Dr. Sekeres mentions radon, asbestos, microplastics, and air pollution. Again for what it is worth, he is undecided about the risks from microplastics.
Important point: Often these risks are additive, so, for example, you really don't want to live in a house with high levels of radon, breath polluted air -- and smoke.
(Two leaders illustrate what governments should do, and should not do, on air pollution, respectively, GHWB and Angela Merkel.)
My guess is that 75% of the movement in public opinion on Brexit is nostalgia for the time before Trump, Covid and Ukraine.
Nostalgia for an imaginary period before Brexit.
The 2006-2016 period wasn't the best in the UK - bank crashes, high unemployment, uncontrolled immigration and then public spending restrictions.
You'd have to go back to between 1995 and 2005 for a period when things seemed good and the future rosy.
1989 to 2001 was the really rosy time imo.
Not sure about your date range, although the 1992 to 1997 Tory Government produced some comedy gold.
Oh to have been in a position to buy a house in 1995...
Sadly I was twelve.
Circa 1995 would have coincided with my 18% Bradford and Bingley mortgage rate...
18% of what, though?
I have a friend who bought a house in Cambridge for 550k last year. Was sold in 1995 for 35k. Renovated, but no loft conversion or floor space extension.
I bought that house in Whitchurch in Cardiff as a doer upper in 1991 for £62,000. Houses in that road were going for around £90K. I sold it in 2000 for £135K. However when the mortgage rate starts at a little over 10% in 1991 hitting the dizzy heights of 18% a few years later was no joke.
Are you sure about that ?
Interest rates peaked in October 1989 and were steadily falling throughout 1991 and 1992 (bar the one day wonder of Black Wednesday) and haven't been above 10% since September 1991:
For those who are interested in US politics at the moment an interesting conversation by my two favourite podcasters Medhi Hasan and Krystal Ball about who is saying what. It definitely has a cutting edge that UK podcasts often lack
Unrestricted immigration came with membership of the EEC in 1973; freedom of labour was one of the four freedoms (it was four, right?)
That said, clearly the two 'kickers' that caused the most problems were (a) Maastricht, which meant that you had to treat other EU nationals as if they were citizens of your country from a benefits perspective (and where blame should be laid on Blair's predecessors); and (b) the accession of the Eastern European Eight, without the same transitional controls that other European countries had. And which does need to be laid at the door of the Blair government.
My guess is that 75% of the movement in public opinion on Brexit is nostalgia for the time before Trump, Covid and Ukraine.
Nostalgia for an imaginary period before Brexit.
The 2006-2016 period wasn't the best in the UK - bank crashes, high unemployment, uncontrolled immigration and then public spending restrictions.
You'd have to go back to between 1995 and 2005 for a period when things seemed good and the future rosy.
The Blair Years...
There was never a better time to be PM than what Blair had.
And what did he achieve during it ?
48 quarters of successive growth
You're putting the cart before the horse.
Blair didn't achieve 48 quarters of growth.
The 48 quarters of growth was why it was such a good time to be PM.
The issue being that many of the problems that the country has suffered since arose in those 48 quarters.
Including 45 successive quarters of trade deficit, 45 successive quarters of falling manufacturing employment and such like for rising house prices and increasing personal debt.
And circa 600 columns from the Economics editor of the Guardian warning about the Fantasy Island Economics.
There was a lot of criticism at the time that trouble was being stored up for later.
My guess is that 75% of the movement in public opinion on Brexit is nostalgia for the time before Trump, Covid and Ukraine.
Nostalgia for an imaginary period before Brexit.
The 2006-2016 period wasn't the best in the UK - bank crashes, high unemployment, uncontrolled immigration and then public spending restrictions.
You'd have to go back to between 1995 and 2005 for a period when things seemed good and the future rosy.
1989 to 2001 was the really rosy time imo.
Not sure about your date range, although the 1992 to 1997 Tory Government produced some comedy gold.
Oh to have been in a position to buy a house in 1995...
Sadly I was twelve.
Circa 1995 would have coincided with my 18% Bradford and Bingley mortgage rate...
18% of what, though?
I have a friend who bought a house in Cambridge for 550k last year. Was sold in 1995 for 35k. Renovated, but no loft conversion or floor space extension.
I bought that house in Whitchurch in Cardiff as a doer upper in 1991 for £62,000. Houses in that road were going for around £90K. I sold it in 2000 for £135K. However when the mortgage rate starts at a little over 10% in 1991 hitting the dizzy heights of 18% a few years later was no joke.
Are you sure about that ?
Interest rates peaked in October 1989 and were steadily falling throughout 1991 and 1992 (bar the one day wonder of Black Wednesday) and haven't been above 10% since September 1991:
It was an endowment mortgage which meant that the interest was paid but the endowment element if it didn't cover the figure borrowed meant the debt would increase, so to cover that the interest payment was raised. So this might have been mid rather than early 90s. I eventually replaced it with a NatWest repayment mortgage and I believe I claimed money back under a mis-selling compensation package.
My guess is that 75% of the movement in public opinion on Brexit is nostalgia for the time before Trump, Covid and Ukraine.
Nostalgia for an imaginary period before Brexit.
The 2006-2016 period wasn't the best in the UK - bank crashes, high unemployment, uncontrolled immigration and then public spending restrictions.
You'd have to go back to between 1995 and 2005 for a period when things seemed good and the future rosy.
1989 to 2001 was the really rosy time imo.
Not sure about your date range, although the 1992 to 1997 Tory Government produced some comedy gold.
Oh to have been in a position to buy a house in 1995...
Sadly I was twelve.
Circa 1995 would have coincided with my 18% Bradford and Bingley mortgage rate...
18% of what, though?
I have a friend who bought a house in Cambridge for 550k last year. Was sold in 1995 for 35k. Renovated, but no loft conversion or floor space extension.
I bought that house in Whitchurch in Cardiff as a doer upper in 1991 for £62,000. Houses in that road were going for around £90K. I sold it in 2000 for £135K. However when the mortgage rate starts at a little over 10% in 1991 hitting the dizzy heights of 18% a few years later was no joke.
Are you sure about that ?
Interest rates peaked in October 1989 and were steadily falling throughout 1991 and 1992 (bar the one day wonder of Black Wednesday) and haven't been above 10% since September 1991:
My guess is that 75% of the movement in public opinion on Brexit is nostalgia for the time before Trump, Covid and Ukraine.
Nostalgia for an imaginary period before Brexit.
The 2006-2016 period wasn't the best in the UK - bank crashes, high unemployment, uncontrolled immigration and then public spending restrictions.
You'd have to go back to between 1995 and 2005 for a period when things seemed good and the future rosy.
1989 to 2001 was the really rosy time imo.
Not sure about your date range, although the 1992 to 1997 Tory Government produced some comedy gold.
Oh to have been in a position to buy a house in 1995...
Sadly I was twelve.
Circa 1995 would have coincided with my 18% Bradford and Bingley mortgage rate...
18% of what, though?
I have a friend who bought a house in Cambridge for 550k last year. Was sold in 1995 for 35k. Renovated, but no loft conversion or floor space extension.
I bought that house in Whitchurch in Cardiff as a doer upper in 1991 for £62,000. Houses in that road were going for around £90K. I sold it in 2000 for £135K. However when the mortgage rate starts at a little over 10% in 1991 hitting the dizzy heights of 18% a few years later was no joke.
Are you sure about that ?
Interest rates peaked in October 1989 and were steadily falling throughout 1991 and 1992 (bar the one day wonder of Black Wednesday) and haven't been above 10% since September 1991:
I might have my dates wrong but I was certainly paying circa 18% on an interest only mortgage in the 1990s.
In 1990 you would have been but was that an endowment mortgage that you had ? I thought interest only mortgages only appeared in the 2000s.
It was an endowment mortgage, see earlier post and the endowment element fell behind the value borrowed, so in order to keep up the repayments increased. So rather than just the interest and the endowment a top up figure to cover the anticipated shortfall was added to the monthly repayment.
My guess is that 75% of the movement in public opinion on Brexit is nostalgia for the time before Trump, Covid and Ukraine.
Nostalgia for an imaginary period before Brexit.
The 2006-2016 period wasn't the best in the UK - bank crashes, high unemployment, uncontrolled immigration and then public spending restrictions.
You'd have to go back to between 1995 and 2005 for a period when things seemed good and the future rosy.
1989 to 2001 was the really rosy time imo.
Not sure about your date range, although the 1992 to 1997 Tory Government produced some comedy gold.
Oh to have been in a position to buy a house in 1995...
Sadly I was twelve.
Circa 1995 would have coincided with my 18% Bradford and Bingley mortgage rate...
18% of what, though?
I have a friend who bought a house in Cambridge for 550k last year. Was sold in 1995 for 35k. Renovated, but no loft conversion or floor space extension.
I bought that house in Whitchurch in Cardiff as a doer upper in 1991 for £62,000. Houses in that road were going for around £90K. I sold it in 2000 for £135K. However when the mortgage rate starts at a little over 10% in 1991 hitting the dizzy heights of 18% a few years later was no joke.
Are you sure about that ?
Interest rates peaked in October 1989 and were steadily falling throughout 1991 and 1992 (bar the one day wonder of Black Wednesday) and haven't been above 10% since September 1991:
Denmark votes tomorrow and the last polls are all suggesting the "Red" bloc of parties are still narrowly ahead of the "blue" parties.
The current coalition of the Social Democrats, Liberals and Moderates is going to take a beating dropping from 50% to 35%. The parties set to gain seats are the Socialist People's Party (known as the Green Left), Liberal Alliance and the Danish People's Party but the split of Red to Blue parties looks close to last time when it was 49-42 to the Red Bloc. Voxmeter has 49-43, Megafon 49-44 and only Epinion, which traditionally is the strongest poll for the Blue bloc, has the Red bloc leading 47.5-46.
The question is whether Mette Frederiksen can assemble a new Government coalition of centre-left parties or whether a new centre-right administration couled be formed including the Moderates and led by the Liberal Alliance. The other question is whether Frederiksen's head will be the price for the deal on the centre-left exacted by Pia Olsen Dyhr.
This of course is the Red Bloc that broke up EM communities for being too ethnic.
My guess is that 75% of the movement in public opinion on Brexit is nostalgia for the time before Trump, Covid and Ukraine.
Nostalgia for an imaginary period before Brexit.
The 2006-2016 period wasn't the best in the UK - bank crashes, high unemployment, uncontrolled immigration and then public spending restrictions.
You'd have to go back to between 1995 and 2005 for a period when things seemed good and the future rosy.
1989 to 2001 was the really rosy time imo.
Not sure about your date range, although the 1992 to 1997 Tory Government produced some comedy gold.
Oh to have been in a position to buy a house in 1995...
Sadly I was twelve.
Circa 1995 would have coincided with my 18% Bradford and Bingley mortgage rate...
18% of what, though?
I have a friend who bought a house in Cambridge for 550k last year. Was sold in 1995 for 35k. Renovated, but no loft conversion or floor space extension.
I bought that house in Whitchurch in Cardiff as a doer upper in 1991 for £62,000. Houses in that road were going for around £90K. I sold it in 2000 for £135K. However when the mortgage rate starts at a little over 10% in 1991 hitting the dizzy heights of 18% a few years later was no joke.
Are you sure about that ?
Interest rates peaked in October 1989 and were steadily falling throughout 1991 and 1992 (bar the one day wonder of Black Wednesday) and haven't been above 10% since September 1991:
Did anyone buy Netgear shares before the announcement? Though I'm not sure how much of their stuff is actually US made.
All their consumer stuff is made in Asia and has been for years. Margins on consumer network equipment are tiny (one reason why they're full of security issues) so they're manufactured in the cheapest possible place.
Dr. Sekeres mentions radon, asbestos, microplastics, and air pollution. Again for what it is worth, he is undecided about the risks from microplastics.
Important point: Often these risks are additive, so, for example, you really don't want to live in a house with high levels of radon, breath polluted air -- and smoke.
(Two leaders illustrate what governments should do, and should not do, on air pollution, respectively, GHWB and Angela Merkel.)
Our .ac.uk paid a very significant amount of money for a full asbestos survey of all our buildings. Nice stickers ontop the old paint where there was a risk.
Then our .ac.uk paid a very significant amount of money for a full 'lick of paint' to make the place look a bit brighter. And they painted over all the asbestos warning stickers.
Hence we now need a significant amount of money for a new asbestos survey.
Dr. Sekeres mentions radon, asbestos, microplastics, and air pollution. Again for what it is worth, he is undecided about the risks from microplastics.
Important point: Often these risks are additive, so, for example, you really don't want to live in a house with high levels of radon, breath polluted air -- and smoke.
(Two leaders illustrate what governments should do, and should not do, on air pollution, respectively, GHWB and Angela Merkel.)
Our .ac.uk paid a very significant amount of money for a full asbestos survey of all our buildings. Nice stickers ontop the old paint where there was a risk.
Then our .ac.uk paid a very significant amount of money for a full 'lick of paint' to make the place look a bit brighter. And they painted over all the asbestos warning stickers.
Hence we now need a significant amount of money for a new asbestos survey.
20 GOTO 10
A survey for painted-over stickers would perhaps be easier?
Dr. Sekeres mentions radon, asbestos, microplastics, and air pollution. Again for what it is worth, he is undecided about the risks from microplastics.
Important point: Often these risks are additive, so, for example, you really don't want to live in a house with high levels of radon, breath polluted air -- and smoke.
(Two leaders illustrate what governments should do, and should not do, on air pollution, respectively, GHWB and Angela Merkel.)
Our .ac.uk paid a very significant amount of money for a full asbestos survey of all our buildings. Nice stickers ontop the old paint where there was a risk.
Then our .ac.uk paid a very significant amount of money for a full 'lick of paint' to make the place look a bit brighter. And they painted over all the asbestos warning stickers.
Hence we now need a significant amount of money for a new asbestos survey.
20 GOTO 10
My old college was having a 1970s building refurbished. Some 400 student rooms. They carefully pulled out the original blueprints and warned the contractors there were asbestos heat shields behind the radiators. Cue circular saws straight through the panels and a cleanup operation at the contractors expense...
Dr. Sekeres mentions radon, asbestos, microplastics, and air pollution. Again for what it is worth, he is undecided about the risks from microplastics.
Important point: Often these risks are additive, so, for example, you really don't want to live in a house with high levels of radon, breath polluted air -- and smoke.
(Two leaders illustrate what governments should do, and should not do, on air pollution, respectively, GHWB and Angela Merkel.)
Our .ac.uk paid a very significant amount of money for a full asbestos survey of all our buildings. Nice stickers ontop the old paint where there was a risk.
Then our .ac.uk paid a very significant amount of money for a full 'lick of paint' to make the place look a bit brighter. And they painted over all the asbestos warning stickers.
Hence we now need a significant amount of money for a new asbestos survey.
20 GOTO 10
A survey for painted-over stickers would perhaps be easier?
It could take years to organise that kind of contract change. Are you mad? Repeating the same doomed process over and over is clearly the correct path forward.
Dr. Sekeres mentions radon, asbestos, microplastics, and air pollution. Again for what it is worth, he is undecided about the risks from microplastics.
Important point: Often these risks are additive, so, for example, you really don't want to live in a house with high levels of radon, breath polluted air -- and smoke.
(Two leaders illustrate what governments should do, and should not do, on air pollution, respectively, GHWB and Angela Merkel.)
Our .ac.uk paid a very significant amount of money for a full asbestos survey of all our buildings. Nice stickers ontop the old paint where there was a risk.
Then our .ac.uk paid a very significant amount of money for a full 'lick of paint' to make the place look a bit brighter. And they painted over all the asbestos warning stickers.
Hence we now need a significant amount of money for a new asbestos survey.
20 GOTO 10
A survey for painted-over stickers would perhaps be easier?
Are you mad? Repeating the same doomed process over and over is clearly the correct path forward.
Congratulations on your future appointment as Cabinet Secretary.
My guess is that 75% of the movement in public opinion on Brexit is nostalgia for the time before Trump, Covid and Ukraine.
Nostalgia for an imaginary period before Brexit.
The 2006-2016 period wasn't the best in the UK - bank crashes, high unemployment, uncontrolled immigration and then public spending restrictions.
You'd have to go back to between 1995 and 2005 for a period when things seemed good and the future rosy.
1989 to 2001 was the really rosy time imo.
Not sure about your date range, although the 1992 to 1997 Tory Government produced some comedy gold.
Oh to have been in a position to buy a house in 1995...
Sadly I was twelve.
Circa 1995 would have coincided with my 18% Bradford and Bingley mortgage rate...
18% of what, though?
I have a friend who bought a house in Cambridge for 550k last year. Was sold in 1995 for 35k. Renovated, but no loft conversion or floor space extension.
I bought that house in Whitchurch in Cardiff as a doer upper in 1991 for £62,000. Houses in that road were going for around £90K. I sold it in 2000 for £135K. However when the mortgage rate starts at a little over 10% in 1991 hitting the dizzy heights of 18% a few years later was no joke.
Are you sure about that ?
Interest rates peaked in October 1989 and were steadily falling throughout 1991 and 1992 (bar the one day wonder of Black Wednesday) and haven't been above 10% since September 1991:
I might have my dates wrong but I was certainly paying circa 18% on an interest only mortgage in the 1990s.
In 1990 you would have been but was that an endowment mortgage that you had ? I thought interest only mortgages only appeared in the 2000s.
An endowment mortgage was an interest only mortgage with a separate endowment policy that was supposed to repay the capital
Indeed.
The interest only mortgages which appeared in the 2000s didn't have any repayment method attached.
And so were extremely risky.
To be pedantic, interest only mortgages were always there, just the way of not paying off the capital changed. In the late 90s I had a manager whose side hustle was buying endowments at above the surrender value and completing the payments.
Comments
* Pete Hegseth made me do it though will be in the historical record.
Danny (Dennis) Citrinowicz ,داني سيترينوفيتش
@citrinowicz
Ghalibaf is not Delcy. Iran is not Venezuela.
https://x.com/citrinowicz/status/2036205779150106844
Its also clear that Trump doesn't have the patience for a sustained war.
What did Blair initiate as PM ?
Student tuition fees
Unrestricted immigration
Devolution
Anything else ?
Dr. Sekeres mentions radon, asbestos, microplastics, and air pollution. Again for what it is worth, he is undecided about the risks from microplastics.
Important point: Often these risks are additive, so, for example, you really don't want to live in a house with high levels of radon, breath polluted air -- and smoke.
(Two leaders illustrate what governments should do, and should not do, on air pollution, respectively, GHWB and Angela Merkel.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JsVu41g3V4k
That said, clearly the two 'kickers' that caused the most problems were (a) Maastricht, which meant that you had to treat other EU nationals as if they were citizens of your country from a benefits perspective (and where blame should be laid on Blair's predecessors); and (b) the accession of the Eastern European Eight, without the same transitional controls that other European countries had. And which does need to be laid at the door of the Blair government.
There was a lot of criticism at the time that trouble was being stored up for later.
Tom Scott is back.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yz3lSKgz4q8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0NHv6owsCvw&t=61s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_UFhePH68Ac
The interest only mortgages which appeared in the 2000s didn't have any repayment method attached.
And so were extremely risky.
https://x.com/SkyNews/status/2036218183900704858
HS2 trains could run 16% slower than planned to save billions, minister says
Then our .ac.uk paid a very significant amount of money for a full 'lick of paint' to make the place look a bit brighter. And they painted over all the asbestos warning stickers.
Hence we now need a significant amount of money for a new asbestos survey.
In the late 90s I had a manager whose side hustle was buying endowments at above the surrender value and completing the payments.
https://x.com/Breaking911/status/2036233543362240995
Smoke is seen billowing from Valero refinery in Port Arthur, Texas following reports of an explosion
The slide. Mr Moon Face. The land of dreams.
They were the first books I fell in love with.
IRGC-affiliated Fars News Agency claims that the US and Israel has carried out strikes on two "energy infrastructure" sites
Damn
(punches wall)