk that there would be no more legal restrictions this year, winnings to the site. If the administrators can put up the donate button I will make the donation since I have clearly lost.

    Touch unlucky there. Omicron has picked your pocket.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 17,700

    Looks like SAGE is on same page as me. There's so much riding on knowledge we won't have for 2 weeks. So we should act now as if it will be bad and relax if it isn't.

    https://twitter.com/chrischirp/status/1465969113822601217?s=20

    If we followed her advice we still be in the same lockdown that started last Christmas....

    On 99% of reports, this variant is a severe cold. It's been around for weeks. You ought to read more widely. It's clearly not an emergency so stop complying with illegal measures, as Lord Sumption said

    https://truthunmuted.org/top-uk-judge-calls-for-civil-disobedience/

    One can't get much more senior than a former Supreme Court Justice.
    That's wasn't me saying that, it was a direct quote from the most lockdowny lockdowner among the zero covid lot. The equivalent of somebody who thinks we should ban all cars because no speed limit is too low to stop deaths on the road and we must eliminate all of them.
    I think it looked like it was your comment. I had to read it twice to see you were quoting her.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 13,228
    kinabalu said:

    isam said:

    SKS going on " did you have a Christmas Party last year" as his first question with everything else thats going on.

    I think that was a bad call by Starmer. Be serious. Of course they had an illegal party last year. So what? I suspect most people did not fully comply with all the regulations in the last 18 months. Big deal.
    Exactly right – I have said before that Labour has too be very careful not to side with the joyless and judgmental.
    They are the joyless and judgemental
    They (as in the Labour Party) really are not. They love a knees-up. But the leadership, and the line, can certainly present as if they are.
    Joyless and judgemental! - What tosh.

    We're a broad church and our services are destination events.
    As usual the problem is the Labour-supporting new model army with their blue hearts all over Twitter. Most are simply supporters (or more specifically anti-Tories) but they poison the brand. Like the anti-woke crusader types do for the Tory brand.

    Sad to say a few of the yellow-diamond Twitter Lib Dems have succumbed to the temperance movement too.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,650

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Is everything all right John?
    Sorry you are watching the chess! ♟
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,334
    I wish people wouldn’t say “mandatory vaccines” when they mean something else.

    Mandatory vaccines are repugnant.
    But a surcharge for people who don’t / won’t get vaccinated is actually OK given the strain on health services.
  • Further to a recent discussion, coolest fcking photo evah




  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,484
    I've just caught up with PMQs.
    I note that JRM was wearing a mask; he has resolutely refused to do so previously.
    Does this mean that the Tory benches have suddenly become less "convivial and fraternal", as per his explanation a month ago for why he had no need to wear a mask in the HoC?
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,755
    MaxPB said:

    theakes said:

    This fits in with my pretty close observations of the scene.
    People are talking about the election in shops and win or lose you get the firm impression the Lib Dems are doing well, borne out by the betting which still has them coming in well.
    However anything can happen, bad weather on polling day, a Labour win tomorrow to stiffen their vote, a Conservative hard campaign in the last week, many factors at play.

    The media seem to be in full lock everyone down mood today and apart from undermining thousands of small businesses at their busiest time of the year they will only be content when everyone is kept at home

    Then when they succeed they will be asking why is the economy tanking and it is time to get things back to normal
    Jenny Harries' unguarded comments on Monday were absolutely stupid: she has probably cost the hospitality trade several millions of pounds, and possibly thousands of jobs, just by opening her mouth. Boris and Javid's attempts to roll it back will probably only have had a limited effect, judging by the anecdotal evidence.
    This is the problem with scientists, they don't necessarily think through the end consequences of what they propose, only the headlines. Less socialising means less cases, for sure and that's what she wants. Yet less socialising means businesses struggling, unemployment going up and just a general bit of misery. Those are consequences of what she said that simply won't even have entered the equation for her which will have been, how can we make cases go down.

    It's also something the government needs to clamp down on, there's an agreed position and all advisors sing from the same hymn sheet. If they disagree then make the case to the politicians and get the agreed position changed.

    One of the reasons I think she has gone rogue is because Javid is a lot tougher than Hancock and probably is less inclined to social measures like lockdowns and distancing.
    She should be sacked
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Nah. Those pawns on e4/e5 are holding both sides positions together and neither can afford to do much. I reckon black will put a bit of pressure on with Bb7 but there's no big attack coming.

    But what do I know...
    Not a lot apparently-



    "4m ago
    13:33
    Nepomniachtchi plays 18. Ng3 after three minutes. Carlsen answers with 18. ... Ng6. The challenger takes two more minutes before getting his dark-squared bishop into the mix with 19. Be3. White enjoys a slight positional edge with black’s light-squared bishop in the weeds."

    https://www.theguardian.com/sport/live/2021/dec/01/world-chess-championship-game-5-live-magnus-carlsen-v-ian-nepomniachtchi?filterKeyEvents=false#liveblog-content
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,650
    kinabalu said:

    kinabalu said:

    Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.

    12 years into a a Tory Government and being tied midterm in the polls is impressive?

    Labour should be 10-15 clear at this stage
    That is grade A bollox. We are just 2 years after a landslide Con election victory.
    That’s very rudely put Kinny. That Conservatives can’t see or acknowledge how much more of a threat libdems and Labour will be to them next time and how much less potent Boris and his promises will be next time is actually very funny.
    Yes, I'm not one to underestimate the Magnificent but I'm slowly growing in confidence that it will be close.
    It’s a change of government to libdems and Labour with SNP ensuring budget and confidence. This is turning into a fag end government now.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 49,235

    Further to a recent discussion, coolest fcking photo evah




    Ah, the famous people traffickers with their customers, and French official accomplices?
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Is everything all right John?
    Sorry you are watching the chess! ♟
    I was actually on a piss break.

    It's Jim or James btw - it's from a PKD book.
  • Further to a recent discussion, coolest fcking photo evah




    That is awesome.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,650

    Further to a recent discussion, coolest fcking photo evah




    That is awesome.
    Casablanca!
  • Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


    That data is cumulative since eight years ago and doesn't come close to "tens of thousands".
    These are the ones that actually were detained overseas. Many more never were, generally on medical or family grounds, and were kept in Australia.

    Per capita, Australian asylum numbers are not very different to ours.

    Again its not about asylum numbers, its about the numbers coming via boats.

    Australian boat numbers collapsed to near-zero following their offshore processing. Asylum through other means continued and there's nothing wrong with that, indeed its a good thing.

    You claimed tens of thousands from boats were in Australia on BVE visas. Do you have any figures to support that, or would you like to withdraw that comment?
    As posted:

    "As at 30 June 2020, 12,450 asylum seekers who arrived by boat remained in the community (10,245 with a current BVE and 2,205 awaiting grant of a further BVE). The remaining 24,576 asylum seekers who were granted BVEs were granted a substantive visa, departed Australia, returned to immigration detention or passed away"

    From https://www.kaldorcentre.unsw.edu.au/publication/bridging-visas#:~:text=health care system).-,Bridging Visa E (BVE),to reside in the community.
    Thank you. That's very different to the data you shared a moment ago.

    That data includes people who arrived from 2011. The current policy that halted the boats started a couple of years later so the figures are probably distorted by that.

    Your source says 37k have arrived since 2011 and that matches this data from the Refugee Council of Australia - note the annual split of that 37k.


    https://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/asylum-boats-statistics/
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254
    Casablanca is a great film - one of the black and whites to watch younglings.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,650
    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Is everything all right John?
    Sorry you are watching the chess! ♟
    I was actually on a piss break.

    It's Jim or James btw - it's from a PKD book.
    👍🏻
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254
    Farooq said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Is everything all right John?
    Sorry you are watching the chess! ♟
    With Briskin he could just as easily be tripping. The man's clearly a basket case.
    I hate Psychedelics FTR
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,650
    Farooq said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Is everything all right John?
    Sorry you are watching the chess! ♟
    With Briskin he could just as easily be tripping. The man's clearly a basket case.
    Too rude! 🤨
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,484
    edited December 2021
    I think the Jenny Harries stuff is a complete red herring. If people are beginning to think about reviewing arrangements over the next month or so, it's nothing to do with what Harries (who hardly anybody has heard of) has said.

    What makes people anxious is that after a prolonged period of quiescence on the Covid front we have had a week of serious pronouncements, and a slight rule change, from the Health Secretary and the Prime Minister. Both Javid and Johnson have put their 'this is serious' faces on. Javid has sounded quite rattled. Press conferences have been revived again - a sure sign of concern.

    That's what's raised anxiety. Not Harries.
  • I've just caught up with PMQs.
    I note that JRM was wearing a mask; he has resolutely refused to do so previously.
    Does this mean that the Tory benches have suddenly become less "convivial and fraternal", as per his explanation a month ago for why he had no need to wear a mask in the HoC?

    Either that or he's a hypocritical buffoon...
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 49,235

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


    That data is cumulative since eight years ago and doesn't come close to "tens of thousands".
    These are the ones that actually were detained overseas. Many more never were, generally on medical or family grounds, and were kept in Australia.

    Per capita, Australian asylum numbers are not very different to ours.

    Again its not about asylum numbers, its about the numbers coming via boats.

    Australian boat numbers collapsed to near-zero following their offshore processing. Asylum through other means continued and there's nothing wrong with that, indeed its a good thing.

    You claimed tens of thousands from boats were in Australia on BVE visas. Do you have any figures to support that, or would you like to withdraw that comment?
    As posted:

    "As at 30 June 2020, 12,450 asylum seekers who arrived by boat remained in the community (10,245 with a current BVE and 2,205 awaiting grant of a further BVE). The remaining 24,576 asylum seekers who were granted BVEs were granted a substantive visa, departed Australia, returned to immigration detention or passed away"

    From https://www.kaldorcentre.unsw.edu.au/publication/bridging-visas#:~:text=health care system).-,Bridging Visa E (BVE),to reside in the community.
    Thank you. That's very different to the data you shared a moment ago.

    That data includes people who arrived from 2011. The current policy that halted the boats started a couple of years later so the figures are probably distorted by that.

    Your source says 37k have arrived since 2011 and that matches this data from the Refugee Council of Australia - note the annual split of that 37k.


    https://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/asylum-boats-statistics/
    Yet 12 000 are still on BVE, despite average case resolution of 103 weeks.

    In addition as I showed, of those offshored, a significant number got BVE or other Australian visas.

  • Farooq said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


    That data is cumulative since eight years ago and doesn't come close to "tens of thousands".
    These are the ones that actually were detained overseas. Many more never were, generally on medical or family grounds, and were kept in Australia.

    Per capita, Australian asylum numbers are not very different to ours.

    Again its not about asylum numbers, its about the numbers coming via boats.

    Australian boat numbers collapsed to near-zero following their offshore processing. Asylum through other means continued and there's nothing wrong with that, indeed its a good thing.

    You claimed tens of thousands from boats were in Australia on BVE visas. Do you have any figures to support that, or would you like to withdraw that comment?
    As posted:

    "As at 30 June 2020, 12,450 asylum seekers who arrived by boat remained in the community (10,245 with a current BVE and 2,205 awaiting grant of a further BVE). The remaining 24,576 asylum seekers who were granted BVEs were granted a substantive visa, departed Australia, returned to immigration detention or passed away"

    From https://www.kaldorcentre.unsw.edu.au/publication/bridging-visas#:~:text=health care system).-,Bridging Visa E (BVE),to reside in the community.
    Thank you. That's very different to the data you shared a moment ago.

    That data includes people who arrived from 2011. The current policy that halted the boats started a couple of years later so the figures are probably distorted by that.

    Your source says 37k have arrived since 2011 and that matches this data from the Refugee Council of Australia - note the annual split of that 37k.


    https://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/asylum-boats-statistics/
    Just a note to say that boat arrivals aren't the same as attempted crossings. Turning a boat back isn't the same as preventing an attempt. This is tangential to the immediate discussion but relevant to the earlier one with me.
    Indeed but the figures are there. Once people realised that an attempted crossing couldn't work, the attempts stopped almost overnight. People aren't attempting the crossing anymore because there's no gain from attempting it.
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254
    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Is everything all right John?
    Sorry you are watching the chess! ♟
    With Briskin he could just as easily be tripping. The man's clearly a basket case.
    Too rude! 🤨
    Yet... true
    Not true - I'm strictly Cigarettes and Alcohol these days.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,733
    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Nah. Those pawns on e4/e5 are holding both sides positions together and neither can afford to do much. I reckon black will put a bit of pressure on with Bb7 but there's no big attack coming.

    But what do I know...
    Not a lot apparently-



    "4m ago
    13:33
    Nepomniachtchi plays 18. Ng3 after three minutes. Carlsen answers with 18. ... Ng6. The challenger takes two more minutes before getting his dark-squared bishop into the mix with 19. Be3. White enjoys a slight positional edge with black’s light-squared bishop in the weeds."

    https://www.theguardian.com/sport/live/2021/dec/01/world-chess-championship-game-5-live-magnus-carlsen-v-ian-nepomniachtchi?filterKeyEvents=false#liveblog-content
    Nothing there to contradict...

    Black is slightly worse and needs to get his white bishop involved somehow but without losing control of f5.

    It might be hard for either side to do anything without weakening their own defensive position.

    We shall see.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,484

    I've just caught up with PMQs.
    I note that JRM was wearing a mask; he has resolutely refused to do so previously.
    Does this mean that the Tory benches have suddenly become less "convivial and fraternal", as per his explanation a month ago for why he had no need to wear a mask in the HoC?

    Either that or he's a hypocritical buffoon...
    Well, I took that as read.
  • Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


    That data is cumulative since eight years ago and doesn't come close to "tens of thousands".
    These are the ones that actually were detained overseas. Many more never were, generally on medical or family grounds, and were kept in Australia.

    Per capita, Australian asylum numbers are not very different to ours.

    Again its not about asylum numbers, its about the numbers coming via boats.

    Australian boat numbers collapsed to near-zero following their offshore processing. Asylum through other means continued and there's nothing wrong with that, indeed its a good thing.

    You claimed tens of thousands from boats were in Australia on BVE visas. Do you have any figures to support that, or would you like to withdraw that comment?
    As posted:

    "As at 30 June 2020, 12,450 asylum seekers who arrived by boat remained in the community (10,245 with a current BVE and 2,205 awaiting grant of a further BVE). The remaining 24,576 asylum seekers who were granted BVEs were granted a substantive visa, departed Australia, returned to immigration detention or passed away"

    From https://www.kaldorcentre.unsw.edu.au/publication/bridging-visas#:~:text=health care system).-,Bridging Visa E (BVE),to reside in the community.
    Thank you. That's very different to the data you shared a moment ago.

    That data includes people who arrived from 2011. The current policy that halted the boats started a couple of years later so the figures are probably distorted by that.

    Your source says 37k have arrived since 2011 and that matches this data from the Refugee Council of Australia - note the annual split of that 37k.


    https://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/asylum-boats-statistics/
    Yet 12 000 are still on BVE, despite average case resolution of 103 weeks.

    In addition as I showed, of those offshored, a significant number got BVE or other Australian visas.

    Yes people who arrived a decade ago are on that visa. The average for the visa as a whole would include people who've arrived via planes, or have overstayed their visa and are going to leave the country etc

    Only a few hundred, not tens of thousands, in a decade got it from the other data.

    The annual data shows the crossing dropped to virtually zero after 2013 and have stayed at virtually zero. Including people who arrived in 2011 doesn't change that.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,573

    The Labour leadership was branded “pathetic and childish” after it issued an invite for a drinks party jointly hosted by Sir Keir Starmer and his Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves - but not his deputy Angela Rayner

    Deep divisions have emerged at the top of the Labour party at a time when speculation is rife over a fresh civil war within party ranks.

    Labour source: “It’s idiotic, pathetic and childish to send that invite out today, in that way, to 200 lobby hacks hungry for gossip.”

    SKS really is a useless nonentity

    I think its the opposite. He's realised that he can bin off and ignore the left. Hence the removal of their remaining element from the Shadow Cabinet and the utter marginalisation of the deputy leader.

    Before anyone says "how beastly" in reference to the leader's treatment of the deputy, think back to the conference where they tried to remove Tom Watson and failed miserably.

    If the hard left don't want to vote Labour there are a plethora of splinter groups out there, including the laughably named "left unity".
    He can't entirely ignore the left. It's not 1997. If he does, he'll lose.
    I think he can - "the left" are still foaming on about the Forde report, Jezbollah and witchhunts. Irrelevant to the real needs.
    Rayner and Miliband represent a broad soft-left constituency in the party. If he consciously antagonises them, as he appears to be doing in at least one case, and possibly at the behest of some of his team with links to a 1990's approach, he could have big trouble.
    What's he doing to Ed? I agree that both are soft left, and frankly they aren't the target. The reality is that Rayner - a proud Blairite remember, just listen to her passionate description of how His government transformed her life chances - is the remaining totem of the hard left.

    She seems to enjoy that role as she indulges in mouth-foaming rants about Tory scum which cause the Labour party considerable harm. That one speech alone was enough for Starmer to bin her off.
    The makeup of the party is such that Starmer just can't do that. The membership is further to the left than in the late 1990's, quite clearly, and she and Miliband link the left, the soft-left, and Starmer and the right of the party. He antagonises them at his party's, and electoral prospect's, peril.
    Starmer and Rayner clearly don't have a warm relationship, but they are elected separately, so Starmer couldn't sack her even if he wanted to, which I don't think he does. Conversely, no left-winger who I know (and I know lots) thinks that Rayner is left-wing. She's louder, punchier and less judicious. The closest parallel is Blair and Prescott. Nobody thought Prescott was left-wing, but he filled the need for someone to be forceful and aggressive while Blair pursued the "can see him as PM" line. Miliband, by contrast, is a clear link to both the inside left and the green movement.

    I do agree with Whispering Oracle on the membership - it's somewhat to the left of the leadership, but not in tightly organised form, and there's no obvious correlation between left/right and activism - I know plenty of active and inactive people on both wings. It's pretty much always been that way in the 50 years I've been a member.
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Nah. Those pawns on e4/e5 are holding both sides positions together and neither can afford to do much. I reckon black will put a bit of pressure on with Bb7 but there's no big attack coming.

    But what do I know...
    Not a lot apparently-



    "4m ago
    13:33
    Nepomniachtchi plays 18. Ng3 after three minutes. Carlsen answers with 18. ... Ng6. The challenger takes two more minutes before getting his dark-squared bishop into the mix with 19. Be3. White enjoys a slight positional edge with black’s light-squared bishop in the weeds."

    https://www.theguardian.com/sport/live/2021/dec/01/world-chess-championship-game-5-live-magnus-carlsen-v-ian-nepomniachtchi?filterKeyEvents=false#liveblog-content
    Nothing there to contradict...

    Black is slightly worse and needs to get his white bishop involved somehow but without losing control of f5.

    It might be hard for either side to do anything without weakening their own defensive position.

    We shall see.
    If I say White has a powerful mode of attack and the Guardian reports that as "slight positional edge" I take that as a Brisky win.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,755
    edited December 2021

    I think the Jenny Harries stuff is a complete red herring. If people are beginning to think about reviewing arrangements over the next month or so, it's nothing to do with what Harries (who hardly anybody has heard of) has said.

    What makes people anxious is that after a prolonged period of quiescence on the Covid front we have had a week of serious pronouncements, and a slight rule change, from the Health Secretary and the Prime Minister. Both Javid and Johnson have put their 'this is serious' faces on. Javid has sounded quite rattled. Press conferences have been revived again - a sure sign of concern.

    That's what's raised anxiety. Not Harries.

    Pull the other one. The main headline in the Guardian was along the lines of “Johnson ignores experts”. Words have consequences.

    I of course don’t mind her having her own opinion and it’s important for the process that we have diverging voices. But she should air that in private while part of the formal machine of government policy. Once the team decides on the strategy that is that. If she wants to diverge, she can give up her position and speak as freely as she wants.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,760

    kinabalu said:

    kinabalu said:

    Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.

    12 years into a a Tory Government and being tied midterm in the polls is impressive?

    Labour should be 10-15 clear at this stage
    That is grade A bollox. We are just 2 years after a landslide Con election victory.
    That’s very rudely put Kinny. That Conservatives can’t see or acknowledge how much more of a threat libdems and Labour will be to them next time and how much less potent Boris and his promises will be next time is actually very funny.
    Yes, I'm not one to underestimate the Magnificent but I'm slowly growing in confidence that it will be close.
    It’s a change of government to libdems and Labour with SNP ensuring budget and confidence. This is turning into a fag end government now.
    Yep. I picture Davey at the election year party conf. "Go back to your constituencies and prepare for confidence & supply to a minority Labour government". If that doesn't get the blood pumping nothing will.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,650
    edited December 2021
    JBriskin3 said:

    Casablanca is a great film - one of the black and whites to watch younglings.

    I love it. But it wans’t made as a main feature was it, still writing it as they filmed it, knocked it up quickly and cheaply, yet it all works. German and French trying to out sing each other is so totally unforgettable moment from any film.

    On the other hand, big budget Citizen Kane doesn’t do much for me. It has component parts but not the flow.

    Love It’s a wonderful life.
  • Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


    That data is cumulative since eight years ago and doesn't come close to "tens of thousands".
    These are the ones that actually were detained overseas. Many more never were, generally on medical or family grounds, and were kept in Australia.

    Per capita, Australian asylum numbers are not very different to ours.

    Again its not about asylum numbers, its about the numbers coming via boats.

    Australian boat numbers collapsed to near-zero following their offshore processing. Asylum through other means continued and there's nothing wrong with that, indeed its a good thing.

    You claimed tens of thousands from boats were in Australia on BVE visas. Do you have any figures to support that, or would you like to withdraw that comment?
    As posted:

    "As at 30 June 2020, 12,450 asylum seekers who arrived by boat remained in the community (10,245 with a current BVE and 2,205 awaiting grant of a further BVE). The remaining 24,576 asylum seekers who were granted BVEs were granted a substantive visa, departed Australia, returned to immigration detention or passed away"

    From https://www.kaldorcentre.unsw.edu.au/publication/bridging-visas#:~:text=health care system).-,Bridging Visa E (BVE),to reside in the community.
    Thank you. That's very different to the data you shared a moment ago.

    That data includes people who arrived from 2011. The current policy that halted the boats started a couple of years later so the figures are probably distorted by that.

    Your source says 37k have arrived since 2011 and that matches this data from the Refugee Council of Australia - note the annual split of that 37k.


    https://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/asylum-boats-statistics/
    Just a note to say that boat arrivals aren't the same as attempted crossings. Turning a boat back isn't the same as preventing an attempt. This is tangential to the immediate discussion but relevant to the earlier one with me.
    Indeed but the figures are there. Once people realised that an attempted crossing couldn't work, the attempts stopped almost overnight. People aren't attempting the crossing anymore because there's no gain from attempting it.
    People are attempting the crossing. Fewer, but they still are.
    My only point was that to expect to totally stop people trying to cross is as unrealistic as "zero covid".
    Do you have a source saying people are attempting the crossing? How many? With annual data, not data from decades ago. Because the data I have from the Refugee Council of Australia says the crossings are virtually zero now.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,544
    edited December 2021
    Farooq said:

    Video has emerged of a group of men spitting at a bus full of Jewish teenagers in Oxford Street where the group were celebrating the first night of Chanukah.

    https://twitter.com/JewishChron/status/1466022171143245832?s=20

    I presume under twitter new rules this sort of thing will be banned, as the individuals spitting and hitting the bus with their shoes haven't given written consent to have their faces shown.

    No. This is problem with getting your information from headlines and PB idiots. Here's the blogpost about the policy change. It clearly says there is a public interest "clause".

    https://blog.twitter.com/en_us/topics/company/2021/private-information-policy-update
    I was the one who linked to that yesterday and I read it and fully aware. Lets see how they apply it.....they are already incredibly inconsistent with other applications of their rules. That was somewhat facetiously my point.
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254
    Farooq said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Is everything all right John?
    Sorry you are watching the chess! ♟
    With Briskin he could just as easily be tripping. The man's clearly a basket case.
    Too rude! 🤨
    Yet... true
    Not true - I'm strictly Cigarettes and Alcohol these days.
    ...and a basket case
    It's true - I've got a Schzoid diagnosis. But didn't you hear Boris today? - it's international disablities day soon so you have to be nice to me.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,736

    Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.

    12 years into a a Tory Government and being tied midterm in the polls is impressive?

    Labour should be 10-15 clear at this stage

    Jeremy Corbyn's Labour on multiple times recorded a 10 point lead over the Tories in 2019.
    4 years ago today Corbyn was 8 pts ahead

    Survation/Mail on Sunday 2017-12-01

    Con 38

    Lab 46

    LD 6

    Green 4

    19 MONTHS INTO AN SKS LEADERSHIP SKS has underperformed "even Corbyn" in EVERY REAL ELECTION

    2021 LE's did worse than even Corbyn

    Every Parliamentary BY Election did worse than even Corbyn

    The useless nonentity cant even match even Corbyn

  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,422
    Bit surprised Carlsen went for a Morphy over the drawBerlin
  • MattWMattW Posts: 24,002

    Further to a recent discussion, coolest fcking photo evah




    Is the second from the left TSE?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 24,002

    I've just caught up with PMQs.
    I note that JRM was wearing a mask; he has resolutely refused to do so previously.
    Does this mean that the Tory benches have suddenly become less "convivial and fraternal", as per his explanation a month ago for why he had no need to wear a mask in the HoC?

    Either that or he's a hypocritical buffoon...
    Well, I took that as read.
    Is the HOC a space where they have become compulsory?
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254

    JBriskin3 said:

    Casablanca is a great film - one of the black and whites to watch younglings.

    I love it. But it wans’t made as a main feature was it, still writing it as they filmed it, knocked it up quickly and cheaply, yet it all works. German and French trying to out sing each other is so totally unforgettable moment from any film.

    On the other hand, big budget Citizen Kane doesn’t do much for me. It has component parts but not the flow.

    Love It’s a wonderful life.
    I liked Citizen Kane on first viewing but the re-watch was a bit more of a bore-fest.

    The other black and white I'd recommend is His Girl Friday.
  • MonkeysMonkeys Posts: 758
    edited December 2021

    kinabalu said:

    kinabalu said:

    Starmer is clearly not a bad politician. To go from 25 points behind to tied is impressive.

    Whether he’s a great politician, only time will tell.

    12 years into a a Tory Government and being tied midterm in the polls is impressive?

    Labour should be 10-15 clear at this stage
    That is grade A bollox. We are just 2 years after a landslide Con election victory.
    That’s very rudely put Kinny. That Conservatives can’t see or acknowledge how much more of a threat libdems and Labour will be to them next time and how much less potent Boris and his promises will be next time is actually very funny.
    Yes, I'm not one to underestimate the Magnificent but I'm slowly growing in confidence that it will be close.
    It’s a change of government to libdems and Labour with SNP ensuring budget and confidence. This is turning into a fag end government now.
    I'm an outsider but I always imagine the rest of the UK wouldn't put up with Blackford and co propping up a Labour government, and the threat of it seems to have worked well in the past. Surely just put clips of him standing up saying anything he's ever said and "do you want the PM beholden to this?" for a few weeks and the Labour Minority govt threat collapses? Or am I way out?
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,484
    moonshine said:

    I think the Jenny Harries stuff is a complete red herring. If people are beginning to think about reviewing arrangements over the next month or so, it's nothing to do with what Harries (who hardly anybody has heard of) has said.

    What makes people anxious is that after a prolonged period of quiescence on the Covid front we have had a week of serious pronouncements, and a slight rule change, from the Health Secretary and the Prime Minister. Both Javid and Johnson have put their 'this is serious' faces on. Javid has sounded quite rattled. Press conferences have been revived again - a sure sign of concern.

    That's what's raised anxiety. Not Harries.

    Pull the other one. The main headline in the Guardian was along the lines of “Johnson ignores experts”. Words have consequences.

    I of course don’t mind her having her own opinion and it’s important for the process that we have diverging voices. But she should air that in private while part of the formal machine of government policy. Once the team decides on the strategy that is that. If she wants to diverge, she can give up her position and speak as freely as she wants.
    Nobody reads The Guardian, surely (except me)?
    Anyway, you're missing the point of my post. It is government anxiety about Omicron, as displayed by HoC statements by Javid and the re-introduction of Covid press conferences, that have led the public to think 'oh shit, are we heading towards trouble again'?
  • Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Eabhal said:

    eek said:

    Eabhal said:

    Radio Scotland phone in has been fun this morning.

    Callers flat out refusing to cancel any Christmas plans, asking how many more variants there will be and whether this will the case every Christmas for evermore.

    Virologist comes on and responds with zero-covid strategy: "we must stop this variant in its tracks".

    "We should not learn to live with it. We must eradicate it now"

    To which the next question should be how do you do that? And drill the person down to he turns silent at which point the interviewer should say "so that would be impossible"...
    Presenters response was to comment that it showed how misguided many callers were.
    The Groupthink is strong that "something must be done, this is something, so this must be done".

    To even suggest that death is a part of the circle of life and not to be prevented at all costs is now viewed as a monstrous suggestion by some people.
    You don't think a thousand extra deaths a week, many of them avoidable, is enough?
    I don't think its too many.

    Most deaths are either the unvaccinated who can own their own choices, or people who are very vulnerable and could die from the common cold or flu or anything else.

    NPIs made sense pre-PIs, not anymore. If a thousand 'extra' deaths is the 'new normal' then that's the new normal and that's what we have to live with, though I'm sceptical that excess deaths actually are a thousand a week.
    You seemed concerned about people drowning in the channel in far smaller numbers.
    They're healthy young people dying a horrible and preventable death and there's a simple solution to stop it happening that doesn't restrict the rights of anyone living here.
    So you're a "zero crossings" believer then?
    Well, good luck with that.
    I think crossings should be made safely and legally via humane routes, via proper planes or boats and not dinghies.

    If anyone who crosses in a dinghy is instantly deported to a third party nation like Rwanda then the dinghies would stop overnight.

    We should then offer MORE asylum to more people, but via proper and safe routes not via people smugglers.
    It's touching when your naivety is so openly on display. You can't completely stop people entering the country illegally, even with the policy you describe. Oh you might be able to reduce it at a certain cost, but dinghies and stowaways and overstaying visas and even people walking across the Irish border will still happen. And sometimes people will die in the attempt. You can't legislate it away, you can't public awareness it away. Zero illegal immigration is a myth.
    People don't drown in the sea if they overstay visas, people don't die walking across the border, people don't die if they've got here on a plane. I don't care about any of that, I'm OK with that.

    I don't care if we don't have zero illegal immigration. People smugglers on a deadly crossing is a different matter.
    It'll still happen though.
    People get through barbed wire, cross raging torrents, choose longer routes etc to avoid being caught.
    The error you're making is that you think the consequences of being caught will deter everyone. It's the same "hang 'em high" error that headchoppers and thief danglers make. They think perpetrators focus on the outcome if they're apprehended. But we know that very often people don't think they will get caught at all. That's why people slow down for speed cameras and then speed up when they think they're clear.

    People will still board dinghies elsewhere no matter how diligently you patrol Dover or how assiduously you punish them when they're caught. And perhaps a higher percentage of them will drown trying from Cherbourg than Calais, who knows?
    Except this has already worked in the real world.
    "Worked" as in zero migrants? If you are talking about Australia then no, no it hasn't.
    Indeed the rhetoric on this from Australia doesn't match reality.

    Tens of thousands are on Bridging Visa E (which permits employment) in Australian communities, and only a few hundred on Nauru.

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
    From refugee Council of Australia:


    That data is cumulative since eight years ago and doesn't come close to "tens of thousands".
    These are the ones that actually were detained overseas. Many more never were, generally on medical or family grounds, and were kept in Australia.

    Per capita, Australian asylum numbers are not very different to ours.

    Again its not about asylum numbers, its about the numbers coming via boats.

    Australian boat numbers collapsed to near-zero following their offshore processing. Asylum through other means continued and there's nothing wrong with that, indeed its a good thing.

    You claimed tens of thousands from boats were in Australia on BVE visas. Do you have any figures to support that, or would you like to withdraw that comment?
    As posted:

    "As at 30 June 2020, 12,450 asylum seekers who arrived by boat remained in the community (10,245 with a current BVE and 2,205 awaiting grant of a further BVE). The remaining 24,576 asylum seekers who were granted BVEs were granted a substantive visa, departed Australia, returned to immigration detention or passed away"

    From https://www.kaldorcentre.unsw.edu.au/publication/bridging-visas#:~:text=health care system).-,Bridging Visa E (BVE),to reside in the community.
    Thank you. That's very different to the data you shared a moment ago.

    That data includes people who arrived from 2011. The current policy that halted the boats started a couple of years later so the figures are probably distorted by that.

    Your source says 37k have arrived since 2011 and that matches this data from the Refugee Council of Australia - note the annual split of that 37k.


    https://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/asylum-boats-statistics/
    Just a note to say that boat arrivals aren't the same as attempted crossings. Turning a boat back isn't the same as preventing an attempt. This is tangential to the immediate discussion but relevant to the earlier one with me.
    Indeed but the figures are there. Once people realised that an attempted crossing couldn't work, the attempts stopped almost overnight. People aren't attempting the crossing anymore because there's no gain from attempting it.
    People are attempting the crossing. Fewer, but they still are.
    My only point was that to expect to totally stop people trying to cross is as unrealistic as "zero covid".
    Do you have a source saying people are attempting the crossing? How many? With annual data, not data from decades ago. Because the data I have from the Refugee Council of Australia says the crossings are virtually zero now.
    Page two of the same site you're looking at. Completed crossings < attempts. Boats get turned back etc.
    Yes the data on Page 2 shows that the numbers of people turned back are in the dozens rather than hundreds or thousands.

    So again, virtually zero. A few people try it on, but not many. The days of tens of thousands attempting are long over.
  • Farooq said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    JBriskin3 said:

    Ba4 surely

    Qc2 - bah
    A double horsey attack on the right flank looks quite powerful...
    Is everything all right John?
    Sorry you are watching the chess! ♟
    With Briskin he could just as easily be tripping. The man's clearly a basket case.
    Too rude! 🤨
    Yet... true
    Not true - I'm strictly Cigarettes and Alcohol these days.
    ...and a basket case
    Whenever I read an accusation someone is a basket case it shows a profound lack of understanding of mental health, the debilitating effect on the sufferer and their family

    My own family's battles with extreme mental health and PTSD are well known, but it is also true several of our own posters have admitted to mental health problems and treatments and I just think we need to be kinder
This discussion has been closed.