Skip to content

We need to go back to having a Prime Minister born in Canada – politicalbetting.com

135

Comments

  • Feels like it’s safe to post?

    The staggering thing is that a few people (albeit not many) still supported Trump here after his first term.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 4,142
    HYUFD said:

    Cicero said:

    Icarus said:

    Mr Trump wants the lowest interest rates in the world. Think we should all boycott US Treasury bills and see what happens.

    If the US chooses not to pay to finance 25% of its debt externally, then it can simply adjust through a having a c 25% recession in GDP. That's OK though, the US capital markets represent just over 50% of global market capitalisation as against 25% of GDP, so the Maths is simple- sell the US by 50%. regardless. The tech bros are going to be taken apart by the EU courts anyway. The real economy in the US will just have to work round.... if they can.

    Of course, if the US does want to finance externally, it can not cut rates, it will have to raise them. Either way Trump has just made the kind of fuck up that will cripple the US economy. In the middle of all this, the USD is looking like it is on a one way trip south.

    Lutnick was booed at the dinner and Legarde walked out apparently, this is turning into an unbelievable disaster for the US.
    Given the deficit, rising unemployment and inflation here in the UK we can hardly lecture.

    I doubt Trump cares too much what the globalist elite in Davos thinks of what he and his team are telling them anyway
    It is not the "globalist elite", it is something far more powerful: the bond market,

    I don't think anyone wants things to fall out of bed, but a slow puncture seems more or less inevitable. I note the markets are happy that there will be no war, and Sterling is up a bit across the board, but the Americans will need to respond to the "concerns"* raised.

    *namely, that their President is a senile lunatic surrounded by incompetent crooks.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,085

    Nigelb said:

    BREAKING: Sweden’s pension fund Alecta has divested most of its U.S. Treasury holdings, citing increased risk and unpredictability in U.S. politics. The sell-off totaled roughly 70–80 billion SEK ($7.7–8.8B) - Reuters
    https://x.com/FaytuksNetwork/status/2013954270010200224

    There we go. It can be done. Dump the fuckers. Quick - before the price gets really low.

    Its a valid question though. When there is a run on a collapsing company / country, who does buy their shit?
    Trump ordered some financial institutions to buy mortgage bonds in order to force down mortgage rates.

    You could imagine something along those lines to force US banks to buy US Treasury bonds. Then extend that to profitable US companies that are hoarding cash, etc.
  • MelonB said:

    Nigelb said:

    Nigelb said:

    Nigelb said:

    BREAKING: Sweden’s pension fund Alecta has divested most of its U.S. Treasury holdings, citing increased risk and unpredictability in U.S. politics. The sell-off totaled roughly 70–80 billion SEK ($7.7–8.8B) - Reuters
    https://x.com/FaytuksNetwork/status/2013954270010200224

    There we go. It can be done. Dump the fuckers. Quick - before the price gets really low.

    Its a valid question though. When there is a run on a collapsing company / country, who does buy their shit?
    We hold way too many dollars to dump like that.
    Not if you unwind. Trade oil in EUR/RMB. Start selling treasuries. Blanket policy not to buy any more treasuries. Start loading up on GBP/EUR etc
    The UK is the second largest overseas holder of US treasuries after Japan, I think ?
    @rcs1000 will know a great deal more than me about the implications of that.
    It’s not “The UK” that holds the treasuries though, it’s financial institutions - banks, fund managers, insurance companies, pension funds - in London. Including many US-headquartered ones.
    Yep. Just let them make their own decisions. Remember what we're trying to preserve here. Uncompromised capital and talent will drift away from the US of its own accord if Trump and his accolytes continue on their current path.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,268

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 27,543

    Feels like it’s safe to post?

    The staggering thing is that a few people (albeit not many) still supported Trump here after his first term.

    An interesting what if - would things have been better had been re-elected? I'm not sure either way to be honest.
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 10,127

    He's saying he can destroy any country economically if they don't do what we wants. A protection racket. And he's just said "protection" from his military.

    Its like that Indycar commentary. "Wow wow wow! Five Wide!!!" Absolute incredulity.

    He said he will not invade so the only option is for him to apply destructive tariffs

    I have no idea how this is resolved
    25th Amendment
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,154

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    Trump has just ruled out invading Greenland
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 85,595
    MelonB said:

    Nigelb said:

    Nigelb said:

    Nigelb said:

    BREAKING: Sweden’s pension fund Alecta has divested most of its U.S. Treasury holdings, citing increased risk and unpredictability in U.S. politics. The sell-off totaled roughly 70–80 billion SEK ($7.7–8.8B) - Reuters
    https://x.com/FaytuksNetwork/status/2013954270010200224

    There we go. It can be done. Dump the fuckers. Quick - before the price gets really low.

    Its a valid question though. When there is a run on a collapsing company / country, who does buy their shit?
    We hold way too many dollars to dump like that.
    Not if you unwind. Trade oil in EUR/RMB. Start selling treasuries. Blanket policy not to buy any more treasuries. Start loading up on GBP/EUR etc
    The UK is the second largest overseas holder of US treasuries after Japan, I think ?
    @rcs1000 will know a great deal more than me about the implications of that.
    It’s not “The UK” that holds the treasuries though, it’s financial institutions - banks, fund managers, insurance companies, pension funds - in London. Including many US-headquartered ones.
    Hence my comment about Robert.
    I have no clue of how that breaks down - and I expect it's quite hard to work out. But I wouldn't simply assume that we don't have significant exposure to a large, rapid fall in the value of treasuries.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 27,195

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 41,852
    HYUFD said:

    Trump has just ruled out invading Greenland

    No he hasn't
  • Vance doesn't really want to push the 25th yet because (i) he might fail and so be impeached or killed by a mob himself (ii) it doesn't count as a "term" if he takes over after >2 years, AIUI (iii) poor performance in the midterms will give more justification to an internal coup in the minds of those whose support he'll need. Right ?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,989

    Icarus said:

    Mr Trump wants the lowest interest rates in the world. Think we should all boycott US Treasury bills and see what happens.

    Remember all the ridicule Diane Abbot received for her arithmetic errors over police funding?

    It's so much worse than that.
    One of the revelations in Simon Hart’s book is that “woman of the people” Abbot and “crusader against injustice” Shami Chakrabati are regularly seen together at 7pm every evening necking down champagne in Parliament’s Pugin Room bar…
  • Sir Keir is a very lucky general. With Trump rescuing his premiership.

    Trump moving now in the run up to the May elections must be one of the biggest strokes of luck of all time.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,154
    Scott_xP said:

    HYUFD said:

    Trump has just ruled out invading Greenland

    No he hasn't
    Yes he has, he still wants to buy Greenland but said he 'won't use force' to take it
    https://edition.cnn.com/politics/live-news/trump-administration-news-01-21-26
  • LeonLeon Posts: 66,165
    I’m back on Team Trump

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Trump we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Today will be seen as a turning point, time to bet on Trump for 2028
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,989
    HYUFD said:

    Scott_xP said:

    HYUFD said:

    Trump has just ruled out invading Greenland

    No he hasn't
    Yes he has, he still wants to buy Greenland but said he 'won't use force' to take it
    https://edition.cnn.com/politics/live-news/trump-administration-news-01-21-26
    And he might easily say the complete opposite next week; everyone else knows that.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 40,350

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    The priority is to do what is right, and what is needful. There may be occasions when doing so conflicts with public international law, (occupying neutral countries in wartime would be an example, the use of incendiary weapons could be another). And, public international law gives no protection whatsoever to anyone, unless it is backed up by force.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 41,852
    HYUFD said:

    Scott_xP said:

    HYUFD said:

    Trump has just ruled out invading Greenland

    No he hasn't
    Yes he has, he still wants to buy Greenland but said he 'won't use force' to take it
    https://edition.cnn.com/politics/live-news/trump-administration-news-01-21-26
    Can I interest you in a bridge for sale...
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,154
    edited 3:29PM
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Trump

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Trump we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Today will be seen as a turning point, time to bet on Trump for 2028

    Yes I thought Trump was quite clear and concise today on where he was going and what he wanted to do and avoided being totally insane. He also sensibly said he wouldn't invade Greenland.

    Trump can't run again though so this is more about his legacy, it will be up to VP Vance or Sec Rubio to be GOP nominee in 2028
  • I’m back on Team Leon

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Leon we all remembered and love in our hearts
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 13,209
    edited 3:32PM

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    It's a weird logic, isn't it? You'd have to be stark raving bonkers to think something like the Law of the Sea (EEZs, freedom of navigation etc etc) isn't a good thing for the UK economy, and therefore something worth adhering to and encouraging the same from other countries (or at least to the principles that support it).

    Something like the Genocide Convention (now 75 years old) hasn't stopped a number of genocides from happening, but nor has it given any wriggle room for those who make excuses for them - and that's really important to ensure we don't slide towards them becoming justifiable. Anyone who dismisses these conventions is deeply suspect - they're just trying to avoid facing some incovenient truths in most cases.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,268
    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    The priority is to do what is right, and what is needful. There may be occasions when doing so conflicts with public international law, (occupying neutral countries in wartime would be an example, the use of incendiary weapons could be another). And, public international law gives no protection whatsoever to anyone, unless it is backed up by force.
    Is the world better when countries are generally aspiring to follow international law, or is the world better with Trump ranting at Davos about invading Greenland/Iceland/Venezuela? The former seems better to me, ergo what is right and needful is supporting public international law.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 66,165

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 69,674

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Trump is saying Europe, go fuck yourself, sort out migration and energy, or you will kill your economies and countries. And anyway I’m taking Greenland, and that’s that, but we will pay and not invade, and you will accept

    What are the Europeans gonna do?

    Not buy his debt.

    Then he's fucked. He can forget buying Greenland. Americans can't buy dinner.
    As has been pointed out by many economists, this simply won’t work
    Just selling his debt they hold now won't. But refusing to buy the $7 trillion he needs to roll over - that's a different matter.

    China isn't buying it. Neither should anyone else who doesn't like being threatened. We used to buy it because it was the safest harbour on the planet. But a debt strike would terrify the US markets - because then that status goes.

    We could also stop paying for energy in dollars.
    AEP had a piece on all this in Telegraph this morning.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 7,062
    Eabhal said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    It's a weird logic, isn't it? You'd have to be stark raving bonkers to think something like the Law of the Sea (EEZs, freedom of navigation etc etc) isn't a good thing for the UK economy, and therefore something worth adhering to and encouraging the same from other countries (or at least to the principles that support it).

    Something like the Genocide Convention (now 75 years old) hasn't stopped a number of genocides from happening, but nor has it given any wriggle room for those who make excuses for them - and that's really important to ensure we don't slide towards them becoming justifiable. Anyone who dismisses these conventions is deeply suspect - they're just trying to avoid facing some incovenient truths in most cases.
    I think you have to accept that international treaties are only meaningful in so far as they are implemented and given force by national governments. There can be no concept of an “international court” to punish a country that breaks a treaty; only the consequences that can be imposed by other parties to the deal they broke, jointly or separately. The role of a bod like the UN is to try and provide a forum to mediate those disputes, but any attempt to imagine a law that supersedes national sovereignty is naive.

    That used to be the standard interpretation, and I think we need to accept it is the only one that works.
  • HYUFD said:

    Scott_xP said:

    HYUFD said:

    Trump has just ruled out invading Greenland

    No he hasn't
    Yes he has, he still wants to buy Greenland but said he 'won't use force' to take it
    https://edition.cnn.com/politics/live-news/trump-administration-news-01-21-26
    Putin said he wasn't going to invade Ukraine, right up until he did.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 8,602

    Sir Keir is a very lucky general. With Trump rescuing his premiership.

    Trump moving now in the run up to the May elections must be one of the biggest strokes of luck of all time.

    Too early to say. I think not being Farage is likely to benefit all of the other parties, but people are still fundamentally fed up with how the country is being run.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 57,428
    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    The Septics bought Alaska from Russia for 2 cents an acre in 1867!
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 21,275
    HYUFD said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    Trump has just ruled out invading Greenland
    What Trump says and what Trump does are not linked
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 57,064
    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    Another possible trade would be if the US gave a security guarantee to Ukraine in return for getting Greenland, like a new version of the rare earths deal.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,085
    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    It took £350m a week for people to vote for Brexit. Do you really think they'll settle for a one-off $100k?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,989
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Trump

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Trump we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Today will be seen as a turning point, time to bet on Trump for 2028

    Excellent news! Now, we just need to await the Curse of Leondamus delivering for us, as it always has before….
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 8,602
    HYUFD said:

    Scott_xP said:

    HYUFD said:

    Trump has just ruled out invading Greenland

    No he hasn't
    Yes he has, he still wants to buy Greenland but said he 'won't use force' to take it
    https://edition.cnn.com/politics/live-news/trump-administration-news-01-21-26
    Oh that's alright then. Phew, I was getting worried. Now that Trump, a man whose integrity and honesty is legendary, has ruled it out, I can sleep easy at night.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 57,369
    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    Make them all millionanires and you might have a deal. That said, they'd still have a mad President to contend with.

    A million each - and they might all go en masse to Iceland. Although the native - and now poor - Icelanders might have something to say.

    A million each and 20% of all net value extracted from Greenland going to Denmark might have been a decent proposal to get people considering it, without all the psychodrama. Bit late for that now.

    Denmark should just put a stupidly high offer on the table. $10m per Greenlander - half a trillion - and 50% of all gross value extracted for the next 999 years.

    THAT is the going price of Trump's legacy. He'd probably pay it. Well, the American public would.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 4,142
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Trump

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Trump we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Today will be seen as a turning point, time to bet on Trump for 2028

    Naughty Leon, You are a card...

    Trump will not survive his term. That is, of course, objectively a good thing.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 66,165
    edited 3:43PM

    I’m back on Team Leon

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Leon we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Thanks

    Like Trump, I do this not because I have to but because I feel a need to. This site is so fucking monumentally soporifically boring without people like me, or, indeed, me. Every single person says exactly what you know they are going to say, it is a bus load of utterly tedious centrist dorks dribbling their platitudes into the spittoon of irrelevance. You personally are one of the worst, you manage to be boring, middlebrow and witless while barely saying anything at all, which is quite an achievement

    There really is no point to a “debating” forum when there is no debate. Just the rehashing of the same dull warmed over “sensible” opinions, seen a trillion times, and served with a mouldy side salad of preening liberal self regard

    Pukeworthy. Not a single one of you, as far as I can see, has a brain that thinks for itself, with the noble exception of @williamglenn
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 3,446
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Trump

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Trump we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Today will be seen as a turning point, time to bet on Trump for 2028

    I suspect Team Carney may attract more applicants tho.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,268
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 57,428
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Leon

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Leon we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Thanks

    Like Trump, I do this not because I have to but because I feel a need to. This site is so fucking monumentally soporifically boring without people like me, or, indeed, me. Every single person says exactly what you know they are going to say, it is a bus load of utterly tedious centrist dorks dribbling their platitudes into the spittoon of irrelevance. You personally are one of the worst, you manage to be boring, middlebrow and witless while barely saying anything at all, which is quite an achievement

    There really is in point to a “debating” forum when there is no debate. Just the rehashing of the same dull warmed over “sensible” opinions, seen a trillion times, and served with a mouldy side salad of preening liberal self regard

    Pukeworthy. Not a single one of you, as far as I can see, has a brain that thinks for itself, with the noble exception of @williamglenn
    Is that you, Donald???
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 7,062
    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    I dunno. I can remember another election, in 2016, where I willingly voted for slightly slower growth. Peoples’ identity matters to them.

    And anyway 100k each is meaningless unless the US also guarenteed to match the existing Danish subsidy. Finally, is he offering them a chance to be a U.S. territory or a chance to be a state? If the latter he’s his handed the Democrats another senate seat. If the former, they are less likely to say yes.

    Actually there’s a point. He wants to grow the U.S. and go down in history as the man who added some states. Why about Puerto Rico and D.C? Someone suggested that to him. Who was the last President to add two states? Must be back in the 1880s as Hawaii and Alaska were decades apart.
  • FossFoss Posts: 2,292
    edited 3:46PM

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    The Septics bought Alaska from Russia for 2 cents an acre in 1867!
    The Louisiana Purchase cost about 3 cents/acre in 1803. Given it covered a big part of the Great Plains, it was probably a better deal.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 7,062
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Leon

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Leon we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Thanks

    Like Trump, I do this not because I have to but because I feel a need to. This site is so fucking monumentally soporifically boring without people like me, or, indeed, me. Every single person says exactly what you know they are going to say, it is a bus load of utterly tedious centrist dorks dribbling their platitudes into the spittoon of irrelevance. You personally are one of the worst, you manage to be boring, middlebrow and witless while barely saying anything at all, which is quite an achievement

    There really is no point to a “debating” forum when there is no debate. Just the rehashing of the same dull warmed over “sensible” opinions, seen a trillion times, and served with a mouldy side salad of preening liberal self regard

    Pukeworthy. Not a single one of you, as far as I can see, has a brain that thinks for itself, with the noble exception of @williamglenn
    Thank you for your service.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,989
    Yet US markets are shooting upwards?
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,268
    biggles said:

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    I dunno. I can remember another election, in 2016, where I willingly voted for slightly slower growth. Peoples’ identity matters to them.

    And anyway 100k each is meaningless unless the US also guarenteed to match the existing Danish subsidy. Finally, is he offering them a chance to be a U.S. territory or a chance to be a state? If the latter he’s his handed the Democrats another senate seat. If the former, they are less likely to say yes.

    Actually there’s a point. He wants to grow the U.S. and go down in history as the man who added some states. Why about Puerto Rico and D.C? Someone suggested that to him. Who was the last President to add two states? Must be back in the 1880s as Hawaii and Alaska were decades apart.
    Two Senate seats. (Two per state.)
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 57,428

    biggles said:

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    I dunno. I can remember another election, in 2016, where I willingly voted for slightly slower growth. Peoples’ identity matters to them.

    And anyway 100k each is meaningless unless the US also guarenteed to match the existing Danish subsidy. Finally, is he offering them a chance to be a U.S. territory or a chance to be a state? If the latter he’s his handed the Democrats another senate seat. If the former, they are less likely to say yes.

    Actually there’s a point. He wants to grow the U.S. and go down in history as the man who added some states. Why about Puerto Rico and D.C? Someone suggested that to him. Who was the last President to add two states? Must be back in the 1880s as Hawaii and Alaska were decades apart.
    Two Senate seats. (Two per state.)
    But only 1 in the House (cf. Alaska).
  • MightyAlexMightyAlex Posts: 1,854
    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    Log term it would be a net negative for most. And that is ignoring all the mineral rights they'll be handing over.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 57,369

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    The Septics bought Alaska from Russia for 2 cents an acre in 1867!
    There are 535,000,000 acres in Greenland. That would be 17m....

    Even allowing for a 100-fold increase, that is buttons.

    But it requres a willing seller.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 7,062
    IanB2 said:

    Yet US markets are shooting upwards?

    They had previously priced in the risk or unprecedented stupidity. They have now adjusted for standard Trumpian stupidity.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,268

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    The Septics bought Alaska from Russia for 2 cents an acre in 1867!
    There are 535,000,000 acres in Greenland. That would be 17m....

    Even allowing for a 100-fold increase, that is buttons.

    But it requres a willing seller.
    It also requires there "rumours" to be true rather than just random nonsense someone said on Twitter.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,154

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_xP said:

    HYUFD said:

    Trump has just ruled out invading Greenland

    No he hasn't
    Yes he has, he still wants to buy Greenland but said he 'won't use force' to take it
    https://edition.cnn.com/politics/live-news/trump-administration-news-01-21-26
    Putin said he wasn't going to invade Ukraine, right up until he did.
    Not really, he never ruled it out eg 'Russia is open to dialogue with Ukraine and ready to discuss the most complex issues. But it is important for us to understand that our partner is defending its national interests but not serving someone else's, and is not a tool in someone else's hands to fight against us.'
    http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/66181
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 27,195

    The only thing in Leon's favour at this point is that he's not the MOST wrongheaded person on the planet.

    Leon: Challenge accepted.
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Trump

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Trump we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Today will be seen as a turning point, time to bet on Trump for 2028

    * cough *
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 57,428
    Foss said:

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    The Septics bought Alaska from Russia for 2 cents an acre in 1867!
    The Louisiana Purchase cost about 3 cents/acre in 1803. Given it covered a big part of the Great Plains, it was probably a better deal.
    Indeed, the 1867 deal was ridiculed by some as "Seward's Folly", after Secretary of State William Seward.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,085
    edited 3:55PM
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Leon

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Leon we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Thanks

    Like Trump, I do this not because I have to but because I feel a need to. This site is so fucking monumentally soporifically boring without people like me, or, indeed, me. Every single person says exactly what you know they are going to say, it is a bus load of utterly tedious centrist dorks dribbling their platitudes into the spittoon of irrelevance. You personally are one of the worst, you manage to be boring, middlebrow and witless while barely saying anything at all, which is quite an achievement

    There really is no point to a “debating” forum when there is no debate. Just the rehashing of the same dull warmed over “sensible” opinions, seen a trillion times, and served with a mouldy side salad of preening liberal self regard

    Pukeworthy. Not a single one of you, as far as I can see, has a brain that thinks for itself, with the noble exception of @williamglenn
    This isn't a debating forum. It's a place for people to talk about how politics might change in the future, and therefore which bets might consequently have value, with political debate to fill the time in between.

    It's just possible that the recent defections to Reform will come to be seen as spectacularly ill-timed. Not often that rats are seen joining a stinking ship. Trump's increasingly erratic and aggressive behaviour has the potential to drive Reform support down a bit further - and Farage's air of genial bonhomie isn't likely to survive the tide turning against him.

    The main caveat to this is that if the small boat crossings of the Channel resume in earnest as the winter weather recedes, the political climate will favour Reform again.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 66,165
    edited 3:53PM
    Foss said:

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    The Septics bought Alaska from Russia for 2 cents an acre in 1867!
    The Louisiana Purchase cost about 3 cents/acre in 1803. Given it covered a big part of the Great Plains, it was probably a better deal.
    Apparently Napoleon made that seemingly mad sale because he was concerned that if the USA did not get the land, the Brits would roar down from the north and seize it, creating a huge new British colony in North America, bigger than the USA, and guaranteeing likely British dominance of the entire world for the next two centuries

    Yes, he resented us that much. Also, he needed the cash

  • DumbosaurusDumbosaurus Posts: 945
    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?

    What a hypothetical parcel of scottish rogues would have taken isn't really relevant. We're talking here about a people that are so determined to live on sheet ice they used to starve their grandparents to death rather than move somewhere warmer. 100k ain't worth it, it's a stupidly expensive place to live without all the subsidies that would immediately disappear. Break your leg and need a helicopter evacuation and you've lost it (or your grandkids pretend not to have seen you). 1m would perhaps do it.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 36,485
    Totally O/t, but my competition entry:

    The questions:
    Number of net gains (or losses -ve) for the Dems in the House? 30*
    Number of net gains (or losses -ve) for the Dems in the Senate? 4*
    Number of MSPs won by the SNP at the Holyrood election? 55
    Number of AMs won by Plaid Cymru at the Senedd election? 38
    UK Party recording the largest poll lead during 2026 and by what percentage? (British Polling Council registered pollsters only). I don’t think any party will beat Reform’s 14% in January
    Labour’s Projected National Share of the vote based on the 2026 local elections according to the BBC? 18
    Number of Reform MPs on the 31st December 2026? 10
    The name of the UK Prime Minister on 31st December 2026? Ed Davey
    Will Andy Burnham will be an MP on 31st December 2026? No
    UK borrowing in the financial year to November 2026 (£132.3bn to November 2025). £138bn
    UK GDP growth in the 12 months to October 2026 (1.1% to October 2025).2%
    Winners of the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup. France
    *Assuming the elections take place and are not rigged.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 57,428

    Totally O/t, but my competition entry:

    The questions:
    Number of net gains (or losses -ve) for the Dems in the House? 30*
    Number of net gains (or losses -ve) for the Dems in the Senate? 4*
    Number of MSPs won by the SNP at the Holyrood election? 55
    Number of AMs won by Plaid Cymru at the Senedd election? 38
    UK Party recording the largest poll lead during 2026 and by what percentage? (British Polling Council registered pollsters only). I don’t think any party will beat Reform’s 14% in January
    Labour’s Projected National Share of the vote based on the 2026 local elections according to the BBC? 18
    Number of Reform MPs on the 31st December 2026? 10
    The name of the UK Prime Minister on 31st December 2026? Ed Davey
    Will Andy Burnham will be an MP on 31st December 2026? No
    UK borrowing in the financial year to November 2026 (£132.3bn to November 2025). £138bn
    UK GDP growth in the 12 months to October 2026 (1.1% to October 2025).2%
    Winners of the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup. France
    *Assuming the elections take place and are not rigged.

    You need to put #competition.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,268

    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Leon

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Leon we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Thanks

    Like Trump, I do this not because I have to but because I feel a need to. This site is so fucking monumentally soporifically boring without people like me, or, indeed, me. Every single person says exactly what you know they are going to say, it is a bus load of utterly tedious centrist dorks dribbling their platitudes into the spittoon of irrelevance. You personally are one of the worst, you manage to be boring, middlebrow and witless while barely saying anything at all, which is quite an achievement

    There really is no point to a “debating” forum when there is no debate. Just the rehashing of the same dull warmed over “sensible” opinions, seen a trillion times, and served with a mouldy side salad of preening liberal self regard

    Pukeworthy. Not a single one of you, as far as I can see, has a brain that thinks for itself, with the noble exception of @williamglenn
    This isn't a debating forum. It's a place for people to talk about how politics might change in the future, and therefore which bets might consequently have value, with political debate to fill the time in between.

    It's just possible that the recent defections to Reform will come to be seen as spectacularly ill-timed. Not often that rats are seen joining a stinking ship. Trump's increasingly erratic and aggressive behaviour has the potential to drive Reform support down a bit further - and Farage's air of genial bonhomie isn't likely to survive the tide turning against him.

    The main caveat to this is that if the small boat crossings of the Channel resume in earnest as the winter weather recedes, the political climate will favour Reform again.
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ceqz1lzdxw1o

    France makes first interception targeting small boat crossings to UK
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,085

    Totally O/t, but my competition entry:

    The questions:
    Number of net gains (or losses -ve) for the Dems in the House? 30*
    Number of net gains (or losses -ve) for the Dems in the Senate? 4*
    Number of MSPs won by the SNP at the Holyrood election? 55
    Number of AMs won by Plaid Cymru at the Senedd election? 38
    UK Party recording the largest poll lead during 2026 and by what percentage? (British Polling Council registered pollsters only). I don’t think any party will beat Reform’s 14% in January
    Labour’s Projected National Share of the vote based on the 2026 local elections according to the BBC? 18
    Number of Reform MPs on the 31st December 2026? 10
    The name of the UK Prime Minister on 31st December 2026? Ed Davey
    Will Andy Burnham will be an MP on 31st December 2026? No
    UK borrowing in the financial year to November 2026 (£132.3bn to November 2025). £138bn
    UK GDP growth in the 12 months to October 2026 (1.1% to October 2025).2%
    Winners of the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup. France
    *Assuming the elections take place and are not rigged.

    #competition

    Ed Davey as PM!
    Good to see someone make a different prediction but that's a bold one!
    Ed Davey is 80/1 to be next PM - What's your scenario as to how he gets there?
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,085

    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Leon

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Leon we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Thanks

    Like Trump, I do this not because I have to but because I feel a need to. This site is so fucking monumentally soporifically boring without people like me, or, indeed, me. Every single person says exactly what you know they are going to say, it is a bus load of utterly tedious centrist dorks dribbling their platitudes into the spittoon of irrelevance. You personally are one of the worst, you manage to be boring, middlebrow and witless while barely saying anything at all, which is quite an achievement

    There really is no point to a “debating” forum when there is no debate. Just the rehashing of the same dull warmed over “sensible” opinions, seen a trillion times, and served with a mouldy side salad of preening liberal self regard

    Pukeworthy. Not a single one of you, as far as I can see, has a brain that thinks for itself, with the noble exception of @williamglenn
    This isn't a debating forum. It's a place for people to talk about how politics might change in the future, and therefore which bets might consequently have value, with political debate to fill the time in between.

    It's just possible that the recent defections to Reform will come to be seen as spectacularly ill-timed. Not often that rats are seen joining a stinking ship. Trump's increasingly erratic and aggressive behaviour has the potential to drive Reform support down a bit further - and Farage's air of genial bonhomie isn't likely to survive the tide turning against him.

    The main caveat to this is that if the small boat crossings of the Channel resume in earnest as the winter weather recedes, the political climate will favour Reform again.
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ceqz1lzdxw1o

    France makes first interception targeting small boat crossings to UK
    Well, fingers crossed that holds and continues to be effective, but the detail isn't particularly encouraging.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 36,605
    HYUFD said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    Trump has just ruled out invading Greenland
    There was a pretty solid Mafia style threat. *"I am not going to invade Greenland, but I am having Greenland, you can do this the easy way and give it to me, or the hard way and I shoot your kneecaps".

    * My precis.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 36,485
    #competition.
    OKC:

    Totally O/t, but my competition entry:

    The questions:
    Number of net gains (or losses -ve) for the Dems in the House? 30*
    Number of net gains (or losses -ve) for the Dems in the Senate? 4*
    Number of MSPs won by the SNP at the Holyrood election? 55
    Number of AMs won by Plaid Cymru at the Senedd election? 38
    UK Party recording the largest poll lead during 2026 and by what percentage? (British Polling Council registered pollsters only). I don’t think any party will beat Reform’s 14% in January
    Labour’s Projected National Share of the vote based on the 2026 local elections according to the BBC? 18
    Number of Reform MPs on the 31st December 2026? 10
    The name of the UK Prime Minister on 31st December 2026? Ed Davey
    Will Andy Burnham will be an MP on 31st December 2026? No
    UK borrowing in the financial year to November 2026 (£132.3bn to November 2025). £138bn
    UK GDP growth in the 12 months to October 2026 (1.1% to October 2025).2%
    Winners of the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup. France
    *Assuming the elections take place and are not rigged.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 36,485
    edited 4:07PM

    Totally O/t, but my competition entry:

    The questions:
    Number of net gains (or losses -ve) for the Dems in the House? 30*
    Number of net gains (or losses -ve) for the Dems in the Senate? 4*
    Number of MSPs won by the SNP at the Holyrood election? 55
    Number of AMs won by Plaid Cymru at the Senedd election? 38
    UK Party recording the largest poll lead during 2026 and by what percentage? (British Polling Council registered pollsters only). I don’t think any party will beat Reform’s 14% in January
    Labour’s Projected National Share of the vote based on the 2026 local elections according to the BBC? 18
    Number of Reform MPs on the 31st December 2026? 10
    The name of the UK Prime Minister on 31st December 2026? Ed Davey
    Will Andy Burnham will be an MP on 31st December 2026? No
    UK borrowing in the financial year to November 2026 (£132.3bn to November 2025). £138bn
    UK GDP growth in the 12 months to October 2026 (1.1% to October 2025).2%
    Winners of the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup. France
    *Assuming the elections take place and are not rigged.

    #competition

    Ed Davey as PM!
    Good to see someone make a different prediction but that's a bold one!
    Ed Davey is 80/1 to be next PM - What's your scenario as to how he gets there?
    Labour (and some Conservative) break-ups after the Conference season. Minority Government.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,989

    The only thing in Leon's favour at this point is that he's not the MOST wrongheaded person on the planet.

    Leon: Challenge accepted.
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Trump

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Trump we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Today will be seen as a turning point, time to bet on Trump for 2028

    * cough *
    Having been posting about Trump’s rambling diatribe, which began just as this thread went live, I’ve now had the chance to listen to Carney’s speech as featured in the lead. Which was masterful - full of long words and metaphors that those with low IQ - whether in the White House or on PB - would struggle to follow, yet a clear call for action nevertheless. The bottom line, the ‘middle’ nations of the democratic world either hang together, or we get hanged separately. Time for everyone to step up.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,989
    Leon said:

    Foss said:

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    The Septics bought Alaska from Russia for 2 cents an acre in 1867!
    The Louisiana Purchase cost about 3 cents/acre in 1803. Given it covered a big part of the Great Plains, it was probably a better deal.
    Apparently Napoleon made that seemingly mad sale because he was concerned that if the USA did not get the land, the Brits would roar down from the north and seize it, creating a huge new British colony in North America, bigger than the USA, and guaranteeing likely British dominance of the entire world for the next two centuries

    Yes, he resented us that much. Also, he needed the cash

    More to the point, he had no way to defend it, without command of the seas, and therefore was being paid for something that he could have lost for nothing.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 68,955
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_xP said:

    HYUFD said:

    Trump has just ruled out invading Greenland

    No he hasn't
    Yes he has, he still wants to buy Greenland but said he 'won't use force' to take it
    https://edition.cnn.com/politics/live-news/trump-administration-news-01-21-26
    Putin said he wasn't going to invade Ukraine, right up until he did.
    Not really, he never ruled it out eg 'Russia is open to dialogue with Ukraine and ready to discuss the most complex issues. But it is important for us to understand that our partner is defending its national interests but not serving someone else's, and is not a tool in someone else's hands to fight against us.'
    http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/66181
    If you think Trump's words today rule out an invasion than you are very naive

    Trump's is a dangerous and unreliable so called member of NATO
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,268
    IanB2 said:

    The only thing in Leon's favour at this point is that he's not the MOST wrongheaded person on the planet.

    Leon: Challenge accepted.
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Trump

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Trump we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Today will be seen as a turning point, time to bet on Trump for 2028

    * cough *
    Having been posting about Trump’s rambling diatribe, which began just as this thread went live, I’ve now had the chance to listen to Carney’s speech as featured in the lead. Which was masterful - full of long words and metaphors that those with low IQ - whether in the White House or on PB - would struggle to follow, yet a clear call for action nevertheless. The bottom line, the ‘middle’ nations of the democratic world either hang together, or we get hanged separately. Time for everyone to step up.
    I think Bart thinks we should hang separately.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 57,428
    Leon said:

    Foss said:

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    The Septics bought Alaska from Russia for 2 cents an acre in 1867!
    The Louisiana Purchase cost about 3 cents/acre in 1803. Given it covered a big part of the Great Plains, it was probably a better deal.
    Apparently Napoleon made that seemingly mad sale because he was concerned that if the USA did not get the land, the Brits would roar down from the north and seize it, creating a huge new British colony in North America, bigger than the USA, and guaranteeing likely British dominance of the entire world for the next two centuries

    Yes, he resented us that much. Also, he needed the cash

    The funny thing was, the French obtained that land off the Spanish just a few years earlier.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 34,799
    glw said:

    isam said:

    NEW: Westminster voting intention

    🟣 RFM: 26% (-3)
    🔴 LAB: 21% (+1)
    🔵 CON: 20% (+2)
    🟠 LDM: 14% (+1)
    🟢 GRN: 10% (-2)

    16-19 Jan, 1,585 respondents (GB)
    Changes with 26-28 Nov


    https://x.com/focaldatahq/status/2013974760833585283?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    The cost of Jenrick.... Reform -3, Tories +2.
    Keeping Trump's puppet out of No. 10 is the most important thing to consider when voting now.
    Trump's term will be up before our general election on 2029.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 39,063
    edited 4:12PM
    The polling average is moving about all over the place again, with Labour moving back to tie in second place. LDs also overtake the Greens compared to previously.

    Ref 28.5%
    Lab 19.4%
    Con 19.4%
    LD 13.1%
    Grn 12.5%
    SNP 2.4%

    https://electionmaps.uk/polling/vi
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 36,605

    HYUFD said:

    Trump says Biden or Harris could have led to WW3 if he wasn't elected in 2024

    Which is prima facie insane.

    Biden stood up to Russia and supported Ukraine but never crossed any lines to lead to WW3 and never would have.

    Trump fellates Putin because he's his bitch, not to avoid WW3.
    He's gas lighting you Bart. Come back in 2028 and tell me Trump didn't trigger WW3. The question is with whom?*

    * Caveat emptor: probably not Russia.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,691
    IanB2 said:

    Yet US markets are shooting upwards?

    Normalcy bias, they really want to believe Trump's not mad enough to do something extremely dangerous.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 16,355

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    Make them all millionanires and you might have a deal. That said, they'd still have a mad President to contend with.

    A million each - and they might all go en masse to Iceland. Although the native - and now poor - Icelanders might have something to say.

    A million each and 20% of all net value extracted from Greenland going to Denmark might have been a decent proposal to get people considering it, without all the psychodrama. Bit late for that now.

    Denmark should just put a stupidly high offer on the table. $10m per Greenlander - half a trillion - and 50% of all gross value extracted for the next 999 years.

    THAT is the going price of Trump's legacy. He'd probably pay it. Well, the American public would.
    Nah, they'll be shopping at Waitrose.

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 39,063
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Leon

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Leon we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Thanks

    Like Trump, I do this not because I have to but because I feel a need to. This site is so fucking monumentally soporifically boring without people like me, or, indeed, me. Every single person says exactly what you know they are going to say, it is a bus load of utterly tedious centrist dorks dribbling their platitudes into the spittoon of irrelevance. You personally are one of the worst, you manage to be boring, middlebrow and witless while barely saying anything at all, which is quite an achievement

    There really is no point to a “debating” forum when there is no debate. Just the rehashing of the same dull warmed over “sensible” opinions, seen a trillion times, and served with a mouldy side salad of preening liberal self regard

    Pukeworthy. Not a single one of you, as far as I can see, has a brain that thinks for itself, with the noble exception of @williamglenn
    100% true, the site was rather boring for a few months when you weren't here.
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 9,056
    One thing I am noticing is Bluesky creeping up in the links people post. Twitter still dominates but it feels like starting to shift.
  • TheValiantTheValiant Posts: 2,083
    biggles said:


    Actually there’s a point. He wants to grow the U.S. and go down in history as the man who added some states. Why about Puerto Rico and D.C? Someone suggested that to him. Who was the last President to add two states? Must be back in the 1880s as Hawaii and Alaska were decades apart.

    Hawaii and Alaska were both under Eisenhower, and both in 1959.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 85,595
    Leon said:

    I’m back on Team Trump

    His meandering demented waffle yesterday was a tad concerning, but today he stormed back to form. Cogent, funny, likeable, clever - the Trump we all remembered and love in our hearts

    Today will be seen as a turning point, time to bet on Trump for 2028

    I know you're only here to have fun, but please don't.

    It just encourages william.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 27,376

    Look, we needed this speech. Listen to Carney yesterday, listen to this, and take the sign down from our window.

    It's *OVER*

    Carney's invocation of Havel is interesting because the equivalent "sign in the window" in the modern West is not simply a belief in the international order but an entire ideology about equality and progressive values.
    Current Thing is not about your thing. This has nothing to do with the culture wars.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 68,955
    Farage at Davos

    'World "more secure" if US was in Greenland'

  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 36,605
    Scott_xP said:

    @drjennings.bsky.social‬

    Say what you will about Hitler, at least he knew which countries he was invading.

    At least he's still on the nation building page.

    Imagine if he tasks his lackies with buying Iceland and they return with a modest grocery retail chain from North Wales.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 85,595
    IanB2 said:

    Leon said:

    Foss said:

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    The Septics bought Alaska from Russia for 2 cents an acre in 1867!
    The Louisiana Purchase cost about 3 cents/acre in 1803. Given it covered a big part of the Great Plains, it was probably a better deal.
    Apparently Napoleon made that seemingly mad sale because he was concerned that if the USA did not get the land, the Brits would roar down from the north and seize it, creating a huge new British colony in North America, bigger than the USA, and guaranteeing likely British dominance of the entire world for the next two centuries

    Yes, he resented us that much. Also, he needed the cash

    More to the point, he had no way to defend it, without command of the seas, and therefore was being paid for something that he could have lost for nothing.
    That's not really true.
    It's rather that he lost his army for the Americas to the Haitian slave revolt (and rampant disease).

    The sale might otherwise not have happened at all.
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,687
    From previous thread: Montana may not be the best example of a place where it is difficult to mine, considering Anaconda Copper's long history there: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anaconda_Copper

    As I have mentioned before, a Massachusetts company, Phoenix Tailings, has a promising rare earths refining operation going now. https://phoenixtailings.com/

    (I learned of this company from a December 29th article in the NYT.
    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/29/business/energy-environment/rare-earth-processing-phoenix-tailings.html )

    You would probably need to search business and trade publications for more details. But I do have considerable faith in MIT engineers and scientists.
  • MelonBMelonB Posts: 16,729

    Farage at Davos

    'World "more secure" if US was in Greenland'

    Really? I struggle to believe he’d choose this battle to side with Trump.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 16,355

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    Another possible trade would be if the US gave a security guarantee to Ukraine in return for getting Greenland, like a new version of the rare earths deal.
    Not easy to see how that works. Being a member of NATO did not and does not preclude a Trump threat to invade NATO territory, so how can he be expected to keep his word about anything? Once he has got Greenland he isn't giving it back if he breaks a related pledge in the contract.

  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 68,955
    MelonB said:

    Farage at Davos

    'World "more secure" if US was in Greenland'

    Really? I struggle to believe he’d choose this battle to side with Trump.
    He has just now live in Davos
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 27,376
    "...This author has chosen to make their posts visible only to people who are signed in..."
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 85,595

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    Make them all millionanires and you might have a deal. That said, they'd still have a mad President to contend with.

    A million each - and they might all go en masse to Iceland. Although the native - and now poor - Icelanders might have something to say.

    A million each and 20% of all net value extracted from Greenland going to Denmark might have been a decent proposal to get people considering it, without all the psychodrama. Bit late for that now.

    Denmark should just put a stupidly high offer on the table. $10m per Greenlander - half a trillion - and 50% of all gross value extracted for the next 999 years.

    THAT is the going price of Trump's legacy. He'd probably pay it. Well, the American public would.
    "It was a horrible deal. Biden was the worst president. Just horrible.
    I'm not going to pay it."
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 27,376
    Scott_xP said:

    @drjennings.bsky.social‬

    Say what you will about Hitler, at least he knew which countries he was invading.

    https://bsky.app/profile/drjennings.bsky.social
    https://bsky.app/profile/drjennings.bsky.social/post/3mcwuvqxqec2h
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,085

    Farage at Davos

    'World "more secure" if US was in Greenland'

    The US is already in Greenland. Farage being a disingenuous arse.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,085
    edited 4:38PM
    algarkirk said:

    Leon said:

    Sean_F said:

    There is however truth in the fact that all law (international and domestic) is enforced by violence. If we want to keep the current status quo of international law then we have to be prepared to defend it, with violence.

    Yes. Otherwise, it is meaningless verbiage.

    Reading and listening to some people going piously on about international law, in a world whose bad leaders do not give a toss about it, drives me nuts.
    If bad leaders do not give a toss about international law, does that not imply that good leaders should care about it?
    No, it means good leaders should invest in defence rather than international law to protect themselves.

    We need to be spending on armaments and sending them where they're most useful, like Ukraine.
    So, good leaders should do exactly the same as bad leaders...???

    I disagree: while we do need to invest in defence (and send armaments to Ukraine), I don't think that's a reason to give up on the idea of international law. We should champion the idea of international law and counter those who wish to ignore it.
    Bad leaders should be prepared to stand up to good leaders.

    Banging on piously about international law does not do that.

    Sending armaments to Ukraine does.

    We should champion our values like the idea of democracy more than international law. Where our values like democracy and international law conflict, then democracy etc is more important.
    Trump was democratically elected, and wants to invade Greenland in contravention of international law. Is that what you mean by democracy and international law conflicting?
    No. We should champion the people of Greenland, Ukraine etc being free to democratically determine their own future.

    With military support where required.

    Banging on about international law does Jack Shit to achieve that.
    There are rumours Trump is gonna offer $100,000 per Greenlander to buy the island

    As there are only 50,000 that’s just $5bn, a drop in the US military budget

    I suspect that will be very very persuasive for lots of Greenlanders. In fact I reckon it would be very very persuasive for lots of Brits

    Imagine a similar offer here. Everyone in your household gets $100k if they agree to become American. For a lot of families that would be close to lifetime financial security, just for changing a flag. Plus a huge surge in investment from the new owners. They would take it

    Wasn’t there a poll that showed Scots could be swayed to Yes or No on Indy for about 5000 quid? Or less?
    Another possible trade would be if the US gave a security guarantee to Ukraine in return for getting Greenland, like a new version of the rare earths deal.
    Not easy to see how that works. Being a member of NATO did not and does not preclude a Trump threat to invade NATO territory, so how can he be expected to keep his word about anything? Once he has got Greenland he isn't giving it back if he breaks a related pledge in the contract.
    If it weren't for the fact that there are 56,000 people living in Greenland you could offer the place to Trump in exchange for defeating Russia in Ukraine and restoring Ukraine's 1991 borders.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 68,955

    Farage at Davos

    'World "more secure" if US was in Greenland'

    The US is already in Greenland. Farage being a disingenuous arse.
    Sky suggesting he will not be popular siding with US
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 57,369
    MelonB said:

    Farage at Davos

    'World "more secure" if US was in Greenland'

    Really? I struggle to believe he’d choose this battle to side with Trump.
    Let's hope his polling takes a tumble as a result.

    Siding with the mad "King". Brave...
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 10,941
    edited 4:35PM
    Afternoon, all.
    Interesting to see Refiorm's share in apparently being affected by their support for Trunp, but Farage not flinching from his wanted role as viceroy. It must be very important to him.
Sign In or Register to comment.