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  • MattWMattW Posts: 23,955
    Speedy said:

    dr_spyn said:

    Has Corbyn issued a writ yet?

    I think he can shrug Mann off by equally pointing that if he is responsible for that sex scandal simply because he is the local MP, then John Mann is equally responsible for the sex scandals in Bassetlaw, like this one:

    http://www.doncasterfreepress.co.uk/news/dogging-scandal-at-clumber-1-638210

    No writs needed, just humour at the face of absurdity.
    That's desperate, Speedy.

    You really expect to be taken seriously comparing covered-up child abuse in Islington children's homes and dogging in Clumber Park ie consenting adults having sex in public, and suggesting that both are equally scandalous?

    LOL.
  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    Jeremy Corbyn today claimed the Labour leadership contest had reached a 'new low' after a fellow MP accused him of failing to act on child abuse allegations.

    In an open letter Labour MP John Mann - who is backing Yvette Cooper - said it was 'inappropriate' for Mr Corbyn to stand to be Labour leader at the time of the major inquiry into abuse which will 'haunt this Parliament'.

    He claimed Mr Corbyn 'inadvertently helped the rubbishing' allegations made by Tory MP Geoffrey Dickens in the 1980s and blamed the 'trendy left' for covering up abuse.

    But the Corbyn campaign hit back tonight, insisting he has 'a long record of standing up for his constituents'.

    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3172430/A-new-low-Labour-leadership-race-Jeremy-Corbyn-hits-rival-s-attempt-accuse-non-action-child-abuse.html#ixzz3gjzkzpmm
    Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
  • Blofelds_CatBlofelds_Cat Posts: 154
    TGOHF said:

    franklyn said:

    franklyn said:

    May I draw readers' attention to the government petition website https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/104334
    This petition has reached over 176.000 signatures in 48 hours, and passed the 100,000 threshold in 24 hours.
    This isn't about politics; this is about Jeremy Hunt having no concept of the degree to which the NHS is, and has always been, dependent on the good will of the workforce.
    Please sign and let others know about it

    It is entirely about politics and about sad idiots who can't accept the fact that the Tories won a majority and so can pursue their agenda as they see fit so long as they can command a majority in the Hoc.

    It doesn't matter how many people sign the petition. They will not overturn a democratically elected Government (who just for the record I did not vote for and do not support).
    I am a Conservative voter, and a party member, but, and I say this as someone who started work in the NHS as a lab assistant in 1969, was a medical student 1969-75 and then a doctor 1975-present, that Hunt has taken on a unique position in antagonizing the workforce; he has shown himself as the worst Health Minister (and I have been through quite a number) in the last 46 years. I fully support reform. I support the Conservative party, but I cannot support the ignorant and aggressive style of this man.
    No mention of patients again.

    It really isn't all about you.
    No - it is really about patients. I suspect it will be difficult to explain my views without appearing to be part of the "provider problem" but I'll have a go.

    I will make an assumption that you don't believe that doctors and nurses (of any type and seniority) should be working full hours 7 day a week.

    In order to provide a full service 7 days a week, in primary or secondary care, will thus require either a lot more doctors and nurses (of all grades) or it will mean a dilution in the quality of provision and a reduction in access. The former affects patients in their pockets - 'cos it will have to be paid for. The latter affects patients in the quality of their healthcare.

    I would work at weekends, if somebody would explain to my patients on weekdays why they couldn't get an appointment.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,547
    Disraeli said:

    Cyclefree said:


    But aren't we - the patients and the taxpayers - entitled to ask that the service be provided on a 24/7 basis? And work out a sensible way to achieve that?

    That's exactly what I personally want to see - though I can only speak for myself, of course.

    The limiting factor is our attitudes to public services and their funding. We criticise the Greeks for "wanting their cake and eating it", but when it comes to public services the great UK public wants a Rolls Royce service for the cost of a Renault.

    [Edited to remove a Grocer's Apostrophe]
    The UK public are prepared to pay 37% or thereabouts of their income to fund public services. It ought to be possible to run decent public services out of that sum.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,338

    TGOHF said:

    franklyn said:

    franklyn said:

    May I draw readers' attention to the government petition website https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/104334
    This petition has reached over 176.000 signatures in 48 hours, and passed the 100,000 threshold in 24 hours.
    This isn't about politics; this is about Jeremy Hunt having no concept of the degree to which the NHS is, and has always been, dependent on the good will of the workforce.
    Please sign and let others know about it

    It is entirely about politics and about sad idiots who can't accept the fact that the Tories won a majority and so can pursue their agenda as they see fit so long as they can command a majority in the Hoc.

    It doesn't matter how many people sign the petition. They will not overturn a democratically elected Government (who just for the record I did not vote for and do not support).
    I am a Conservative voter, and a party member, but, and I say this as someone who started work in the NHS as a lab assistant in 1969, was a medical student 1969-75 and then a doctor 1975-present, that Hunt has taken on a unique position in antagonizing the workforce; he has shown himself as the worst Health Minister (and I have been through quite a number) in the last 46 years. I fully support reform. I support the Conservative party, but I cannot support the ignorant and aggressive style of this man.
    No mention of patients again.

    It really isn't all about you.
    No - it is really about patients. I suspect it will be difficult to explain my views without appearing to be part of the "provider problem" but I'll have a go.

    I will make an assumption that you don't believe that doctors and nurses (of any type and seniority) should be working full hours 7 day a week.

    In order to provide a full service 7 days a week, in primary or secondary care, will thus require either a lot more doctors and nurses (of all grades) or it will mean a dilution in the quality of provision and a reduction in access. The former affects patients in their pockets - 'cos it will have to be paid for. The latter affects patients in the quality of their healthcare.

    I would work at weekends, if somebody would explain to my patients on weekdays why they couldn't get an appointment.
    I don't disagree with any of that. But I'm puzzled why - when I was growing up - my GP (and it was just him) - was open all week, including Saturday mornings and did do home visits. And now, the same surgery - has a number of doctors and is pretty good - is only open during the week.



  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,008
    Plato said:

    I think Yvette is a better candidate, even though she says nothing. Andy is such a weathervane - Labour has enough issues without having a leader who can't stick with the same opinion for 24hrs.

    Don't like her myself, but she's the best uncontroversial candidate to hold the ship together.

    Danny565 said:

    I'm still torn between Andy and Yvette. I'd been drifting to the view that Yvette would be a more robust and competent leader, but this is the second poll in a row where the electorate have given her markedly worse ratings than Andy. We really need some more to be commissioned.

    Blair was at his most popular when he was a weathervane, he started to lose popularity when he got some convictions!
  • FensterFenster Posts: 2,115
    edited July 2015
    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,547
    matt said:

    antifrank said:

    John Mann's intervention tells you everything you need to know about the febrile nature of today's Labour party.

    Labour's feral nature would be more appropriate..!
    John Mann strikes me as the modern equivalent of a Geoffrey Dickens or Peter Brunievals. ie a less than talented bullshiter who can't resist a microphone, and the media knows it.
    Geoffrey Dickens was a loudmouth, but he was clearly one of the good guys, when it came to exposing child sex scandals.

    Sometimes the annoying truculent people ar right.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,547
    Fenster said:

    I have been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    None of that is surprising. The hard left is well-represented in professional occupations in London and core cities.
  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    Have you two decided where to honeymoon yet?
    HYUFD said:

    Plato said:

    I think Yvette is a better candidate, even though she says nothing. Andy is such a weathervane - Labour has enough issues without having a leader who can't stick with the same opinion for 24hrs.

    Don't like her myself, but she's the best uncontroversial candidate to hold the ship together.

    Danny565 said:

    I'm still torn between Andy and Yvette. I'd been drifting to the view that Yvette would be a more robust and competent leader, but this is the second poll in a row where the electorate have given her markedly worse ratings than Andy. We really need some more to be commissioned.

    Blair was at his most popular when he was a weathervane, he started to lose popularity when he got some convictions!
  • DisraeliDisraeli Posts: 1,106
    Sean_F said:

    Disraeli said:

    Cyclefree said:


    But aren't we - the patients and the taxpayers - entitled to ask that the service be provided on a 24/7 basis? And work out a sensible way to achieve that?

    That's exactly what I personally want to see - though I can only speak for myself, of course.

    The limiting factor is our attitudes to public services and their funding. We criticise the Greeks for "wanting their cake and eating it", but when it comes to public services the great UK public wants a Rolls Royce service for the cost of a Renault.

    [Edited to remove a Grocer's Apostrophe]
    The UK public are prepared to pay 37% or thereabouts of their income to fund public services. It ought to be possible to run decent public services out of that sum.
    A "decent" service. Absolutely! The NHS is very cost-effective in providing that.

    "The NHS – a stunningly cost effective supplier of high quality healthcare"
    http://www.taxresearch.org.uk/Blog/2011/06/06/the-nhs-a-stunningly-cost-effective-supplier-of-high-quality-healthcare/

    "Report in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine finds health service second only to Ireland for cost-effectiveness "
    http://www.theguardian.com/society/2011/aug/07/nhs-among-most-efficient-health-services

    "The NHS and USA’s Efficiency and Effectiveness in reducing mortality"

    "Cost-Effectiveness ratio: ..., the USA cost-effective ratio was 1: 515 pm deaths, whereas the UK had the second highest ratio at 1: 1490pm, almost three times more cost-effective than the USA, where `private health care’ is the dominant model."
    http://www.sochealth.co.uk/links/campaigns/denigration-of-the-nhs/the-nhs-and-the-usas-efficiency-and-effectiveness-in-reducing-mortality/

  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,669
    Cyclefree said:

    I don't disagree with any of that. But I'm puzzled why - when I was growing up - my GP (and it was just him) - was open all week, including Saturday mornings and did do home visits. And now, the same surgery - has a number of doctors and is pretty good - is only open during the week.

    Because almost all GPs are oversubscribed, and there is little competition between them. They know that not offering midnight service will not affect the number of patients on their books. (And they get paid per patient. Worse, a patient that needs them in the middle of the night is the kind of patient who needs lots of help... i.e., it's exactly the kind of often sick patient they desperately wish to avoid.)

    If GPs really worried about keeping patients, they would offer home visits, etc. But they do not.
  • FensterFenster Posts: 2,115
    @Pulpstar

    The wifey and me went to Port Isaac a few years back (yep, she's a Doc Martin fan) and the Fishermen's Friends played a live set on the beach.

    I'd never heard of them! Good laugh though.

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,713
    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    Let me guess: the responses shooting you down were very heavily 'liked'?

    That's why I post less and less on facebook. It gets irrational, heated and personal and encourages playing to the crowd. Or silence.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,669
    edited July 2015
    Disraeli said:

    Sean_F said:

    Disraeli said:

    Cyclefree said:


    But aren't we - the patients and the taxpayers - entitled to ask that the service be provided on a 24/7 basis? And work out a sensible way to achieve that?

    That's exactly what I personally want to see - though I can only speak for myself, of course.

    The limiting factor is our attitudes to public services and their funding. We criticise the Greeks for "wanting their cake and eating it", but when it comes to public services the great UK public wants a Rolls Royce service for the cost of a Renault.

    [Edited to remove a Grocer's Apostrophe]
    The UK public are prepared to pay 37% or thereabouts of their income to fund public services. It ought to be possible to run decent public services out of that sum.
    A "decent" service. Absolutely! The NHS is very cost-effective in providing that.

    "The NHS – a stunningly cost effective supplier of high quality healthcare"
    http://www.taxresearch.org.uk/Blog/2011/06/06/the-nhs-a-stunningly-cost-effective-supplier-of-high-quality-healthcare/

    "Report in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine finds health service second only to Ireland for cost-effectiveness "
    http://www.theguardian.com/society/2011/aug/07/nhs-among-most-efficient-health-services

    "The NHS and USA’s Efficiency and Effectiveness in reducing mortality"

    "Cost-Effectiveness ratio: ..., the USA cost-effective ratio was 1: 515 pm deaths, whereas the UK had the second highest ratio at 1: 1490pm, almost three times more cost-effective than the USA, where `private health care’ is the dominant model."
    http://www.sochealth.co.uk/links/campaigns/denigration-of-the-nhs/the-nhs-and-the-usas-efficiency-and-effectiveness-in-reducing-mortality/

    On a per taxpayer basis, the US government spends more on healthcare than the UK does (Medicare + Medicaid + Veterans).

    And that only pays for around 25% of population.
  • FensterFenster Posts: 2,115
    edited July 2015

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    Let me guess: the responses shooting you down were very heavily 'liked'?

    That's why I post less and less on facebook. It gets irrational, heated and personal and encourages playing to the crowd. Or silence.
    Yeah they were egging each other on and I know people get wound up and a bit silly on social media but I wasn't expecting it off these people. I was told to stop eating all the right wing bullshit people are feeding me and to think for myself.

    I didn't have the nerve to tell them I read PB :)

  • CornishBlueCornishBlue Posts: 840
    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    I find that the majority of British people have spent very little time (and have no intention of doing so) in getting a good understanding of - essentially - "how the world works" (be that economics, societies, etc). Perfectly nice people, with good careers, etc, as you say become strange animals when discussing politics, especially on social media.

    (Long-time lurker btw... I've been reading pb.com since it started but now feel I should make a comment or two as I think politics in the UK really is getting interesting! Never mind the rise of UKIP or the SNP - I sense it's the demise of Labour that's the biggie...)
  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    One of things that I think marks PB out is how little piling on there is - and newbies used to a less informed debate quickly realise that asserting your opinion isn't a fact.

    Providing evidence of one's position makes for much more civilised discussion/stops a lot of silly hyperbole.
    Fenster said:

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    Let me guess: the responses shooting you down were very heavily 'liked'?

    That's why I post less and less on facebook. It gets irrational, heated and personal and encourages playing to the crowd. Or silence.
    Yeah they were egging each other on and I know people get wound up and a bit silly on social media but I wasn't expecting it off these people. I was told to stop eating all the right wing bullshit people are feeding me and to think for myself.

    I didn't have the nerve to tell them I read PB :)

  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    Welcome aboard, Mr Blue!

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    I find that the majority of British people have spent very little time (and have no intention of doing so) in getting a good understanding of - essentially - "how the world works" (be that economics, societies, etc). Perfectly nice people, with good careers, etc, as you say become strange animals when discussing politics, especially on social media.

    (Long-time lurker btw... I've been reading pb.com since it started but now feel I should make a comment or two as I think politics in the UK really is getting interesting! Never mind the rise of UKIP or the SNP - I sense it's the demise of Labour that's the biggie...)
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,008
    edited July 2015
    Plato said:

    Have you two decided where to honeymoon yet?

    HYUFD said:

    Plato said:

    I think Yvette is a better candidate, even though she says nothing. Andy is such a weathervane - Labour has enough issues without having a leader who can't stick with the same opinion for 24hrs.

    Don't like her myself, but she's the best uncontroversial candidate to hold the ship together.

    Danny565 said:

    I'm still torn between Andy and Yvette. I'd been drifting to the view that Yvette would be a more robust and competent leader, but this is the second poll in a row where the electorate have given her markedly worse ratings than Andy. We really need some more to be commissioned.

    Blair was at his most popular when he was a weathervane, he started to lose popularity when he got some convictions!
    I would probably vote for Osborne over Burnham in 2020, that does not mean I don't think Burnham is Labour's best chance of beating him. 2015 was the only time I have not voted Tory at a general election since I first voted in 2001 (I voted LD and Tory at council level)
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    I find that the majority of British people have spent very little time (and have no intention of doing so) in getting a good understanding of - essentially - "how the world works" (be that economics, societies, etc). Perfectly nice people, with good careers, etc, as you say become strange animals when discussing politics, especially on social media.

    (Long-time lurker btw... I've been reading pb.com since it started but now feel I should make a comment or two as I think politics in the UK really is getting interesting! Never mind the rise of UKIP or the SNP - I sense it's the demise of Labour that's the biggie...)
    Welcome.

    Did you spot any of IOS's ground game down in Cornwall?
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,300
    Corbyn is in Bristol.

    One running commentry from twitter.com/bristolpa

    People's Assembly group seem to be summing thing up. Have noticed one Labour supporter tweeting about plenty of Greens, SWP and CPGB turning up to hear Jezza. He also implies that there are Greens for Corbyn joining Labour.


    Sign off with this gem.

    Bristol PplsAssembly ‏@bristolpa 2m2 minutes ago
    #ScrapTridant to make us secure by not threatening anyone else with nuclear weapons. Thats true security #JezWeCan
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Good evening, everyone.

    Welcome to pb.com, Mr. Blue.

    Hungary's covered live, so I might watch the practice sessions on BBC2. Williams versus Ferrari could be interesting.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,713
    Sean_F said:

    matt said:

    antifrank said:

    John Mann's intervention tells you everything you need to know about the febrile nature of today's Labour party.

    Labour's feral nature would be more appropriate..!
    John Mann strikes me as the modern equivalent of a Geoffrey Dickens or Peter Brunievals. ie a less than talented bullshiter who can't resist a microphone, and the media knows it.
    Geoffrey Dickens was a loudmouth, but he was clearly one of the good guys, when it came to exposing child sex scandals.

    Sometimes the annoying truculent people ar right.
    Saw an old episode of Drop The Dead Donkey on repeat the other week.

    That was a hit BBC sit-com in the 90s. It was making jokes like, 'Girlfriend? Oh no, he prefers little boys!' Guffaw.

    Up until fairly recently, this was seen as a joke.
  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    No surprise there.
    dr_spyn said:

    Corbyn is in Bristol.

    One running commentry from twitter.com/bristolpa

    People's Assembly group seem to be summing thing up. Have noticed one Labour supporter tweeting about plenty of Greens, SWP and CPGB turning up to hear Jezza. He also implies that there are Greens for Corbyn joining Labour.


    Sign off with this gem.

    Bristol PplsAssembly ‏@bristolpa 2m2 minutes ago
    #ScrapTridant to make us secure by not threatening anyone else with nuclear weapons. Thats true security #JezWeCan

  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Dr. Spyn, to be fair, the Roman Empire was at its most powerful when the legions put down the gladius and hugged their enemies instead.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,713
    Cyclefree said:

    TGOHF said:

    franklyn said:

    franklyn said:

    May I draw readers' attention to the government petition website https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/104334
    This petition has reached over 176.000 signatures in 48 hours, and passed the 100,000 threshold in 24 hours.
    This isn't about politics; this is about Jeremy Hunt having no concept of the degree to which the NHS is, and has always been, dependent on the good will of the workforce.
    Please sign and let others know about it

    It is entirely about politics and about sad idiots who can't accept the fact that the Tories won a majority and so can pursue their agenda as they see fit so long

    It doesn't matter how many people sign the petition. They will not overturn a democratically elected Government (who just for the record I did not vote for and do not support).
    I am a Conservative voter, and a party member, but, and I say this as someone who started work in the NHS as a lab assistant in 1969, was a medical student 1969-75 and then a doctor 1975-present, that Hunt has taken on a unique position in antagonizing the workforce; he has shown himself as the worst Health Minister (and I have been through quite a number) in the last 46 years. I fully support reform. I support the Conservative party, but I cannot support the ignorant and aggressive style of this man.
    No mention of patients again.

    It really isn't all about you.
    No - it is really about patients. I suspect it will be difficult to explain my views without appearing to be part of the "provider problem" but I'll have a go.

    I will make an assumption that you don't believe that doctors and nurses (of any type and seniority) should be working full hours 7 day a week.

    In order to provide a full service 7 days a week, in primary or secondary care, will thus require either a lot more doctors and nurses (of all grades) or it will mean a dilution in the quality of provision and a reduction in access. The former affects patients in their pockets - 'cos it will have to be paid for. The latter affects patients in the quality of their healthcare.

    I would work at weekends, if somebody would explain to my patients on weekdays why they couldn't get an appointment.
    I don't disagree with any of that. But I'm puzzled why - when I was growing up - my GP (and it was just him) - was open all week, including Saturday mornings and did do home visits. And now, the same surgery - has a number of doctors and is pretty good - is only open during the week.



    What the issue here is the fact the BMA would rather not have the very generous consultant contracts negotiated by Labour in the past to be reopened by the Conservatives.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,669
    dr_spyn said:

    Corbyn is in Bristol.

    One running commentry from twitter.com/bristolpa

    People's Assembly group seem to be summing thing up. Have noticed one Labour supporter tweeting about plenty of Greens, SWP and CPGB turning up to hear Jezza. He also implies that there are Greens for Corbyn joining Labour.


    Sign off with this gem.

    Bristol PplsAssembly ‏@bristolpa 2m2 minutes ago
    #ScrapTridant to make us secure by not threatening anyone else with nuclear weapons. Thats true security #JezWeCan

    I love the misspelling of Trident :-)

    That being said: there are plenty of countries around the world that don't have nuclear weapons, and don't seem to find themselves disadvantaged by it.
  • Blofelds_CatBlofelds_Cat Posts: 154
    edited July 2015


    snip


    I don't disagree with any of that. But I'm puzzled why - when I was growing up - my GP (and it was just him) - was open all week, including Saturday mornings and did do home visits. And now, the same surgery - has a number of doctors and is pretty good - is only open during the week.



    I wouldn't presume to ask a lady's age, but this is a description of my Grandfather's practice. I know him to have been available round the clock, and he provided GP maternity care as well. However, I also know that it was unusual for him to be called at night, that emergencies were emergencies and he wasn't there to take the place of priest/bank manager/social worker/employment advisor/relationship counsellor/housing officer ..........

    And I don't know many GP colleagues who don't do home visits - in many respects, it is one of the best bits of the job
  • MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034
    edited July 2015
    Frankly, I think all comparisons between the UK and US in healthcare are meaningless. In one system, 100% of the population have a system they have no choice over (save the GE) and may chose to pay extra to top that up. In the other, pre-Obamacare, 85% buy what they want. Some buy an old cheap banger, others buy family cars, and a high percentage buy Rolls Royces, some opt for nothing. Some of the choice is forced (ability to pay) but a lot is real choice (younger professionals not seeing the value in a Rolls Royce at that stage in their life) and even so, many choose to pay for the Rolls Royce.

    In the UK, my sister had to wait 6 months from first visit to a doctor to getting a melanoma (a F***ING MELANOMA) removed. In the US, I have something my dermatologist doesn't like during my 6-monthly check up, he removes it there and then and sends it to the lab for work up. I have a follow up to inform me of what it was, whether the margins were ok and what else I should do about it.

    I also have to wonder what the data cited in the studies is hiding - what factors are not covered.

    Efficiency studies of health care provision certainly have their place. But humans are not automatons or widgets produced on an assembly line. I would read them with a great deal of skepticism.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,713
    edited July 2015
    Fenster said:

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    Let me guess: the responses shooting you down were very heavily 'liked'?

    That's why I post less and less on facebook. It gets irrational, heated and personal and encourages playing to the crowd. Or silence.
    Yeah they were egging each other on and I know people get wound up and a bit silly on social media but I wasn't expecting it off these people. I was told to stop eating all the right wing bullshit people are feeding me and to think for myself.

    I didn't have the nerve to tell them I read PB :)

    Don't worry. There're plenty who agree with you who won't bother getting involved.

    When I posted my reaction to THAT exit poll, I had 20 likes within minutes from people I'd half-forgotten I'd friended, and all the Lefties were silent.

    That was quite a delicious moment.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Mr. 1000, nukes are the ultimate insurance policy.

    We'll only ever know if they're really worth it if we find we need them when we don't have them. If IS could use one, they would. And we should have the ability to obliterate ISIS' capital in return, horrific as that would be.

    Not to mention we'll have more massive wars in the future. We'll always have nukes, it's just a question of how many.
  • MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034
    edited July 2015
    rcs1000 said:

    dr_spyn said:

    Corbyn is in Bristol.

    One running commentry from twitter.com/bristolpa

    People's Assembly group seem to be summing thing up. Have noticed one Labour supporter tweeting about plenty of Greens, SWP and CPGB turning up to hear Jezza. He also implies that there are Greens for Corbyn joining Labour.


    Sign off with this gem.

    Bristol PplsAssembly ‏@bristolpa 2m2 minutes ago
    #ScrapTridant to make us secure by not threatening anyone else with nuclear weapons. Thats true security #JezWeCan

    I love the misspelling of Trident :-)

    That being said: there are plenty of countries around the world that don't have nuclear weapons, and don't seem to find themselves disadvantaged by it.
    No one is disadvantaged by a lack of insurance during a period of no fires.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,669

    Mr. 1000, nukes are the ultimate insurance policy.

    We'll only ever know if they're really worth it if we find we need them when we don't have them. If IS could use one, they would. And we should have the ability to obliterate ISIS' capital in return, horrific as that would be.

    Not to mention we'll have more massive wars in the future. We'll always have nukes, it's just a question of how many.

    But that would suggest that - for example - the Swiss, the Swedes or the Spanish are less secure than us.

    Are they, really?
  • Tissue_PriceTissue_Price Posts: 9,039

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    I find that the majority of British people have spent very little time (and have no intention of doing so) in getting a good understanding of - essentially - "how the world works" (be that economics, societies, etc). Perfectly nice people, with good careers, etc, as you say become strange animals when discussing politics, especially on social media.

    (Long-time lurker btw... I've been reading pb.com since it started but now feel I should make a comment or two as I think politics in the UK really is getting interesting! Never mind the rise of UKIP or the SNP - I sense it's the demise of Labour that's the biggie...)
    Welcome aboard. I am finding it a little disconcerting talking to a cheese, though.

    http://www.cheesevine.com/cornish-blue/
  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    edited July 2015
    I'm sure you've just committed a hate crime there in Loonyland.

    Cheese Bigot. :wink:

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    I find that the majority of British people have spent very little time (and have no intention of doing so) in getting a good understanding of - essentially - "how the world works" (be that economics, societies, etc). Perfectly nice people, with good careers, etc, as you say become strange animals when discussing politics, especially on social media.

    (Long-time lurker btw... I've been reading pb.com since it started but now feel I should make a comment or two as I think politics in the UK really is getting interesting! Never mind the rise of UKIP or the SNP - I sense it's the demise of Labour that's the biggie...)
    Welcome aboard. I am finding it a little disconcerting talking to a cheese, though.

    http://www.cheesevine.com/cornish-blue/
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Mr. 1000, perhaps, perhaps not. Would we nuke ISIS if they detonated a nuclear device in Bern? Quite probably. But it'd be a question, not a certainty.

    It may well be that as long as The West generally has nukes that works. But some nations still need to have them for that to work.

    Mr. T, indeed, but if we could accurately predict when every fire will happen insurance wouldn't exist. It's the doubt that makes insurance a feasible proposition.
  • MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034
    rcs1000 said:

    Mr. 1000, nukes are the ultimate insurance policy.

    We'll only ever know if they're really worth it if we find we need them when we don't have them. If IS could use one, they would. And we should have the ability to obliterate ISIS' capital in return, horrific as that would be.

    Not to mention we'll have more massive wars in the future. We'll always have nukes, it's just a question of how many.

    But that would suggest that - for example - the Swiss, the Swedes or the Spanish are less secure than us.

    Are they, really?
    During the peak of the Cold War, yes Sweden was less secure than NATO countries who benefitted from the triple nuclear umbrella. Finland more so, to the extent that its foreign policy was constrained by what was acceptable to the Soviet Union. Within NATO, history could make a case that the non-NW states were reduced to vassals of the US. That is a cost too.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,713
    edited July 2015

    Mr. 1000, nukes are the ultimate insurance policy.

    We'll only ever know if they're really worth it if we find we need them when we don't have them. If IS could use one, they would. And we should have the ability to obliterate ISIS' capital in return, horrific as that would be.

    Not to mention we'll have more massive wars in the future. We'll always have nukes, it's just a question of how many.

    Plenty of Western nations shelter under the NATO nuclear umbrella, plus most nations cannot develop their own if they are not recognised nuclear powers under the non-proliferation treaty.

    Given Russia's antics and China's military growth, and our tiny military, I struggle to see how it would enhance our strategic security to ditch them.
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,932
    Game Theory, The Prisoners Dilemma by Party.
    https://yougov.co.uk/news/2015/07/20/game-theory-public/
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,300
    Bristol East Labour back Burnham & Watson.

    Checked their twitter a/c.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    Reading a couple of the posts regarding the NHS position. There really should be a way to oppose a petition (I suppose making a new petition with the opposite wording), but a disagree button would be nice.
  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    edited July 2015
    Did you try clicking repeatedly on the portcullis logo?

    It changes the heading in a most amusing way!
    RobD said:

    Reading a couple of the posts regarding the NHS position. There really should be a way to oppose a petition (I suppose making a new petition with the opposite wording), but a disagree button would be nice.

  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656
    rcs1000 said:

    Disraeli said:

    Sean_F said:

    Disraeli said:

    Cyclefree said:


    But aren't we - the patients and the taxpayers - entitled to ask that the service be provided on a 24/7 basis? And work out a sensible way to achieve that?

    That's exactly what I personally want to see - though I can only speak for myself, of course.

    The limiting factor is our attitudes to public services and their funding. We criticise the Greeks for "wanting their cake and eating it", but when it comes to public services the great UK public wants a Rolls Royce service for the cost of a Renault.

    [Edited to remove a Grocer's Apostrophe]
    The UK public are prepared to pay 37% or thereabouts of their income to fund public services. It ought to be possible to run decent public services out of that sum.
    A "decent" service. Absolutely! The NHS is very cost-effective in providing that.

    "The NHS – a stunningly cost effective supplier of high quality healthcare"
    http://www.taxresearch.org.uk/Blog/2011/06/06/the-nhs-a-stunningly-cost-effective-supplier-of-high-quality-healthcare/

    "Report in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine finds health service second only to Ireland for cost-effectiveness "
    http://www.theguardian.com/society/2011/aug/07/nhs-among-most-efficient-health-services

    "The NHS and USA’s Efficiency and Effectiveness in reducing mortality"

    "Cost-Effectiveness ratio: ..., the USA cost-effective ratio was 1: 515 pm deaths, whereas the UK had the second highest ratio at 1: 1490pm, almost three times more cost-effective than the USA, where `private health care’ is the dominant model."
    http://www.sochealth.co.uk/links/campaigns/denigration-of-the-nhs/the-nhs-and-the-usas-efficiency-and-effectiveness-in-reducing-mortality/

    On a per taxpayer basis, the US government spends more on healthcare than the UK does (Medicare + Medicaid + Veterans).

    And that only pays for around 25% of population.
    I'd have thought the elderly and veterans are by far the biggest consumers of healthcare. And neither have waiting lists in the US.
  • MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    I find that the majority of British people have spent very little time (and have no intention of doing so) in getting a good understanding of - essentially - "how the world works" (be that economics, societies, etc). Perfectly nice people, with good careers, etc, as you say become strange animals when discussing politics, especially on social media.

    (Long-time lurker btw... I've been reading pb.com since it started but now feel I should make a comment or two as I think politics in the UK really is getting interesting! Never mind the rise of UKIP or the SNP - I sense it's the demise of Labour that's the biggie...)
    Welcome aboard. I am finding it a little disconcerting talking to a cheese, though.

    http://www.cheesevine.com/cornish-blue/
    Talking of Cornish cheeses, used to get a very nice one over here in Maryland called Yarg. Not seen it in a while. Do you know if it is still available? I think it was Gray Dairy Farm, hence Yarg.

    Welcome from a fellow, albeit expatriate, Corn.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,547

    Sean_F said:

    matt said:

    antifrank said:

    John Mann's intervention tells you everything you need to know about the febrile nature of today's Labour party.

    Labour's feral nature would be more appropriate..!
    John Mann strikes me as the modern equivalent of a Geoffrey Dickens or Peter Brunievals. ie a less than talented bullshiter who can't resist a microphone, and the media knows it.
    Geoffrey Dickens was a loudmouth, but he was clearly one of the good guys, when it came to exposing child sex scandals.

    Sometimes the annoying truculent people ar right.
    Saw an old episode of Drop The Dead Donkey on repeat the other week.

    That was a hit BBC sit-com in the 90s. It was making jokes like, 'Girlfriend? Oh no, he prefers little boys!' Guffaw.

    Up until fairly recently, this was seen as a joke.
    I think everyone has encountered the teacher/scoutmaster/politician/priest with the wandering hand. And mostly, they're pathetic, rather than dangerous. So, we laughed at them.
  • MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034

    Game Theory, The Prisoners Dilemma by Party.
    https://yougov.co.uk/news/2015/07/20/game-theory-public/

    Is this from an album cover? Track "Game Theory", from the album "The Prisoner's Dilemma" by the group "Party"?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,713
    rcs1000 said:

    Mr. 1000, nukes are the ultimate insurance policy.

    We'll only ever know if they're really worth it if we find we need them when we don't have them. If IS could use one, they would. And we should have the ability to obliterate ISIS' capital in return, horrific as that would be.

    Not to mention we'll have more massive wars in the future. We'll always have nukes, it's just a question of how many.

    But that would suggest that - for example - the Swiss, the Swedes or the Spanish are less secure than us.

    Are they, really?
    The Swiss and Swedes were during the Cold War, and are today, as secure as they both were with their policy of neutrality during WWII.

    Nothing's changed. You end up being dominated by the strategic realities of the established international order.
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,300
    edited July 2015
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,713
    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    matt said:

    antifrank said:

    John Mann's intervention tells you everything you need to know about the febrile nature of today's Labour party.

    Labour's feral nature would be more appropriate..!
    John Mann strikes me as the modern equivalent of a Geoffrey Dickens or Peter Brunievals. ie a less than talented bullshiter who can't resist a microphone, and the media knows it.
    Geoffrey Dickens was a loudmouth, but he was clearly one of the good guys, when it came to exposing child sex scandals.

    Sometimes the annoying truculent people ar right.
    Saw an old episode of Drop The Dead Donkey on repeat the other week.

    That was a hit BBC sit-com in the 90s. It was making jokes like, 'Girlfriend? Oh no, he prefers little boys!' Guffaw.

    Up until fairly recently, this was seen as a joke.
    I think everyone has encountered the teacher/scoutmaster/politician/priest with the wandering hand. And mostly, they're pathetic, rather than dangerous. So, we laughed at them.
    I'm no different or better. I would have laughed uproariously at it back then.

    I had no idea how dark, serious, prevalent or deeply sick it still was.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,974
    MTimT said:

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    I find that the majority of British people have spent very little time (and have no intention of doing so) in getting a good understanding of - essentially - "how the world works" (be that economics, societies, etc). Perfectly nice people, with good careers, etc, as you say become strange animals when discussing politics, especially on social media.

    (Long-time lurker btw... I've been reading pb.com since it started but now feel I should make a comment or two as I think politics in the UK really is getting interesting! Never mind the rise of UKIP or the SNP - I sense it's the demise of Labour that's the biggie...)
    Welcome aboard. I am finding it a little disconcerting talking to a cheese, though.

    http://www.cheesevine.com/cornish-blue/
    Talking of Cornish cheeses, used to get a very nice one over here in Maryland called Yarg. Not seen it in a while. Do you know if it is still available? I think it was Gray Dairy Farm, hence Yarg.

    Welcome from a fellow, albeit expatriate, Corn.
    Yarg is wrapped in nettle leaves. It probably doesn't get through US Customs. It certainly wouldn't get into Oz or NZ....
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    Plato said:

    Did you try clicking repeatedly on the portcullis logo?

    It changes the heading in a most amusing way!

    RobD said:

    Reading a couple of the posts regarding the NHS position. There really should be a way to oppose a petition (I suppose making a new petition with the opposite wording), but a disagree button would be nice.

    Maybe that is your browser? It just went back to the petition home page for me.
  • DisraeliDisraeli Posts: 1,106
    edited July 2015
    Plato said:

    Did you try clicking repeatedly on the portcullis logo?

    It changes the heading in a most amusing way!

    RobD said:

    Reading a couple of the posts regarding the NHS position. There really should be a way to oppose a petition (I suppose making a new petition with the opposite wording), but a disagree button would be nice.

    I tried it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :smiley:
  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    Oh, someone's changed it! Spoil sport. It said something like "who thought of this??"
    RobD said:

    Plato said:

    Did you try clicking repeatedly on the portcullis logo?

    It changes the heading in a most amusing way!

    RobD said:

    Reading a couple of the posts regarding the NHS position. There really should be a way to oppose a petition (I suppose making a new petition with the opposite wording), but a disagree button would be nice.

    Maybe that is your browser? It just went back to the petition home page for me.
  • FensterFenster Posts: 2,115

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    I find that the majority of British people have spent very little time (and have no intention of doing so) in getting a good understanding of - essentially - "how the world works" (be that economics, societies, etc). Perfectly nice people, with good careers, etc, as you say become strange animals when discussing politics, especially on social media.

    (Long-time lurker btw... I've been reading pb.com since it started but now feel I should make a comment or two as I think politics in the UK really is getting interesting! Never mind the rise of UKIP or the SNP - I sense it's the demise of Labour that's the biggie...)

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    I joined in and got massacred. One lady chipped in with "let's hang on a minute, Labour will never be elected under Corbyn."

    She was massacred too.

    Yvette Cooper was described as a "vile Tory" who shamed the Labour party by abstaining in the benefits vote.

    Like I said, these people are normal. They are actually all nice and regular people with good jobs.

    The world is going mad.

    I find that the majority of British people have spent very little time (and have no intention of doing so) in getting a good understanding of - essentially - "how the world works" (be that economics, societies, etc). Perfectly nice people, with good careers, etc, as you say become strange animals when discussing politics, especially on social media.

    (Long-time lurker btw... I've been reading pb.com since it started but now feel I should make a comment or two as I think politics in the UK really is getting interesting! Never mind the rise of UKIP or the SNP - I sense it's the demise of Labour that's the biggie...)
    Agreed and welcome abroad ☺

  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Labour should give up trying to persuade the public that it is wrong about the party spending too much before the crash and just “move on”, a left-leaning thinktank said on Thursday.

    In a report on why Labour lost the election and what it needs to do next, the Smith Institute said that the party needed to instead develop a different narrative about spending, one that would probably involve “reimagining the state”.
    http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/jul/23/why-labour-lost-election-what-it-needs-next-smith-institute-study
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,417
    Countries protected under article 5 of NATO should pay us (And the French and the USA I suppose) cash for the cost of the nukes !

    Our nukes have a large benefit for Germany and others.
  • FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486
    The Greens on 8%? For crying out loud
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,417
    Freggles said:

    The Greens on 8%? For crying out loud

    Corbyn will sort that out.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    Freggles said:

    The Greens on 8%? For crying out loud

    Will the left ever stop being split?
  • philiphphiliph Posts: 4,704
    SeanT said:

    Cyclefree said:

    Ouch.. thats dirty fighting.. someone is worried.

    Why is it dirty? It's a legitimate question to ask: was he told and, if so, what did he do? After all, Labour (Tom Watson, likely Labour Deputy Leader) has not been shy about accusing Tories of turning a blind eye to alleged child abuse by senior Tories. We have seen the results of inaction by those in a position to do something in Rotherham, Rochdale and elsewhere.

    Turning a blind eye to criminality doesn't just occur in banks you know. And if people want to present themselves as on the side of the vulnerable then we're entitled to ask questions about what that has meant in practice.

    The pedo scandal at the top of Westminster is, I suspect, enormous. Why do I say that? Because no one knows anything.

    With previous pedo scandals the identities of those implicated have been very quickly known to senior journos, lawyers, etc. Yet a trawl of my usually well informed acquaintances does not produce any confirmed "rumours" - e.g. about the "senior Labour MP". No one is sure.

    My reckoning is that there are injunctions and superinjuctions all over the place, that the scandal goes to the heart of all political parties, that it might involve senior figures outside politics (civil service, police, judiciary, armed forces, etc) and that if all was revealed it would dwarf Belgium's Dutroux case which rocked that country to its foundations.

    There are, of course, serious allegations that people have been murmured to cover this up. People are scared of being killed if they talk.

    I know I sound like Tapestry, but hey. That's my hunch, after just one G&T.
    I thought one or two names were widely known.

  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    This is the second time we've heard of this 'demise of Labour' and it again begs the question - if Labour are at end, who is to replace them as the official opposition? UKIP control one council and are a world away of being an organised party with a divisive leader; the LDs have been reduced to a lump of 8 MPs with a leader that may be much more socially conservative than first thought (and how that plays with attracting the centre-left vote is still in question); the SNP are a Scottish party.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Plato said:

    Did you try clicking repeatedly on the portcullis logo?

    It changes the heading in a most amusing way!

    RobD said:

    Reading a couple of the posts regarding the NHS position. There really should be a way to oppose a petition (I suppose making a new petition with the opposite wording), but a disagree button would be nice.

    I tried, but couldn't get it to change. What happens?
  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    And if people think Yvette Cooper is a 'Tory', then well....there are words I'd use, expletives even to describe them. At this stage anyone who isn't hard-left to some of these people is a 'tory'. Maybe we should let them have their Corbyn leadership. These idiots can then be forced to see their own idiocy.
  • FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486
    RobD said:

    Freggles said:

    The Greens on 8%? For crying out loud

    Will the left ever stop being split?
    The one thing we could learn from Greece
  • MJWMJW Posts: 1,738

    Fenster said:

    I've been reading a long thread on Facebook today, featuring comments from otherwise sane and normal adults, who are all pro-Corbyn.

    She was massacred too.

    The world is going mad.

    I find that the majority of British people have spent very little time (and have no intention of doing so) in getting a good understanding of - essentially - "how the world works" (be that economics, societies, etc). Perfectly nice people, with good careers, etc, as you say become strange animals when discussing politics, especially on social media.

    (Long-time lurker btw... I've been reading pb.com since it started but now feel I should make a comment or two as I think politics in the UK really is getting interesting! Never mind the rise of UKIP or the SNP - I sense it's the demise of Labour that's the biggie...)
    You should see Cif, it's out Mailing The Mail at the moment. Anything about Corbyn has become madder than Cybernattery, any suggestion that he won't win in 2020 with a landslide is greeted with calls to have you tarred, feathered and branded with the words 'I love George Osborne' as well as lots of FACTS which are left without context (such as 76% of people didn't vote Tory, etc...) They've even adopted the vocab of the cybernats.

    There are probably three reasons why things are going crazy, with each comprising a section of the Corbynites. Firstly there's the fact the hard left never thought they'd get a chance to take over the Labour Party, and they won't take kindly to anyone threatening to spoil their party. Having had to mumble and grumble either from within or in a variety of rag bag outfits, they're relishing giving those who stray from their creed a good kicking. They don't particularly care if Corbyn is totally unelectable - 21% of the vote is better than the sod all they currently get.

    Then there's the young, I say this as someone who is basically still that myself but we can be very foolish politically because we lack the folk memories of others. A 22-year-old will have known Tony Blair only as a perma-tanned 'war criminal' not an electoral juggernaut. They'll have spent the entire adolescent/adult life with a moderate Labour being unpopular and so see in Corbyn hope. Mentioning the fact that Labour has had these battles since at least the 1960s or that a milder version of Corbynism was tried and failed in the 1980s is met with a blank stare and 'but..'. See also how Occupy was 'going to change the world'.

    Lastly, as you rightly point out very few people understand electoral mechanics and that the electorate doesn't think like their peer group, with most not giving a toss and then voting for whoever is most plausible, and that people aren't suddenly going to acclaim Corbyn because you like him. Therefore they're easily swayed by myths and canards - see also the Green surge.

    Being a Labour member is terrifying atm.

  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046

    And if people think Yvette Cooper is a 'Tory', then well....there are words I'd use, expletives even to describe them. At this stage anyone who isn't hard-left to some of these people is a 'tory'. Maybe we should let them have their Corbyn leadership. These idiots can then be forced to see their own idiocy.

    Well, at least they weren't called PB Tory. The absolute worst kind of Tory.
  • Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091

    This is the second time we've heard of this 'demise of Labour' and it again begs the question - if Labour are at end, who is to replace them as the official opposition? UKIP control one council and are a world away of being an organised party with a divisive leader; the LDs have been reduced to a lump of 8 MPs with a leader that may be much more socially conservative than first thought (and how that plays with attracting the centre-left vote is still in question); the SNP are a Scottish party.

    Also, considering the Tories are in their honeymoon and Labour are in chaos, 31% is a poor score for Labour but not really a terminally disastrous one.
  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    RobD said:

    And if people think Yvette Cooper is a 'Tory', then well....there are words I'd use, expletives even to describe them. At this stage anyone who isn't hard-left to some of these people is a 'tory'. Maybe we should let them have their Corbyn leadership. These idiots can then be forced to see their own idiocy.

    Well, at least they weren't called PB Tory. The absolute worst kind of Tory.
    The worst kind of Tories are those who frequent the Mail and the Telegraph website. For all the examples of deluded crazy lefties on CIF, the Telegraph comments' section is a right-wing mirror image of it.

    @Danny565 *If* the polls are right then I agree. ICM showed Labour about four points behind some weeks ago, which *if* accurate, isn't too bad either.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    SeanT said:

    philiph said:

    SeanT said:

    Cyclefree said:

    Ouch.. thats dirty fighting.. someone is worried.

    Why is it dirty? It's a legitimate question to ask: was he told and, if so, what did he do? After all, Labour (Tom Watson, likely Labour Deputy Leader) has not been shy about accusing Tories of turning a blind eye to alleged child abuse by senior Tories. We have seen the results of inaction by those in a position to do something in Rotherham, Rochdale and elsewhere.

    Turning a blind eye to criminality doesn't just occur in banks you know. And if people want to present themselves as on the side of the vulnerable then we're entitled to ask questions about what that has meant in practice.

    The pedo scandal at the top of Westminster is, I suspect, enormous. Why do I say that? Because no one knows anything.

    With previous pedo scandals the identities of those implicated have been very quickly known to senior journos, lawyers, etc. Yet a trawl of my usually well informed acquaintances does not produce any confirmed "rumours" - e.g. about the "senior Labour MP". No one is sure.

    My reckoning is that there are injunctions and superinjuctions all over the place, that the scandal goes to the heart of all political parties, that it might involve senior figures outside politics (civil service, police, judiciary, armed forces, etc) and that if all was revealed it would dwarf Belgium's Dutroux case which rocked that country to its foundations.

    There are, of course, serious allegations that people have been murmured to cover this up. People are scared of being killed if they talk.

    I know I sound like Tapestry, but hey. That's my hunch, after just one G&T.
    I thought one or two names were widely known.

    They are. But I get different names from different people, and none of my informants is sure. Never happened before.

    It's quite odd. And, as I say, points to a much more determined attempt to keep things quiet, than is normally the case.
    Have you tried searching under #innocentface on twitter?..... titter :D
  • mattmatt Posts: 3,789
    @Blofeld's Cat

    My father was a GP. His work patterns and current GP work patterns seem very different (I don't know where you are but in the areas I've lived, chances of a home visit are near to nil). I wonder how much of that is because 50% plus of medical students are female and the all hours working is not much of a draw (far more PT and jobshare as well). There's an assumption that men and women want the same thing out of work. Intellectually that's right for those training as med students but I wonder about, when people are in their 30s and 40s, there's the same enthusasism for the grind. If that's the case the there's a wider sustainability issue around the NHS.

    I could be very wrong but I look at the area that I used to work in, private practice city law, and the ratio of men to women outside real estate and pensions (ie those areas with perceived solid 9 - 6).
  • FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486
    Pulpstar said:

    Freggles said:

    The Greens on 8%? For crying out loud

    Corbyn will sort that out.
    I am thinking of voting
    Kendall
    Cooper
    Corbyn
    Burnham

    On the basis that Burnham would not be enough of a disaster to trigger a coup, similarly to how Ed had YouGov leads that helped him hang in there but ultimately hurt the party
  • FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486
    Whereas Corbyn will not make it to a GE
  • Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    edited July 2015
    Freggles said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Freggles said:

    The Greens on 8%? For crying out loud

    Corbyn will sort that out.
    I am thinking of voting
    Kendall
    Cooper
    Corbyn
    Burnham

    On the basis that Burnham would not be enough of a disaster to trigger a coup, similarly to how Ed had YouGov leads that helped him hang in there but ultimately hurt the party
    But, according to the public polls cited in the header by OGH, Kendall would be even more unelectable than Corbyn.
  • FalseFlagFalseFlag Posts: 1,801
    Speedy said:

    For those looking for a good read for the evening, a double feature:

    http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/07/23/trump-s-mobbed-up-mccarthyite-mentor.html

    "They met at Le Club, a private disco on the Upper East Side frequented by Jackie Kennedy, Al Pacino, and Diana Ross, according to Trump: The Saga of America’s Most Powerful Real Estate Baron. Donald Trump, the young developer, quickly amassing a fortune in New York real estate and Roy Cohn, America’s most loathed yet socially successful defense attorney who had vaulted to infamy in the 1950s while serving as legal counsel to Sen. Joseph McCarthy."


    http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/07/23/how-thatcher-s-mi5-spy-chief-protected-a-pedophile-member-of-parliament.html

    "The head of Britain’s MI5 domestic intelligence service told the Thatcher government that a pedophile MP was operating in the House of Commons but suggested a plot to cover up his “penchant for small boys” in order to avoid political embarrassment.

    It was a plan the government was only too happy to accept."

    Thanks to the opening up of the Soviet archives we know that Joe McCarthy actually underestimated the extent of Soviet infiltration of US institutions and yet McCarthyism remains a smear term for the left today. In fact there is an attempt to rehabilitate those who were blacklisted despite the now very well documented crimes of communism.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Mr. Freggles, you may be underestimating how bad Labour are at coups.

    I do think they might make a special effort for Corbyn, but they didn't manage it with Brown and didn't even attempt it against Miliband.
  • Tissue_PriceTissue_Price Posts: 9,039

    RobD said:

    And if people think Yvette Cooper is a 'Tory', then well....there are words I'd use, expletives even to describe them. At this stage anyone who isn't hard-left to some of these people is a 'tory'. Maybe we should let them have their Corbyn leadership. These idiots can then be forced to see their own idiocy.

    Well, at least they weren't called PB Tory. The absolute worst kind of Tory.
    The worst kind of Tories are those who frequent the Mail and the Telegraph website. For all the examples of deluded crazy lefties on CIF, the Telegraph comments' section is a right-wing mirror image of it.
    They're Kippers now. Detoxification and 37%.
  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    @MJW, I'm 21 and these same young people should also be aware Blair was the same guy who rode to power on a landslide in 1997, and prior to that Labour had been in opposition for 18 years. Young Labour members should be well aware of the wilderness years, they are just people who are so ideologically blind that they'll ignore realism when it stares them in the face. I'm not a fan of Blair for many reasons, but even I agree with @Roger that Blair is head and shoulders above all the party leaders right now, and at this stage Labour would probably be better off getting Blair back, then electing any of their leadership offerings.
  • FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486
    Danny565 said:

    Freggles said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Freggles said:

    The Greens on 8%? For crying out loud

    Corbyn will sort that out.
    I am thinking of voting
    Kendall
    Cooper
    Corbyn
    Burnham

    On the basis that Burnham would not be enough of a disaster to trigger a coup, similarly to how Ed had YouGov leads that helped him hang in there but ultimately hurt the party
    But, according to the public polls cited in the header by OGH, Kendall would be more unelectable than Corbyn.
    Nobody knows who Kendall is, might be part of it
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,974

    And if people think Yvette Cooper is a 'Tory', then well....there are words I'd use, expletives even to describe them. At this stage anyone who isn't hard-left to some of these people is a 'tory'. Maybe we should let them have their Corbyn leadership. These idiots can then be forced to see their own idiocy.

    I've been saying for a while that is looking like the only way out for Labour. Let Corbyn's Comrades see the reality.
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656
    @SeanT

    I suspect it is too. There must have been abuse and cover-up on an epic scale. People like the one who wrote that MI5 memo that simply weighed up the security threat versus political embarassment to the government, with no care at all for the welfare of children, must be objectively evil.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,713
    Danny565 said:

    Freggles said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Freggles said:

    The Greens on 8%? For crying out loud

    Corbyn will sort that out.
    I am thinking of voting
    Kendall
    Cooper
    Corbyn
    Burnham

    On the basis that Burnham would not be enough of a disaster to trigger a coup, similarly to how Ed had YouGov leads that helped him hang in there but ultimately hurt the party
    But, according to the public polls cited in the header by OGH, Kendall would be even more unelectable than Corbyn.
    This is the trouble with the Labour party right now. This page:

    https://www.facebook.com/pages/Liz-Kendall-for-Conservative-Leader/785674451530108

    ..isn't far off having as many likes as the official page:

    https://www.facebook.com/LabourLiz
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,706
    Corbyn is just the latest example in a long line of antipolitics candidates.

  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,653

    Mr. Freggles, you may be underestimating how bad Labour are at coups.

    I do think they might make a special effort for Corbyn, but they didn't manage it with Brown and didn't even attempt it against Miliband.

    They didn't think they had to. Brown was too late for anyone else to fix it and they were well in the lead in 2012-14 under EdMiliband.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Mr. Jonathan, isn't that like electing a pacifist to lead the army?
  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    edited July 2015
    The Tories are in the honeymoon period. They've announced brutal cuts, but public was fully aware cuts were going to happen, and it's an economic policy the public happen to support. The Tories are pretty much setting the political narrative at the moment, and have the press onside. Cameron is the most well-regarded of the leaders. Osborne is seen as a master-strategist, and has probably more power and influence in the Conservative party than he has ever had before. He has a whole power-base of allies throughout the parliamentary party in particular. UKIP have gone from being seen as a threat to the Tory party, to a laughing-stock. Labour currently are nowhere near close to mounting a challenge to the Tories.

    That's pretty much a honeymoon.
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656

    Danny565 said:

    Freggles said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Freggles said:

    The Greens on 8%? For crying out loud

    Corbyn will sort that out.
    I am thinking of voting
    Kendall
    Cooper
    Corbyn
    Burnham

    On the basis that Burnham would not be enough of a disaster to trigger a coup, similarly to how Ed had YouGov leads that helped him hang in there but ultimately hurt the party
    But, according to the public polls cited in the header by OGH, Kendall would be even more unelectable than Corbyn.
    This is the trouble with the Labour party right now. This page:

    https://www.facebook.com/pages/Liz-Kendall-for-Conservative-Leader/785674451530108

    ..isn't far off having as many likes as the official page:

    https://www.facebook.com/LabourLiz
    Items like this seem openly sexist:

    https://scontent.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpa1/t31.0-8/10860830_10204581875928738_7684413100096387788_o.jpg
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Mr. T, who's Grant?

    Mr. EPG, they had time to do Brown in, but Miliband (David) and perhaps others bottled it.

    They had a false tilt at Miliband in 2014, but they'd left it too late.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,706

    Mr. Jonathan, isn't that like electing a pacifist to lead the army?

    He's the latest FU to the established order. A red Farage.
  • FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486

    Mr. Jonathan, isn't that like electing a pacifist to lead the army?

    That would literally be the case were he PM
  • nigel4englandnigel4england Posts: 4,800
    JEO said:

    @SeanT

    I suspect it is too. There must have been abuse and cover-up on an epic scale. People like the one who wrote that MI5 memo that simply weighed up the security threat versus political embarassment to the government, with no care at all for the welfare of children, must be objectively evil.

    One day the people of this country will come to realize how disgusting our leaders and intelligence services really are.

    The fact this site banned Socrates is particularly shameful.
  • SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    edited July 2015
    FalseFlag said:

    Speedy said:

    For those looking for a good read for the evening, a double feature:

    http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/07/23/trump-s-mobbed-up-mccarthyite-mentor.html

    "They met at Le Club, a private disco on the Upper East Side frequented by Jackie Kennedy, Al Pacino, and Diana Ross, according to Trump: The Saga of America’s Most Powerful Real Estate Baron. Donald Trump, the young developer, quickly amassing a fortune in New York real estate and Roy Cohn, America’s most loathed yet socially successful defense attorney who had vaulted to infamy in the 1950s while serving as legal counsel to Sen. Joseph McCarthy."


    http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/07/23/how-thatcher-s-mi5-spy-chief-protected-a-pedophile-member-of-parliament.html

    "The head of Britain’s MI5 domestic intelligence service told the Thatcher government that a pedophile MP was operating in the House of Commons but suggested a plot to cover up his “penchant for small boys” in order to avoid political embarrassment.

    It was a plan the government was only too happy to accept."

    Thanks to the opening up of the Soviet archives we know that Joe McCarthy actually underestimated the extent of Soviet infiltration of US institutions and yet McCarthyism remains a smear term for the left today. In fact there is an attempt to rehabilitate those who were blacklisted despite the now very well documented crimes of communism.
    Especially those well known commie spies: Charlie Chaplin, Orson Wells and Zero Mostel.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YOIueFbG4g
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,039
    Given that under FPTP, with Duverger's Law, only two parties will realistically be able to offer to lead a Government, and one is currently in Government ... Labour seem intent on abdicating their responsibility to be a credible alternative Government.
    But they're still hogging the second seat out of the two, preventing any other altermative credible Government.
    So ... if Labour are truly intent on indulging their ideological pleasure at the cost of providing a credible alternative, would they mind terribly vacating that seat? Their are others who'd like a go, if they're no longer interested.
  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830

    And if people think Yvette Cooper is a 'Tory', then well....there are words I'd use, expletives even to describe them. At this stage anyone who isn't hard-left to some of these people is a 'tory'. Maybe we should let them have their Corbyn leadership. These idiots can then be forced to see their own idiocy.

    I've been saying for a while that is looking like the only way out for Labour. Let Corbyn's Comrades see the reality.
    What's hilarious is how there are still some people who after seeing the evidence of the 1980s, still want to opt for this agenda. What's more amusing, is how many activists and members appear to not really care about Labour actually getting elected. They don't appear to understand that an electable, credible Labour party, is one that is an effective opposition by default. I think a large amount of them should quit this whole 'party-politics' thing, and join a pressure-group. They don't appear to be in the business of wanting to help change people's lives for the better.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,706

    Given that under FPTP, with Duverger's Law, only two parties will realistically be able to offer to lead a Government, and one is currently in Government ... Labour seem intent on abdicating their responsibility to be a credible alternative Government.
    But they're still hogging the second seat out of the two, preventing any other altermative credible Government.
    So ... if Labour are truly intent on indulging their ideological pleasure at the cost of providing a credible alternative, would they mind terribly vacating that seat? Their are others who'd like a go, if they're no longer interested.

    The SNP?
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Mr. Cooke, might be a good situation for the Lib Dems. Farage's hokey-cokey will not help him win over new supporters.

    That said, Farron's irksome.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,653
    Jonathan said:

    Given that under FPTP, with Duverger's Law, only two parties will realistically be able to offer to lead a Government, and one is currently in Government ... Labour seem intent on abdicating their responsibility to be a credible alternative Government.
    But they're still hogging the second seat out of the two, preventing any other altermative credible Government.
    So ... if Labour are truly intent on indulging their ideological pleasure at the cost of providing a credible alternative, would they mind terribly vacating that seat? Their are others who'd like a go, if they're no longer interested.

    The SNP?
    Scottish and Northern Party.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,713

    Given that under FPTP, with Duverger's Law, only two parties will realistically be able to offer to lead a Government, and one is currently in Government ... Labour seem intent on abdicating their responsibility to be a credible alternative Government.
    But they're still hogging the second seat out of the two, preventing any other altermative credible Government.
    So ... if Labour are truly intent on indulging their ideological pleasure at the cost of providing a credible alternative, would they mind terribly vacating that seat? Their are others who'd like a go, if they're no longer interested.

    Ha. Quite!
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,713
    JEO said:

    Danny565 said:

    Freggles said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Freggles said:

    The Greens on 8%? For crying out loud

    Corbyn will sort that out.
    I am thinking of voting
    Kendall
    Cooper
    Corbyn
    Burnham

    On the basis that Burnham would not be enough of a disaster to trigger a coup, similarly to how Ed had YouGov leads that helped him hang in there but ultimately hurt the party
    But, according to the public polls cited in the header by OGH, Kendall would be even more unelectable than Corbyn.
    This is the trouble with the Labour party right now. This page:

    https://www.facebook.com/pages/Liz-Kendall-for-Conservative-Leader/785674451530108

    ..isn't far off having as many likes as the official page:

    https://www.facebook.com/LabourLiz
    Items like this seem openly sexist:

    https://scontent.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpa1/t31.0-8/10860830_10204581875928738_7684413100096387788_o.jpg
    She actually looks quite good with that blue rosette.
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