It is amazing, you're quite right. But that's more about something we think of being rich in ourselves actually being a pretty formulaic thing. Just because it seems to be almost human (but far better informed) makes LLM a substantial dead end that everyone is piling in to. My view anyway.
LLMs have a variety of uses where they're very useful, they're an interesting technology that absolutely does have a future. But, yes, they are not human-type or human-level intelligences the AI industry portrays them as and they never will be.
They will continue to improve in the areas they are already useful in, but anyone expecting them to ever function like a human mind are going to be disappointed. All those CEOs rushing to replace their employees with LLMs are going to look pretty stupid.
I’m still waiting for AI to become voodoo gods on the internet or make Cornell pastiche boxes for LOLs.
Did you hear about the psephologist from Warsaw who moved to Haiti?
Several times, Sunil.
{Steppin’ Razor has entered the chat}
???
"Steppin' Razor" is a nickname for the character Molly Millions in William Gibson's novel Neuromancer. It is used by a Rastafarian space pilot and is presumably a reference to the reggae song of the same name by Peter Tosh, given that Molly has razor-sharp blades implanted under her fingernails. When Malmesbury(?) said "I’m still waiting for AI to become voodoo gods on the internet", this was also a reference to the novels in the Sprawl trilogy, of which Neuromancer is one. In the Sprawl trilogy, two AIs - Wintermute and Neuromancer - unite/fight/fission and take over cyberspace, a digital visualisation of the internet, and manifest in the later books as voodoo gods.
I have seven copies of the four books in the trilogy, but they are so old now I hesitate to take them down.
I have no knowledge of the books of which you speak, but highly recommend Peter Tosh's 1977 albumn "Equal Rights" from which the track "Steppin'Razor" comes. It's up there with the rather more roots "Blackheart Man" as the best reggae albumn of all time.
That was a very strange move by Kemi. Surely she must know that the Trump phenomenon isn't particularly popular over here, and ICE must be one of the least popular elements of that phenomenon. And if she doesn't know that where's she getting her information from?
It is amazing, you're quite right. But that's more about something we think of being rich in ourselves actually being a pretty formulaic thing. Just because it seems to be almost human (but far better informed) makes LLM a substantial dead end that everyone is piling in to. My view anyway.
LLMs have a variety of uses where they're very useful, they're an interesting technology that absolutely does have a future. But, yes, they are not human-type or human-level intelligences the AI industry portrays them as and they never will be.
They will continue to improve in the areas they are already useful in, but anyone expecting them to ever function like a human mind are going to be disappointed. All those CEOs rushing to replace their employees with LLMs are going to look pretty stupid.
I’m still waiting for AI to become voodoo gods on the internet or make Cornell pastiche boxes for LOLs.
Did you hear about the psephologist from Warsaw who moved to Haiti?
Several times, Sunil.
{Steppin’ Razor has entered the chat}
???
"Steppin' Razor" is a nickname for the character Molly Millions in William Gibson's novel Neuromancer. It is used by a Rastafarian space pilot and is presumably a reference to the reggae song of the same name by Peter Tosh, given that Molly has razor-sharp blades implanted under her fingernails. When Malmesbury(?) said "I’m still waiting for AI to become voodoo gods on the internet", this was also a reference to the novels in the Sprawl trilogy, of which Neuromancer is one. In the Sprawl trilogy, two AIs - Wintermute and Neuromancer - unite/fight/fission and take over cyberspace, a digital visualisation of the internet, and manifest in the later books as voodoo gods.
I have seven copies of the four books in the trilogy, but they are so old now I hesitate to take them down.
The "Cornell pastiche boxes" might also be a reference, since the non-human entities in the Sprawl trilogy are a but whimsical/philosophical, and I think one of them did things like that, but it's been a long time...
Let me check...
Yup, I just cracked the less-fragile copy of Count Zero, and yes, they're in it. A young, hungry female art researcher is given an ungodly commission by a very-ill wealthy older man to track one down. Of course, that's just a cover for What's Really Going On.
Actually the fact that an AI was making Better-Than-Cornell boxes was what convinced Virek that the Ai had truly achieved something beyond humanity.
Which is why it was worth capturing/bargaining with.
It is amazing, you're quite right. But that's more about something we think of being rich in ourselves actually being a pretty formulaic thing. Just because it seems to be almost human (but far better informed) makes LLM a substantial dead end that everyone is piling in to. My view anyway.
LLMs have a variety of uses where they're very useful, they're an interesting technology that absolutely does have a future. But, yes, they are not human-type or human-level intelligences the AI industry portrays them as and they never will be.
They will continue to improve in the areas they are already useful in, but anyone expecting them to ever function like a human mind are going to be disappointed. All those CEOs rushing to replace their employees with LLMs are going to look pretty stupid.
lol
Sunk all your money in to OpenAI shares, have you?
Exclusive: Anthropic spent $2.66 billion on Amazon Web Services in the first three quarters of 2025, around 100% of their estimated revenue. Its costs appear to increase with their revenue, showing little path to profitability.
The round tripping that is going on from Nvidia should worry everybody with money in the markets.
Your out of date there I posted Ed's article as it came out...
What should really scare anyone investing in LLMs is the bottom of the article, the costs aren't training costs it's day to day running costs - basically sales and costs are aligned so unless LLMs can massively increase their prices (which they can't) they will never generate profits
Yes I am well aware of that. The inference costs are large in terms of GPU cycles / power demand, but also what they are finding is hammering these GPUs to such an enormous extent, they are going through GPUs like no tomorrow. So it isn't a matter of you spent $5bn on a GPU cluster that is basically the major investment done and dusted, you will every day need to be replacing significant numbers of $25k a pop GPUs as they keep breaking down.
There was a good video a few months ago doing some rough calcs and basically $200 / month doesn't touch the sides as it works it way up the chain of infrastructure that is required to facilitate the inference.
The way I see it is there will be an equilibrium whereby some combination of improved monetising (search style payments for click through links), subscriptions and improved efficiency (not just making LLMs bigger and bigger) whereby LLMs will be profitable for a small number of companies.
Prince Andrew’s team tried to hire “internet trolls to hassle” his accuser, Virginia Giuffre, while he hid behind the “well-guarded gates” of Balmoral Castle to avoid being served court papers, according to allegations in her posthumous memoir.
If you can't squeeze a French Revolution reference, try jokes like "Not Tonight, Marine" or "Men Of French Letters"
There's nobody called "Dreyfus", "Petain" or even "Clouseau", so I'm stuck. Johnny Hallyday est mort. I hate Jean-Luc Godard. Truffaut is little spoken of these days, malheureusement. Hmmm
Ah. This might work. You may have heard of The New French Extremity, a film movement that produced some very unpleasant/disgusting films which I shall not list.
So you can use "The New French Extremity" or "The New New French Extremity" as your title.
It is amazing, you're quite right. But that's more about something we think of being rich in ourselves actually being a pretty formulaic thing. Just because it seems to be almost human (but far better informed) makes LLM a substantial dead end that everyone is piling in to. My view anyway.
LLMs have a variety of uses where they're very useful, they're an interesting technology that absolutely does have a future. But, yes, they are not human-type or human-level intelligences the AI industry portrays them as and they never will be.
They will continue to improve in the areas they are already useful in, but anyone expecting them to ever function like a human mind are going to be disappointed. All those CEOs rushing to replace their employees with LLMs are going to look pretty stupid.
lol
Sunk all your money in to OpenAI shares, have you?
Exclusive: Anthropic spent $2.66 billion on Amazon Web Services in the first three quarters of 2025, around 100% of their estimated revenue. Its costs appear to increase with their revenue, showing little path to profitability.
The round tripping that is going on from Nvidia should worry everybody with money in the markets.
Your out of date there I posted Ed's article as it came out...
What should really scare anyone investing in LLMs is the bottom of the article, the costs aren't training costs it's day to day running costs - basically sales and costs are aligned so unless LLMs can massively increase their prices (which they can't) they will never generate profits
Yes I am well aware of that. The inference costs are large in terms of GPU cycles / power demand, but also what they are finding is hammering these GPUs to such an enormous extent, they are going through GPUs like no tomorrow. So it isn't a matter of you spent $5bn on a GPU cluster that is basically the major investment done and dusted, you will every day need to be replacing significant numbers of $25k a pop GPUs as they keep breaking down.
There was a good video a few months ago doing some rough calcs and basically $200 / month doesn't touch the sides as it works it way up the chain of infrastructure that is required to facilitate the inference.
The way I see it is there will be an equilibrium whereby some combination of improved monetising (search style payments for click through links), subscriptions and improved efficiency (not just making LLMs bigger and bigger) whereby LLMs will be profitable for a small number of companies.
We've got a long way to go before then.
One of the big issues at the moment is the "chain of thought" mode i.e. sending the output back in as input. Generating tokens is the expensive part of the operation, so now you have gone from somebody typing a wrote of 20-30 words and it perhaps generating a responsible for a few 100 words, to some even very simple prompts generating 1000s and 1000s of tokens.
If you look at how they solve the "how many states in the US have i in the name". The last time I tried it, it took 11 steps, was writing python code, then sending the output generated by that into something else, then getting it wrong, fixing it, rebuilding code, ......
Prince Andrew has not paid rent on Royal Lodge for two decades
The Times obtained a copy of the leasehold agreement for Royal Lodge, revealing the terms under which the prince lives on the 30-room estate.
It states that, while the prince paid £1 million for the lease plus at least £7.5 million for refurbishments completed in 2005, he has paid “one peppercorn (if demanded)” in rent per year, since 2003.
If you can't squeeze a French Revolution reference, try jokes like "Not Tonight, Marine" or "Men Of French Letters"
There's nobody called "Dreyfus", "Petain" or even "Clouseau", so I'm stuck. Johnny Hallyday est mort. I hate Jean-Luc Godard. Truffaut is little spoken of these days, malheureusement. Hmmm
Ah. This might work. You may have heard of The New French Extremity, a film movement that produced some very unpleasant/disgusting films which I shall not list.
So you can use "The New French Extremity" or "The New New French Extremity" as your title.
Over the last couple of weeks, I've binged on the 80s cartoon "Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds" (all 26 episodes available online!), and that in turn inspired me to re-read a decent translation of The Thee Musketeers.
Next on my cartoon list is "The Mysterious Cities of Gold".
It is amazing, you're quite right. But that's more about something we think of being rich in ourselves actually being a pretty formulaic thing. Just because it seems to be almost human (but far better informed) makes LLM a substantial dead end that everyone is piling in to. My view anyway.
LLMs have a variety of uses where they're very useful, they're an interesting technology that absolutely does have a future. But, yes, they are not human-type or human-level intelligences the AI industry portrays them as and they never will be.
They will continue to improve in the areas they are already useful in, but anyone expecting them to ever function like a human mind are going to be disappointed. All those CEOs rushing to replace their employees with LLMs are going to look pretty stupid.
I’m still waiting for AI to become voodoo gods on the internet or make Cornell pastiche boxes for LOLs.
Did you hear about the psephologist from Warsaw who moved to Haiti?
Several times, Sunil.
{Steppin’ Razor has entered the chat}
???
"Steppin' Razor" is a nickname for the character Molly Millions in William Gibson's novel Neuromancer. It is used by a Rastafarian space pilot and is presumably a reference to the reggae song of the same name by Peter Tosh, given that Molly has razor-sharp blades implanted under her fingernails. When Malmesbury(?) said "I’m still waiting for AI to become voodoo gods on the internet", this was also a reference to the novels in the Sprawl trilogy, of which Neuromancer is one. In the Sprawl trilogy, two AIs - Wintermute and Neuromancer - unite/fight/fission and take over cyberspace, a digital visualisation of the internet, and manifest in the later books as voodoo gods.
I have seven copies of the four books in the trilogy, but they are so old now I hesitate to take them down.
The "Cornell pastiche boxes" might also be a reference, since the non-human entities in the Sprawl trilogy are a but whimsical/philosophical, and I think one of them did things like that, but it's been a long time...
Let me check...
Yup, I just cracked the less-fragile copy of Count Zero, and yes, they're in it. A young, hungry female art researcher is given an ungodly commission by a very-ill wealthy older man to track one down. Of course, that's just a cover for What's Really Going On.
Actually the fact that an AI was making Better-Than-Cornell boxes was what convinced Virek that the Ai had truly achieved something beyond humanity.
Which is why it was worth capturing/bargaining with.
I go to the library most Saturdays, and when I was there a few weeks ago I picked up Neuromancer to read whilst having nibbles. Although it has obviously dated, it's really readable and thick with atmosphere and world building and great fun. When you get a chance, reread the Sprawl books.
Over the last couple of weeks, I've binged on the 80s cartoon "Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds" (all 26 episodes available online!), and that in turn inspired me to re-read a decent translation of The Thee Musketeers.
Next on my cartoon list is "The Mysterious Cities of Gold".
There was only 26 episodes. I genuinely thought it was one of those cartoons that had absolutely loads and loads of episodes.
It is amazing, you're quite right. But that's more about something we think of being rich in ourselves actually being a pretty formulaic thing. Just because it seems to be almost human (but far better informed) makes LLM a substantial dead end that everyone is piling in to. My view anyway.
LLMs have a variety of uses where they're very useful, they're an interesting technology that absolutely does have a future. But, yes, they are not human-type or human-level intelligences the AI industry portrays them as and they never will be.
They will continue to improve in the areas they are already useful in, but anyone expecting them to ever function like a human mind are going to be disappointed. All those CEOs rushing to replace their employees with LLMs are going to look pretty stupid.
I’m still waiting for AI to become voodoo gods on the internet or make Cornell pastiche boxes for LOLs.
Did you hear about the psephologist from Warsaw who moved to Haiti?
Several times, Sunil.
{Steppin’ Razor has entered the chat}
???
"Steppin' Razor" is a nickname for the character Molly Millions in William Gibson's novel Neuromancer. It is used by a Rastafarian space pilot and is presumably a reference to the reggae song of the same name by Peter Tosh, given that Molly has razor-sharp blades implanted under her fingernails. When Malmesbury(?) said "I’m still waiting for AI to become voodoo gods on the internet", this was also a reference to the novels in the Sprawl trilogy, of which Neuromancer is one. In the Sprawl trilogy, two AIs - Wintermute and Neuromancer - unite/fight/fission and take over cyberspace, a digital visualisation of the internet, and manifest in the later books as voodoo gods.
I have seven copies of the four books in the trilogy, but they are so old now I hesitate to take them down.
The "Cornell pastiche boxes" might also be a reference, since the non-human entities in the Sprawl trilogy are a but whimsical/philosophical, and I think one of them did things like that, but it's been a long time...
Let me check...
Yup, I just cracked the less-fragile copy of Count Zero, and yes, they're in it. A young, hungry female art researcher is given an ungodly commission by a very-ill wealthy older man to track one down. Of course, that's just a cover for What's Really Going On.
Actually the fact that an AI was making Better-Than-Cornell boxes was what convinced Virek that the Ai had truly achieved something beyond humanity.
Which is why it was worth capturing/bargaining with.
I go to the library most Saturdays, and when I was there a few weeks ago I picked up Neuromancer to read whilst having nibbles. Although it has obviously dated, it's really readable and thick with atmosphere and world building and great fun. When you get a chance, reread the Sprawl books.
The technology was a bit dodgy, but the aesthetics were cutting edge.
Exclusive: Anthropic spent $2.66 billion on Amazon Web Services in the first three quarters of 2025, around 100% of their estimated revenue. Its costs appear to increase with their revenue, showing little path to profitability.
The round tripping that is going on from Nvidia should worry everybody with money in the markets.
They very much should be worried. NVidia's CEO Jensen Huang is confident in his ability to take risks and get them to pay off. He sees AI as the critical inflection point that will secure the company's dominance, vindicating his long held agenda of prioritising compute performance in their GPUs over graphics. After all, that policy made Nvidia a lots of money in the crypto boom and is making them even more now.
He's essentially betting there's some way to get the inference costs of AI under control to the extent that providing LLMs as a subscription service becomes very profitable. If he's right, those round trip deals are a good way of making sure NVidia hardware continues to be core to the whole AI industry. It's notable that AMD, which has more risk-averse management than NVidia, has been rather more cautious in their approach to this.
If Huang is wrong (and there's no sign of that cost miracle yet) then the whole industry will implode in a year or two when it runs out of other people's money, and that's going to be the mother and father of a shitstorm.
I'll be interesting to see how the US reacts politically if the AI bubble pops, markets crash and the economy does an impression of Wile E Coyote running off a cliff.
Over the last couple of weeks, I've binged on the 80s cartoon "Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds" (all 26 episodes available online!), and that in turn inspired me to re-read a decent translation of The Thee Musketeers.
Next on my cartoon list is "The Mysterious Cities of Gold".
Used to watch both of those on Children's BBC. The theme tunes are good. Very memorable. Also Willy Fogg.
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Do you support NCHIs or not?
I've no objection to the principle of recording (eg) incidents of racial abuse that don't reach the threshold of a chargeable crime. The question for me is does it do any good in practice and is it a good use of police time.
Prince Andrew has not paid rent on Royal Lodge for two decades
The Times obtained a copy of the leasehold agreement for Royal Lodge, revealing the terms under which the prince lives on the 30-room estate.
It states that, while the prince paid £1 million for the lease plus at least £7.5 million for refurbishments completed in 2005, he has paid “one peppercorn (if demanded)” in rent per year, since 2003.
Exclusive: Anthropic spent $2.66 billion on Amazon Web Services in the first three quarters of 2025, around 100% of their estimated revenue. Its costs appear to increase with their revenue, showing little path to profitability.
The round tripping that is going on from Nvidia should worry everybody with money in the markets.
They very much should be worried. NVidia's CEO Jensen Huang is confident in his ability to take risks and get them to pay off. He sees AI as the critical inflection point that will secure the company's dominance, vindicating his long held agenda of prioritising compute performance in their GPUs over graphics. After all, that policy made Nvidia a lots of money in the crypto boom and is making them even more now.
He's essentially betting there's some way to get the inference costs of AI under control to the extent that providing LLMs as a subscription service becomes very profitable. If he's right, those round trip deals are a good way of making sure NVidia hardware continues to be core to the whole AI industry. It's notable that AMD, which has more risk-averse management than NVidia, has been rather more cautious in their approach to this.
If Huang is wrong (and there's no sign of that cost miracle yet) then the whole industry will implode in a year or two when it runs out of other people's money, and that's going to be the mother and father of a shitstorm.
I'll be interesting to see how the US reacts politically if the AI bubble pops, markets crash and the economy does an impression of Wile E Coyote running off a cliff.
You can run a half-decent LLM on a laptop these days, as I think you noted earlier. Optimising performance for certain functions seems like the way to go, which is not a path that makes NVidia lots of money.
"Prince Andrew deemed a threat by security services Concerns about the royal’s links to alleged Chinese spies reached highest levels of government, say sources"
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Do you support NCHIs or not?
I've no objection to the principle of recording (eg) incidents of racial abuse that don't reach the threshold of a chargeable crime. The question for me is does it do any good in practice and is it a good use of police time.
What is the argument for them? I've always assumed that there is a very good reason, something around intelligence gathering allowing the police to narrow down suspects quickly in the event a violent assault takes place or something. Otherwise, impossible to justify IMO.
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Police didn't bring charges, but advised him to be 'Careful Now'.
Over the last couple of weeks, I've binged on the 80s cartoon "Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds" (all 26 episodes available online!), and that in turn inspired me to re-read a decent translation of The Thee Musketeers.
Next on my cartoon list is "The Mysterious Cities of Gold".
Used to watch both of those on Children's BBC. The theme tunes are good. Very memorable. Also Willy Fogg.
Yes, of course. But best of all was another cartoon epic: Ulysses 31.
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Do you support NCHIs or not?
I've no objection to the principle of recording (eg) incidents of racial abuse that don't reach the threshold of a chargeable crime. The question for me is does it do any good in practice and is it a good use of police time.
What is the argument for them? I've always assumed that there is a very good reason, something around intelligence gathering allowing the police to narrow down suspects quickly in the event a violent assault takes place or something. Otherwise, impossible to justify IMO.
They were introduced after a recommendation by the Stephen Lawrence report. Not the argument, but the genesis.
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Police didn't bring charges, but advised him to be 'Careful Now'.
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Do you support NCHIs or not?
I've no objection to the principle of recording (eg) incidents of racial abuse that don't reach the threshold of a chargeable crime. The question for me is does it do any good in practice and is it a good use of police time.
What is the argument for them? I've always assumed that there is a very good reason, something around intelligence gathering allowing the police to narrow down suspects quickly in the event a violent assault takes place or something. Otherwise, impossible to justify IMO.
Sort of pre-crime flagger? Maybe some of that. Also deterrence? If you know there's a fair chance of something official coming your way if you racially abuse someone you might be less likely to do it? But I don't actually know. I think the Lawrence case was a contributor.
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Do you support NCHIs or not?
I've no objection to the principle of recording (eg) incidents of racial abuse that don't reach the threshold of a chargeable crime. The question for me is does it do any good in practice and is it a good use of police time.
What is the argument for them? I've always assumed that there is a very good reason, something around intelligence gathering allowing the police to narrow down suspects quickly in the event a violent assault takes place or something. Otherwise, impossible to justify IMO.
They were introduced after a recommendation by the Stephen Lawrence report. Not the argument, but the genesis.
I wonder if it's a result of us losing local cops who would know the local wrong 'uns and keep an eye on them. I know in my home town there was a fair bit of informal "keeping of the peace" that would be difficult to perform in a big city.
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Do you support NCHIs or not?
I've no objection to the principle of recording (eg) incidents of racial abuse that don't reach the threshold of a chargeable crime. The question for me is does it do any good in practice and is it a good use of police time.
What is the argument for them? I've always assumed that there is a very good reason, something around intelligence gathering allowing the police to narrow down suspects quickly in the event a violent assault takes place or something. Otherwise, impossible to justify IMO.
Sort of pre-crime flagger? Maybe some of that. Also deterrence? If you know there's a fair chance of something official coming your way if you racially abuse someone you might be less likely to do it? But I don't actually know. I think the Lawrence case was a contributor.
I think it’s social engineering. People not conforming get a flag that progressively worsens their life, perhaps by cropping up when said person tries for a job.
And stepping away from race, it’s use in regards of contested areas such as trans is a sure sign of something deeply wrong.
Over the last couple of weeks, I've binged on the 80s cartoon "Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds" (all 26 episodes available online!), and that in turn inspired me to re-read a decent translation of The Thee Musketeers.
Next on my cartoon list is "The Mysterious Cities of Gold".
Used to watch both of those on Children's BBC. The theme tunes are good. Very memorable. Also Willy Fogg.
Yes, of course. But best of all was another cartoon epic: Ulysses 31.
Halas and Bachelor animations were very good. Mainly sixties and seventies.
We TOLD you this at the beginning. The whole thing is a treacherous piece of fuckery by a British Establishment (on both sides) desperate to curry favour and make money out of China, by selling us out, and by selling everything we own. All can go
It is a disgrace and it needs serious investigation. And, on top of that, the Chagos deal needs reversing ASAFP
The moment it is done, China will move in, and western security is compromised in the most critical place on earth, arguably
How can this be not-obvious to people like you??
It is a disgrace. The one group of people to whom a major injustice was done - the Chagossians - get jack shit out of the agreement.
The beneficiary is - as predicted - China.
We will find out, in the years to come, that many Mauritius politicians and ICJ judges were in their pay.
Manhunter just starting on BBC2, probably the most perfectly mid-80s movie ever made.
I’d go for Highlander if pressed.
Repoman, Robocop, Blue Velvet or The Cook, The Thief.
Fight!
Somewhat related - I was thinking to myself the other week how much "Betty Blue" has faded. I don't think I know any 'young people' who even know it exists.
We TOLD you this at the beginning. The whole thing is a treacherous piece of fuckery by a British Establishment (on both sides) desperate to curry favour and make money out of China, by selling us out, and by selling everything we own. All can go
It is a disgrace and it needs serious investigation. And, on top of that, the Chagos deal needs reversing ASAFP
The moment it is done, China will move in, and western security is compromised in the most critical place on earth, arguably
How can this be not-obvious to people like you??
It is a disgrace. The one group of people to whom a major injustice was done - the Chagossians - get jack shit out of the agreement.
The beneficiary is - as predicted - China.
We will find out, in the years to come, that many Mauritius politicians and ICJ judges were in their pay.
Farage is going to be PM because of nonsense like this Chagos Deal.
It irritates me - people have been saying she’s going to replicate ICE in toto when that’s clearly not what she meant. If anything, it will be an independent branch of law enforcement - like British transport police for example - with a specific remit
It irritates me - people have been saying she’s going to replicate ICE in toto when that’s clearly not what she meant. If anything, it will be an independent branch of law enforcement - like British transport police for example - with a specific remit
If you're putting ICE in a sentence we know exactly what you're alluding to. Get real.
It irritates me - people have been saying she’s going to replicate ICE in toto when that’s clearly not what she meant. If anything, it will be an independent branch of law enforcement - like British transport police for example - with a specific remit
We could call it Border Force perhaps? Brilliant innovation, bound to sort it all out.
We TOLD you this at the beginning. The whole thing is a treacherous piece of fuckery by a British Establishment (on both sides) desperate to curry favour and make money out of China, by selling us out, and by selling everything we own. All can go
It is a disgrace and it needs serious investigation. And, on top of that, the Chagos deal needs reversing ASAFP
The moment it is done, China will move in, and western security is compromised in the most critical place on earth, arguably
How can this be not-obvious to people like you??
It is a disgrace. The one group of people to whom a major injustice was done - the Chagossians - get jack shit out of the agreement.
The beneficiary is - as predicted - China.
We will find out, in the years to come, that many Mauritius politicians and ICJ judges were in their pay.
Farage is going to be PM because of nonsense like this Chagos Deal.
I suspect Farage's mainstay of support is isolationist. This is a geopolitical issue that has low resonance, and most people probably don't care - wrongly, IMHO - but that might change if it gets out that our security has been badly compromised because Starmer was played and we have all been fleeced for the privilege.
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Do you support NCHIs or not?
I've no objection to the principle of recording (eg) incidents of racial abuse that don't reach the threshold of a chargeable crime. The question for me is does it do any good in practice and is it a good use of police time.
What is the argument for them? I've always assumed that there is a very good reason, something around intelligence gathering allowing the police to narrow down suspects quickly in the event a violent assault takes place or something. Otherwise, impossible to justify IMO.
Sort of pre-crime flagger? Maybe some of that. Also deterrence? If you know there's a fair chance of something official coming your way if you racially abuse someone you might be less likely to do it? But I don't actually know. I think the Lawrence case was a contributor.
I think it’s social engineering. People not conforming get a flag that progressively worsens their life, perhaps by cropping up when said person tries for a job.
And stepping away from race, it’s use in regards of contested areas such as trans is a sure sign of something deeply wrong.
I wouldn't describe abusing someone for their race, gender, religion etc as 'not conforming'. That awards an unmerited gravitas to uncomplex sicko behaviour. I think most NCHIs are of that nature rather than the expression of an opinion. But I could be wrong. I haven't looked into it much.
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Do you support NCHIs or not?
I've no objection to the principle of recording (eg) incidents of racial abuse that don't reach the threshold of a chargeable crime. The question for me is does it do any good in practice and is it a good use of police time.
What is the argument for them? I've always assumed that there is a very good reason, something around intelligence gathering allowing the police to narrow down suspects quickly in the event a violent assault takes place or something. Otherwise, impossible to justify IMO.
They were introduced after a recommendation by the Stephen Lawrence report. Not the argument, but the genesis.
I wonder if it's a result of us losing local cops who would know the local wrong 'uns and keep an eye on them. I know in my home town there was a fair bit of informal "keeping of the peace" that would be difficult to perform in a big city.
I know in my home town - the house all the kids knew was just the place you don't go near mysteriously caught on fire one day.
The local police wouldn't let the fire brigade near it until they'd salvaged all the files and folders.
This was, and it's so obvious I'm sure I don't even need to mention it, 100% not at the behest of the local council leader. Who also was 100% not the leader of the local Orange lodge.
And the Chief Constable was also not 100% in any way in that same lodge.
It irritates me - people have been saying she’s going to replicate ICE in toto when that’s clearly not what she meant. If anything, it will be an independent branch of law enforcement - like British transport police for example - with a specific remit
If you're putting ICE in a sentence we know exactly what you're alluding to. Get real.
Badenoch is not going to introduce masked and armed lawbreakers on to the British streets to detain people on sight. It’s just not going to happen.
So either she was lying, or she has been misrepresented or a bit of both.
We TOLD you this at the beginning. The whole thing is a treacherous piece of fuckery by a British Establishment (on both sides) desperate to curry favour and make money out of China, by selling us out, and by selling everything we own. All can go
It is a disgrace and it needs serious investigation. And, on top of that, the Chagos deal needs reversing ASAFP
The moment it is done, China will move in, and western security is compromised in the most critical place on earth, arguably
How can this be not-obvious to people like you??
It is a disgrace. The one group of people to whom a major injustice was done - the Chagossians - get jack shit out of the agreement.
The beneficiary is - as predicted - China.
We will find out, in the years to come, that many Mauritius politicians and ICJ judges were in their pay.
Farage is going to be PM because of nonsense like this Chagos Deal.
I suspect Farage's mainstay of support is isolationist. This is a geopolitical issue that has low resonance, and most people probably don't care - wrongly, IMHO - but that might change if it gets out that our security has been badly compromised because Starmer was played and we have all been fleeced for the privilege.
Because he has.
I think that's right - most people don't really care, and Reform voters least of all. It's really "rightish dads" that are kicking up a fuss.
I probably care about it more than most Reform voters tbh.
It irritates me - people have been saying she’s going to replicate ICE in toto when that’s clearly not what she meant. If anything, it will be an independent branch of law enforcement - like British transport police for example - with a specific remit
Why did she say 'ICE' then? And she's got form for simpering about Trump.
It irritates me - people have been saying she’s going to replicate ICE in toto when that’s clearly not what she meant. If anything, it will be an independent branch of law enforcement - like British transport police for example - with a specific remit
If you're putting ICE in a sentence we know exactly what you're alluding to. Get real.
Badenoch is not going to introduce masked and armed lawbreakers on to the British streets to detain people on sight. It’s just not going to happen.
So either she was lying, or she has been misrepresented or a bit of both.
She made the choice to make a direct reference to ICE. It's either the former, and designed to titillate Reform voters, or she actually wants to see that happen.
It irritates me - people have been saying she’s going to replicate ICE in toto when that’s clearly not what she meant. If anything, it will be an independent branch of law enforcement - like British transport police for example - with a specific remit
If you're putting ICE in a sentence we know exactly what you're alluding to. Get real.
Badenoch is not going to introduce masked and armed lawbreakers on to the British streets to detain people on sight. It’s just not going to happen.
So either she was lying, or she has been misrepresented or a bit of both.
We are typically a decade behind the US. So currently we are in the phase where politicians say crazy things, no-one takes them seriously, and they cant actually do them. Give it another few years though.....
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Do you support NCHIs or not?
I've no objection to the principle of recording (eg) incidents of racial abuse that don't reach the threshold of a chargeable crime. The question for me is does it do any good in practice and is it a good use of police time.
What is the argument for them? I've always assumed that there is a very good reason, something around intelligence gathering allowing the police to narrow down suspects quickly in the event a violent assault takes place or something. Otherwise, impossible to justify IMO.
Sort of pre-crime flagger? Maybe some of that. Also deterrence? If you know there's a fair chance of something official coming your way if you racially abuse someone you might be less likely to do it? But I don't actually know. I think the Lawrence case was a contributor.
I think it’s social engineering. People not conforming get a flag that progressively worsens their life, perhaps by cropping up when said person tries for a job.
And stepping away from race, it’s use in regards of contested areas such as trans is a sure sign of something deeply wrong.
I wouldn't describe abusing someone for their race, gender, religion etc as 'not conforming'. That awards an unmerited gravitas to uncomplex sicko behaviour. I think most NCHIs are of that nature rather than the expression of an opinion. But I could be wrong. I haven't looked into it much.
I think the point is you cam get an NCHI flag just because someone reports you for it - there doesn't have to be any substance to it. I think.
It irritates me - people have been saying she’s going to replicate ICE in toto when that’s clearly not what she meant. If anything, it will be an independent branch of law enforcement - like British transport police for example - with a specific remit
Why did she say 'ICE' then? And she's got form for simpering about Trump.
Because she was simpering about Trump and looking for headlines to attract back reform curious people.
Manhunter just starting on BBC2, probably the most perfectly mid-80s movie ever made.
Dammit, it's one of my favourite films! Thank you, Andy!
(hums "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vita"...)
I'm ten minutes in and it's gorgeous. I live posted it before (2023 when I was in a Premier Inn in RSS Harrogate), so I won't do it again. But imagine me going "squee" every five minutes.
It irritates me - people have been saying she’s going to replicate ICE in toto when that’s clearly not what she meant. If anything, it will be an independent branch of law enforcement - like British transport police for example - with a specific remit
Why did she say 'ICE' then? And she's got form for simpering about Trump.
Because she was simpering about Trump and looking for headlines to attract back reform curious people.
Yep. And the cost of that kind of politics is you're indelibly associated with the kind of organisation now buying chemical weapons and missiles.
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The description implies they are known before being investigated not to be crimes.
I think the concept is abhorrent. Should never have been created. You might as well just call them ‘shame markers’ and make the culprit where a badge.
The police should be there for crimes, not alleged nasty opinions and wrongthink.
The link with the Linehan case in the BBC item is a bit confusing. That was being investigated as a crime not a non crime. Hence the police statement that 'charges will not be brought'. There'd be no decision on charges to be made if it were being investigated as a NCHI - which the story says they will not be doing from now on. So I'm not sure what the point or ramification is. Saving police time, I guess. Plus maybe another shift in the direction of us all becoming a little more relaxed about racism in public.
Do you support NCHIs or not?
I've no objection to the principle of recording (eg) incidents of racial abuse that don't reach the threshold of a chargeable crime. The question for me is does it do any good in practice and is it a good use of police time.
What is the argument for them? I've always assumed that there is a very good reason, something around intelligence gathering allowing the police to narrow down suspects quickly in the event a violent assault takes place or something. Otherwise, impossible to justify IMO.
Sort of pre-crime flagger? Maybe some of that. Also deterrence? If you know there's a fair chance of something official coming your way if you racially abuse someone you might be less likely to do it? But I don't actually know. I think the Lawrence case was a contributor.
I think it’s social engineering. People not conforming get a flag that progressively worsens their life, perhaps by cropping up when said person tries for a job.
And stepping away from race, it’s use in regards of contested areas such as trans is a sure sign of something deeply wrong.
I wouldn't describe abusing someone for their race, gender, religion etc as 'not conforming'. That awards an unmerited gravitas to uncomplex sicko behaviour. I think most NCHIs are of that nature rather than the expression of an opinion. But I could be wrong. I haven't looked into it much.
I think the point is you cam get an NCHI flag just because someone reports you for it - there doesn't have to be any substance to it. I think.
Surely the most absurd argument ever heard in parliament. By the same token you cannot proscribe any Israeli thug because on the balance of probability they will be Jewish and therefore the action is anti semitic. Even Netanyahu would allow himself a smile at that one particularly sas Maccabi Haifa have even been banned from their own derby in Israel because of their vandalism
It irritates me - people have been saying she’s going to replicate ICE in toto when that’s clearly not what she meant. If anything, it will be an independent branch of law enforcement - like British transport police for example - with a specific remit
Why did she say 'ICE' then? And she's got form for simpering about Trump.
Because she was simpering about Trump and looking for headlines to attract back reform curious people.
Yes, I imagine so. But it all just rolls the pitch for right wing populist extremists and she should steer clear. Ditto all politicians other than those (like Farage) who really do admire Trump.
Bye bye Non Crime Hate Incidents. Well, partially. They won't be investigated but it looks like they may still be recorded. The article is not quite clear.
The Meta are being disingenuous. It's the recording of them which is the problem and which needs to be stopped.
I am usually a fan of Ch 4 news but I have just watched a bizarre episode. They spent at least 30 minutes interviewing the brother and sister in law of Virginia Giuffre about the involvement of Prince Andrew in the Epstein case. Almost all the questions were about the British police involvement of which the Americans were ignorant . Why?
I agree. Complete rubbish. They've become obsessed with gossip and trivia. Eventually I switched off. I couldn't face another minute
I am usually a fan of Ch 4 news but I have just watched a bizarre episode. They spent at least 30 minutes interviewing the brother and sister in law of Virginia Giuffre about the involvement of Prince Andrew in the Epstein case. Almost all the questions were about the British police involvement of which the Americans were ignorant . Why?
I agree. Complete rubbish. They've become obsessed with gossip and trivia. Eventually I switched off. I couldn't face another minute
Channel 4 News used to be compulsory viewing for anyone interested in politics and/or current affairs until about 10 years ago. Sad.
I am usually a fan of Ch 4 news but I have just watched a bizarre episode. They spent at least 30 minutes interviewing the brother and sister in law of Virginia Giuffre about the involvement of Prince Andrew in the Epstein case. Almost all the questions were about the British police involvement of which the Americans were ignorant . Why?
I agree. Complete rubbish. They've become obsessed with gossip and trivia. Eventually I switched off. I couldn't face another minute
Channel 4 News used to be compulsory viewing for anyone interested in politics and/or current affairs until about 10 years ago. Sad.
Jon Snow and his ties. After The Simpsons. Jumpers for goalposts...
Neither can be carried by the UK's F35s. And their is little prospect of that changing.
KAI and MBDA sign a MoU to work to bring SPEAR to South Korean KF-21 Boramae fighter. KF-21 is already to be armed with METEOR, with a "sustantial sale" for it concluded in 2023. New SPEAR test launches (from Typhoon used x trials) were planned for this year although no news yet. https://x.com/Gabriel64869839/status/1980252464642228232
I am usually a fan of Ch 4 news but I have just watched a bizarre episode. They spent at least 30 minutes interviewing the brother and sister in law of Virginia Giuffre about the involvement of Prince Andrew in the Epstein case. Almost all the questions were about the British police involvement of which the Americans were ignorant . Why?
I agree. Complete rubbish. They've become obsessed with gossip and trivia. Eventually I switched off. I couldn't face another minute
Channel 4 News used to be compulsory viewing for anyone interested in politics and/or current affairs until about 10 years ago. Sad.
Jon Snow and his ties. After The Simpsons. Jumpers for goalposts...
Snow was always slightly left-wing but not so much as to be irritating to people not on that wing of politics.
Comments
The Three Trussketeers.
- It won't be a photo finish...
Which is why it was worth capturing/bargaining with.
We've got a long way to go before then.
Typical of Starmer that Labour are so weak and confused on this.
Sanctioning him and offering him up to the US authorities would be popular!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_political_groups_in_the_French_Revolution
If you can't squeeze a French Revolution reference, try jokes like "Not Tonight, Marine" or "Men Of French Letters"
There's nobody called "Dreyfus", "Petain" or even "Clouseau", so I'm stuck. Johnny Hallyday est mort. I hate Jean-Luc Godard. Truffaut is little spoken of these days, malheureusement. Hmmm
Ah. This might work. You may have heard of The New French Extremity, a film movement that produced some very unpleasant/disgusting films which I shall not list.
So you can use "The New French Extremity" or "The New New French Extremity" as your title.
If you look at how they solve the "how many states in the US have i in the name". The last time I tried it, it took 11 steps, was writing python code, then sending the output generated by that into something else, then getting it wrong, fixing it, rebuilding code, ......
Over the last couple of weeks, I've binged on the 80s cartoon "Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds" (all 26 episodes available online!), and that in turn inspired me to re-read a decent translation of The Thee Musketeers.
Next on my cartoon list is "The Mysterious Cities of Gold".
Albanese at the White House: Trump endorses Aukus, signs $8.5bn rare earths deal and calls PM ‘great leader’
President says US has no better friend than Australia but tells ambassador Kevin Rudd “I don’t like you’
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/oct/20/albanese-at-the-white-house-trump-endorses-aukus-signs-85bn-rare-earths-deal-and-calls-pm-great-leader
He's essentially betting there's some way to get the inference costs of AI under control to the extent that providing LLMs as a subscription service becomes very profitable. If he's right, those round trip deals are a good way of making sure NVidia hardware continues to be core to the whole AI industry. It's notable that AMD, which has more risk-averse management than NVidia, has been rather more cautious in their approach to this.
If Huang is wrong (and there's no sign of that cost miracle yet) then the whole industry will implode in a year or two when it runs out of other people's money, and that's going to be the mother and father of a shitstorm.
I'll be interesting to see how the US reacts politically if the AI bubble pops, markets crash and the economy does an impression of Wile E Coyote running off a cliff.
Paul Ingrassia’s bid to lead a whistleblower agency is set for a Senate confirmation hearing Thursday
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/10/20/paul-ingrassia-racist-text-messages-nazi-00613608
Concerns about the royal’s links to alleged Chinese spies reached highest levels of government, say sources"
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/royal-family/2025/10/20/prince-andrew-deemed-threat-by-security-services
https://bsky.app/profile/goldengateblond.bsky.social/post/3m3nlmgbo4k2p
Trump demolishing the East Wing of the White House. It seems now permission is required despite the historic nature of the building.
Very different
And stepping away from race, it’s use in regards of contested areas such as trans is a sure sign of something deeply wrong.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halas_and_Batchelor
Fight!
Somewhat related - I was thinking to myself the other week how much "Betty Blue" has faded. I don't think I know any 'young people' who even know it exists.
Because he has.
The local police wouldn't let the fire brigade near it until they'd salvaged all the files and folders.
This was, and it's so obvious I'm sure I don't even need to mention it, 100% not at the behest of the local council leader. Who also was 100% not the leader of the local Orange lodge.
And the Chief Constable was also not 100% in any way in that same lodge.
Just to be clear.
So either she was lying, or she has been misrepresented or a bit of both.
I probably care about it more than most Reform voters tbh.
(hums "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vita"...)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c20pg8pzp2no
and so ends our broadcast day. Nighty-night, kiddies: don't let the bed-bugs bite.
And their is little prospect of that changing.
KAI and MBDA sign a MoU to work to bring SPEAR to South Korean KF-21 Boramae fighter. KF-21 is already to be armed with METEOR, with a "sustantial sale" for it concluded in 2023. New SPEAR test launches (from Typhoon used x trials) were planned for this year although no news yet.
https://x.com/Gabriel64869839/status/1980252464642228232
Top Republicans stand by president's poop video
https://x.com/MotherJones/status/1980306253449470454
https://x.com/jurgen_nauditt/status/1980311600151289953