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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Never mind Super Tuesday, get ready for Mega March

SystemSystem Posts: 11,689
edited February 2016 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Never mind Super Tuesday, get ready for Mega March

The preliminaries are all but over with the first phase of the presidential primaries doing the job assigned them: knocking out (most of) the also-rans and narrowing the field to the serious contenders and the hobby-horseists.

Read the full story here


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Comments

  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,329
    edited February 2016
    They think its all over....

    It is now. First first in ages.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,329
    Backing up what David is saying CNN reporting that Hillary wants it sorted by the end of March : http://edition.cnn.com/2016/02/28/politics/clinton-sanders-super-tuesday/

    I think the republican selection is sorted already. If Trump wins Texas (and I think he will) that is the end.
  • Options
    Basically if you disavow the national polling, what you are saying is that Trump's support is either (a) disproportionately high among states that have voted, or won't vote yet (and their minds can be changed)
    or (b) people respond differently nationally compared to state-wide

    Neither can reel Trump in from anywhere from +11 points to +33 points as the polls show.
  • Options
    David Herdson on a Monday? The world doesn't make any sense.
  • Options
    FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,047
    DavidL said:

    They think its all over....

    It is now. First first in ages.

    Is that not blasphemous language for a Scot?
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,930
    MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN

    vs

    I'M WITH HER
  • Options
    Will Hillary be able to run her campaign from inside a prison cell?
  • Options
    DavidL said:

    Backing up what David is saying CNN reporting that Hillary wants it sorted by the end of March : http://edition.cnn.com/2016/02/28/politics/clinton-sanders-super-tuesday/

    I think the republican selection is sorted already. If Trump wins Texas (and I think he will) that is the end.

    Trump is more likely than not to miss out on Texas though that might actually benefit him. Cruz has gone all-in on his home state (which is itself telling), and if he wins it then will almost certainly carry on. That, however will split the field against Trump making his life easier.

    If Cruz does lose Texas then the race would likely become a Trump-Rubio showdown. That would probably narrow Trump's lead but it'd still leave him with a healthy margin in the polls and - with the boost of delegates he'd receive in Texas if he won it - a huge lead in delegates.

    A CNN poll today for the GOP nomination put Trump on 49% nationally. I suspect that's on the high side but he's almost certainly in the 40s now. Unless something's gone very wrong with the polling, you don't chalk up new record highs when you're on the slide.

    The fact that Trump is still rising in the polls might also be a pointer to November. I've been saying for a long time that Trump was underrated in the betting markets for the nomination. I'd say the same now for the White House.
  • Options
    FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,047
    SeanT said:

    fpt for Topping, then I'm off to work:

    ******


    TOPPING said:


    @SeanT


    Objective one: protect the single market for Britain and others outside the Eurozone. What I mean by that is a set of binding principles that guarantee fairness between Euro and non-Euro countries.

    Objective two: write competitiveness into the DNA of the whole European Union. And this includes cutting the total burden on business.

    Objective three: exempt Britain from an “ever closer union” and bolster national parliaments. Not through warm words but through legally binding and irreversible changes.

    Objective four: tackle abuses of the right to free movement, and enable us to control migration from the European Union, in line with our manifesto.

    is what he said (November 2015).

    He failed abjectly on Objective four. Then again I don't know what the manifesto said (can't be ar**d to look it up).

    The other objectives he got. Plus he got an opt-out of the single rulebook.

    Not ideal, but not bad.


    *******

    Oh god, I give up. You're one of the less stupid Cameroony pb-ers, and if you really honestly think that this is an impressive, coherent list of serious changes, then there's no point in further debate.

    I mean, look at Objective Two. "Write competitiveness into the DNA of the whole European Union. And this includes cutting the total burden on business."

    This is so meaningless, so insultingly vacant, it could easily have appeared on the Ed Stone. An NHS With Time To Care. An EU With Competitiveness in its DNA. A Pudding With Pastry That Matters. A Platitude That Sounds Like Burping The Alphabet.

    For once Sean I completely agree with you.
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,637
    I see they are still counting votes in Ireland. STV: Nonsense on stilts.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,333
    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?
  • Options

    David Herdson on a Monday? The world doesn't make any sense.

    I wrote two pieces for Saturday but the second (this one) was held over, I'd guess because Mike didn't want three US-based threads in a row when a lot of the site discussion was about the referendum. That's only my surmise though.

    Neither of them was the thread I meant to write though!!
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,930
    edited February 2016
    DavidL said:

    Backing up what David is saying CNN reporting that Hillary wants it sorted by the end of March : http://edition.cnn.com/2016/02/28/politics/clinton-sanders-super-tuesday/

    I think the republican selection is sorted already. If Trump wins Texas (and I think he will) that is the end.

    I think the Democrat race is done now, one of Clinton's aides seems to be carrying the can for her e-mails. Her victory in South Carolina was so overwhelming that it points not to a hundred (As I've seen mooted about), but on my model potentially near a two hundred delegate lead after Super Tuesday.

    I am forecasting wins for Sanders in Vermont (Hillary might make the 15% cutoff, not sure) and Colorado.

    Unfortunately for Bernie those states are totally drowned by VA, TX, MA, MN, GA.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited February 2016
    http://order-order.com/2016/02/29/pro-migrant-campaigner-pelted-with-rocks-by-migrants/

    Maybe one day the media might ask all these campaigners why they aren't lobbying the French government to do something. The way they go on, you would think they were in the middle of the nowhere in a war torn country, not a stones throw away from a major housing estate, sport facilities, shops etc.

    Also the Guardian wing of the media bashed the hell out of "benefits street" as poverty porn, but don't seem to have an issue calling this place the "Jungle" (which I don't know, seems kinda of racist, especially if we are judging it by Rhodes Must Fall, can't call Harvard academics "Master" standards etc) and spending weeks on end shoving cameras in people faces.
  • Options
    PAWPAW Posts: 1,074
    TwistedFireStopper - on the other hand, when my uncle died a soliciter called, said she had been acting for my uncle (actually on the other side of an argument about boundary trees), and proferred an opinion that a modern, large, 5 bedroom house in an acre of land in one of Ferndown's best roads could be sold through her for £115,000 (12 years ago, Ferndown is just north of Bournemouth). My sister tried to get planning permission to split a building site off - refused by the planning authority - enormous effort to get a fair price - sold in the end for 4 times more. But still the property was sold on the next day with planning permission.

    I think you will have better results if you keep control of the estate.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,013
    FPT:
    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
  • Options
    It certainly does look as though it's going to be Trump vs Clinton, unless the email scandal explodes. From a betting point of view, it is very hard to assess the likelihood of such an explosion, but I don't think we can rule it out.

    This article summarises the case for the prosecution quite well, I think:

    http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2016/02/29/hillarys_victories_mean_painful_legal_choices_for_doj_wh.html
  • Options
    Pulpstar said:

    DavidL said:

    Backing up what David is saying CNN reporting that Hillary wants it sorted by the end of March : http://edition.cnn.com/2016/02/28/politics/clinton-sanders-super-tuesday/

    I think the republican selection is sorted already. If Trump wins Texas (and I think he will) that is the end.

    I think the Democrat race is done now, one of Clinton's aides seems to be carrying the can for her e-mails. Her victory in South Carolina was so overwhelming that it points not to a hundred (As I've seen mooted about), but on my model potentially near a two hundred delegate lead after Super Tuesday.

    I am forecasting wins for Sanders in Vermont (Hillary might make the 15% cutoff, not sure) and Colorado.

    Unfortunately for Bernie those states are totally drowned by VA, TX, MA, MN, GA.
    Yes. To have been in with a should, Bernie should have been winning MA and competitive in MN. That he might well end up coming out of Super Tuesday with just his home state - no matter how big a lead he wins there - is as good an indicator as you need that the race is done, barring legal interventions.
  • Options
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,930
    @Richard_Nabavi It looks to me like HRC has several human shields lined up to take the fall in the e-mail scandal.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,333
    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    £55m? You'd leave the EU for that?
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    edited February 2016
    FPT

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    JohnO said:

    Not on pb they aren't.

    And the majority of card-carrying Tories on here will be voting Remain by my calculations.

    Most of the Leavers have already chucked their cards in the bin in disgust, we are mostly ex-members, a legacy from when the Conservative Party was a centre-right party, not the Liberal Democrats with less sandals.
    Also a legacy from when the party was losing?

    As for centre right, spending as a proportion of GDP has come down by 5% and counting. Centre right 7nder my definition.
    Yes, I remember Mr Thatcher "losing" those 3 elections... maybe you are too young :smirk:

    As to spending, you are basically applauding a 30st man for losing a few pounds, when you are that overweight anyone but a idiot (ie Labour) can lose weight, but Osbrown has cut far too little and spent far too much.
    First six years of Thatcher
    1979 42.75%
    1980 44.54%
    1981 45.29%
    1982 45.56%
    1983 43.20%
    1984 42.59%

    First six years of Cameron
    2010 44.86%
    2011 45.31%
    2012 43.97%
    2013 44.05%
    2014 42.40%
    2015 41.39%

    Cameron and Osborne inherited a worse proportion spend of GDP than Thatcher did and have already got it significantly below what Thatcher did in the same period of time. But don't let facts get in your way.
    Damn, I didnt realise that being right-wing was just about public spending, now I realise it has nothing to do with values or a program of government, all becomes clear.

    So Labour 1975-79 was right-wing, who knew it..
  • Options
    tpfkartpfkar Posts: 1,548

    I see they are still counting votes in Ireland. STV: Nonsense on stilts.

    A 2 day wait to actually get what you voted for. Seems a decent trade-off to me.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,013
    TOPPING said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    £55m? You'd leave the EU for that?
    Give benefits of any sort.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    edited February 2016
    FPT
    TOPPING said:

    The other objectives he got. Plus he got an opt-out of the single rulebook.

    Not ideal, but not bad.

    That remains to be seen. If it gets binned by the European Parliament a month after the Referendum, or laughed out of court by the ECJ a few months later, it might look a little less good. The odds of the later on the handbrake (migrants) is pretty high, and that is the only bit most of the voter care about.

  • Options

    David Herdson on a Monday? The world doesn't make any sense.

    I wrote two pieces for Saturday but the second (this one) was held over, I'd guess because Mike didn't want three US-based threads in a row when a lot of the site discussion was about the referendum. That's only my surmise though.

    Neither of them was the thread I meant to write though!!
    Thread scheduling has been fun recently.
  • Options
    Pulpstar said:

    @Richard_Nabavi It looks to me like HRC has several human shields lined up to take the fall in the e-mail scandal.

    Yes, maybe so. The trouble is that it's incredibly hard to judge from the outside without a mole in the right bit of the FBI.
  • Options
    Yes there are - winner-takes-all rules don't kick in until March 15.

    Not that the prizes will do him any good. I did think he might be a decent VP pick about two months ago. That prize has gone even if he does end up second in the delegate total.
  • Options
    Indigo said:

    FPT

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    JohnO said:

    Not on pb they aren't.

    And the majority of card-carrying Tories on here will be voting Remain by my calculations.

    Most of the Leavers have already chucked their cards in the bin in disgust, we are mostly ex-members, a legacy from when the Conservative Party was a centre-right party, not the Liberal Democrats with less sandals.
    Also a legacy from when the party was losing?

    As for centre right, spending as a proportion of GDP has come down by 5% and counting. Centre right 7nder my definition.
    Yes, I remember Mr Thatcher "losing" those 3 elections... maybe you are too young :smirk:

    As to spending, you are basically applauding a 30st man for losing a few pounds, when you are that overweight anyone but a idiot (ie Labour) can lose weight, but Osbrown has cut far too little and spent far too much.
    First six years of Thatcher
    1979 42.75%
    1980 44.54%
    1981 45.29%
    1982 45.56%
    1983 43.20%
    1984 42.59%

    First six years of Cameron
    2010 44.86%
    2011 45.31%
    2012 43.97%
    2013 44.05%
    2014 42.40%
    2015 41.39%

    Cameron and Osborne inherited a worse proportion spend of GDP than Thatcher did and have already got it significantly below what Thatcher did in the same period of time. But don't let facts get in your way.
    Damn, I didnt realise that being right-wing was just about public spending, now I realise it has nothing to do with values or a program of government, all becomes clear.
    Sounds finances are the most important part of a centre right government yes.

    Not sure what your definition of "values" is so no comment there. Wouldn't Trump the economics for me though.
  • Options
    tpfkar said:

    I see they are still counting votes in Ireland. STV: Nonsense on stilts.

    A 2 day wait to actually get what you voted for. Seems a decent trade-off to me.
    Except that no-one is going to get what they voted for. What they are going to get is lots of opposition parties.
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,930
    Will Ben Carson ever drop out the race ?
  • Options
    Indigo said:

    FPT

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    JohnO said:

    Not on pb they aren't.

    And the majority of card-carrying Tories on here will be voting Remain by my calculations.

    Most of the Leavers have already chucked their cards in the bin in disgust, we are mostly ex-members, a legacy from when the Conservative Party was a centre-right party, not the Liberal Democrats with less sandals.
    Also a legacy from when the party was losing?

    As for centre right, spending as a proportion of GDP has come down by 5% and counting. Centre right 7nder my definition.
    Yes, I remember Mr Thatcher "losing" those 3 elections... maybe you are too young :smirk:

    As to spending, you are basically applauding a 30st man for losing a few pounds, when you are that overweight anyone but a idiot (ie Labour) can lose weight, but Osbrown has cut far too little and spent far too much.
    First six years of Thatcher
    1979 42.75%
    1980 44.54%
    1981 45.29%
    1982 45.56%
    1983 43.20%
    1984 42.59%

    First six years of Cameron
    2010 44.86%
    2011 45.31%
    2012 43.97%
    2013 44.05%
    2014 42.40%
    2015 41.39%

    Cameron and Osborne inherited a worse proportion spend of GDP than Thatcher did and have already got it significantly below what Thatcher did in the same period of time. But don't let facts get in your way.
    Damn, I didnt realise that being right-wing was just about public spending, now I realise it has nothing to do with values or a program of government, all becomes clear.

    So Labour 1975-79 was right-wing, who knew it..
    What exactly is it that you're spluttering about?

    (And of course Labour under Callaghan wasn't right-wing. The IMF policies imposed on the Callaghan government, on the other hand, were).
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    edited February 2016
    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
  • Options
    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,333
    Indigo said:

    FPT

    TOPPING said:

    The other objectives he got. Plus he got an opt-out of the single rulebook.

    Not ideal, but not bad.

    That remains to be seen. If it gets binned by the European Parliament a month after the Referendum, or laughed out of court by the ECJ a few months later, it might look a little less good. The odds of the later on the handbrake (migrants) is pretty high, and that is the only bit most of the voter care about.

    Yes well of course if you take the view that the EU will do that then that is wholly legitimate and you will vote Leave.

    And you will presumably agree that the negotiations were irrelevant.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966

    Indigo said:

    FPT

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    JohnO said:

    Not on pb they aren't.

    And the majority of card-carrying Tories on here will be voting Remain by my calculations.

    Most of the Leavers have already chucked their cards in the bin in disgust, we are mostly ex-members, a legacy from when the Conservative Party was a centre-right party, not the Liberal Democrats with less sandals.
    Also a legacy from when the party was losing?

    As for centre right, spending as a proportion of GDP has come down by 5% and counting. Centre right 7nder my definition.
    Yes, I remember Mr Thatcher "losing" those 3 elections... maybe you are too young :smirk:

    As to spending, you are basically applauding a 30st man for losing a few pounds, when you are that overweight anyone but a idiot (ie Labour) can lose weight, but Osbrown has cut far too little and spent far too much.
    First six years of Thatcher
    1979 42.75%
    1980 44.54%
    1981 45.29%
    1982 45.56%
    1983 43.20%
    1984 42.59%

    First six years of Cameron
    2010 44.86%
    2011 45.31%
    2012 43.97%
    2013 44.05%
    2014 42.40%
    2015 41.39%

    Cameron and Osborne inherited a worse proportion spend of GDP than Thatcher did and have already got it significantly below what Thatcher did in the same period of time. But don't let facts get in your way.
    Damn, I didnt realise that being right-wing was just about public spending, now I realise it has nothing to do with values or a program of government, all becomes clear.
    Sounds finances are the most important part of a centre right government yes.

    Not sure what your definition of "values" is so no comment there. Wouldn't Trump the economics for me though.
    So Labour 1975-79 was a rightwing government.

    Healey cut 2% in one year, that took Osbrown an entire parliament.
  • Options
    SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    This article needs an eye catching poll to concentrate minds, so here:

    https://twitter.com/ThePlumLineGS/status/704262003574099968
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,013
    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    FPT

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    JohnO said:

    Not on pb they aren't.

    And the majority of card-carrying Tories on here will be voting Remain by my calculations.

    Most of the Leavers have already chucked their cards in the bin in disgust, we are mostly ex-members, a legacy from when the Conservative Party was a centre-right party, not the Liberal Democrats with less sandals.
    Also a legacy from when the party was losing?

    As for centre right, spending as a proportion of GDP has come down by 5% and counting. Centre right 7nder my definition.
    Yes, I remember Mr Thatcher "losing" those 3 elections... maybe you are too young :smirk:

    As to spending, you are basically applauding a 30st man for losing a few pounds, when you are that overweight anyone but a idiot (ie Labour) can lose weight, but Osbrown has cut far too little and spent far too much.
    First six years of Thatcher
    1979 42.75%
    1980 44.54%
    1981 45.29%
    1982 45.56%
    1983 43.20%
    1984 42.59%

    First six years of Cameron
    2010 44.86%
    2011 45.31%
    2012 43.97%
    2013 44.05%
    2014 42.40%
    2015 41.39%

    Cameron and Osborne inherited a worse proportion spend of GDP than Thatcher did and have already got it significantly below what Thatcher did in the same period of time. But don't let facts get in your way.
    Damn, I didnt realise that being right-wing was just about public spending, now I realise it has nothing to do with values or a program of government, all becomes clear.
    Sounds finances are the most important part of a centre right government yes.

    Not sure what your definition of "values" is so no comment there. Wouldn't Trump the economics for me though.
    So Labour 1975-79 was a rightwing government.

    Healey cut 2% in one year, that took Osbrown an entire parliament.
    Labour may not have been right wing, but Healey was at the far right hand wing of his party.
  • Options

    http://order-order.com/2016/02/29/pro-migrant-campaigner-pelted-with-rocks-by-migrants/

    Maybe one day the media might ask all these campaigners why they aren't lobbying the French government to do something. The way they go on, you would think they were in the middle of the nowhere in a war torn country, not a stones throw away from a major housing estate, sport facilities, shops etc.

    Also the Guardian wing of the media bashed the hell out of "benefits street" as poverty porn, but don't seem to have an issue calling this place the "Jungle" (which I don't know, seems kinda of racist, especially if we are judging it by Rhodes Must Fall, can't call Harvard academics "Master" standards etc) and spending weeks on end shoving cameras in people faces.

    Jungles are full of animals. I do not see where racism comes in. There was a blackboard jungle as I recall.
    'Benefits Street' was just one more example of Reality Porn.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,013
    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    There is a cost and a risk associated with every action. The food you eat might be poisoned. The person who agrees to paint your house might be casing the joint. Your taxi driver might be on drugs

    Better to limit the power of the state than to increase transaction costs.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,082
    Speedy said:

    This article needs an eye catching poll to concentrate minds, so here:

    Rubio's transformation into Scrappy Doo was his undoing.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
  • Options
    Speedy said:

    This article needs an eye catching poll to concentrate minds, so here:

    https://twitter.com/ThePlumLineGS/status/704262003574099968

    That CNN poll has pushed Trump to nearly 42% in the HuffPost average:

    http://elections.huffingtonpost.com/pollster/2016-national-gop-primary

    Currently, Trump = Cruz + Rubio + 6.4%
  • Options
    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,216
    edited February 2016
    At the risk of enraging (again) dear old @SeanT, this quote from a certain Mr S Heaney, written at the time when Ireland was being beaten up by the Germans to pay the debts of German banks, is apposite, I think, to the EU debate and also the US election.

    There is a sense in which people want to feel that the political class is on their side. And they - or a proportion of them - don't feel that. Hence the Trumps and Corbyns and Sanders and the unease about immigration and so forth.

    "We are not simply a credit rating or an economy but a history and a culture, a human population rather than a statistical phenomenon."

    Politicians would do well, occasionally, to remember this.
  • Options
    Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited February 2016
    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
  • Options
    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034
    Indigo said:

    FPT

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    JohnO said:

    Not on pb they aren't.

    And the majority of card-carrying Tories on here will be voting Remain by my calculations.

    Most of the Leavers have already chucked their cards in the bin in disgust, we are mostly ex-members, a legacy from when the Conservative Party was a centre-right party, not the Liberal Democrats with less sandals.
    Also a legacy from when the party was losing?

    As for centre right, spending as a proportion of GDP has come down by 5% and counting. Centre right 7nder my definition.
    Yes, I remember Mr Thatcher "losing" those 3 elections... maybe you are too young :smirk:

    As to spending, you are basically applauding a 30st man for losing a few pounds, when you are that overweight anyone but a idiot (ie Labour) can lose weight, but Osbrown has cut far too little and spent far too much.
    First six years of Thatcher
    1979 42.75%
    1980 44.54%
    1981 45.29%
    1982 45.56%
    1983 43.20%
    1984 42.59%

    First six years of Cameron
    2010 44.86%
    2011 45.31%
    2012 43.97%
    2013 44.05%
    2014 42.40%
    2015 41.39%

    Cameron and Osborne inherited a worse proportion spend of GDP than Thatcher did and have already got it significantly below what Thatcher did in the same period of time. But don't let facts get in your way.
    Damn, I didnt realise that being right-wing was just about public spending, now I realise it has nothing to do with values or a program of government, all becomes clear.

    So Labour 1975-79 was right-wing, who knew it..
    A little disingenuous with your side-by-side comparison of the government spends there, Mr Thompson. Thatcher took over at the nadir of a recession, Cameron 2 years after. Adjusting for that we have:

    45.29% vs 44.86%
    45.56% vs 45.31%
    43.20% vs 43.97%
    42.59% vs 44.05%

    That would argue that Thatcher indeed moved faster to get spending under control.

    Those who lived through the late seventies and early 80s remember how quickly unemployment exploded from around 440k to 1.5m (5.2%-14.8% by 1986). That probably accounted for all the Thatcher increases in GDP spending.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    TOPPING said:

    Indigo said:

    FPT

    TOPPING said:

    The other objectives he got. Plus he got an opt-out of the single rulebook.

    Not ideal, but not bad.

    That remains to be seen. If it gets binned by the European Parliament a month after the Referendum, or laughed out of court by the ECJ a few months later, it might look a little less good. The odds of the later on the handbrake (migrants) is pretty high, and that is the only bit most of the voter care about.

    Yes well of course if you take the view that the EU will do that then that is wholly legitimate and you will vote Leave.

    And you will presumably agree that the negotiations were irrelevant.
    Yes and no.

    You will forgive me if I side step your rhetorical trap of asking me why I am objecting to something that is irrelevant.

    They are irrelevant for me personally, they are however a device which the government is using to garner support, they therefore have value to the extent that the strategy works. If using the negotiations yields a Remain vote, were not using them would have yielded a Leave (which seems a likely outcome), and they are subsequently disemboweled, the public will have been sold a pup, and entitled to ask for their money back, something I can't see the PM allowing.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,329

    DavidL said:

    They think its all over....

    It is now. First first in ages.

    Is that not blasphemous language for a Scot?
    Nah. It was a mere scene setter for us becoming world champions in 1967.
  • Options
    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    FPT

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    JohnO said:

    Not on pb they aren't.

    And the majority of card-carrying Tories on here will be voting Remain by my calculations.

    Most of the Leavers have already chucked their cards in the bin in disgust, we are mostly ex-members, a legacy from when the Conservative Party was a centre-right party, not the Liberal Democrats with less sandals.
    Also a legacy from when the party was losing?

    As for centre right, spending as a proportion of GDP has come down by 5% and counting. Centre right 7nder my definition.
    Yes, I remember Mr Thatcher "losing" those 3 elections... maybe you are too young :smirk:

    As to spending, you are basically applauding a 30st man for losing a few pounds, when you are that overweight anyone but a idiot (ie Labour) can lose weight, but Osbrown has cut far too little and spent far too much.
    First six years of Thatcher
    1979 42.75%
    1980 44.54%
    1981 45.29%
    1982 45.56%
    1983 43.20%
    1984 42.59%

    First six years of Cameron
    2010 44.86%
    2011 45.31%
    2012 43.97%
    2013 44.05%
    2014 42.40%
    2015 41.39%

    Cameron and Osborne inherited a worse proportion spend of GDP than Thatcher did and have already got it significantly below what Thatcher did in the same period of time. But don't let facts get in your way.
    Damn, I didnt realise that being right-wing was just about public spending, now I realise it has nothing to do with values or a program of government, all becomes clear.
    Sounds finances are the most important part of a centre right government yes.

    Not sure what your definition of "values" is so no comment there. Wouldn't Trump the economics for me though.
    So Labour 1975-79 was a rightwing government.

    Healey cut 2% in one year, that took Osbrown an entire parliament.
    The IMF enforced some right wing policies yes. How long did it take Thatcher?
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
    How many would you like before you decide your policy is ill advised.

    You appear to be adopting the approach of a bank manager that feels adding doors to his safe is a little expensive as he hasn't been robbed yet.

    The first duty of government is the protection of its citizens
  • Options
    MTimT said:

    Indigo said:

    FPT

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    JohnO said:

    Not on pb they aren't.

    And the majority of card-carrying Tories on here will be voting Remain by my calculations.

    Most of the Leavers have already chucked their cards in the bin in disgust, we are mostly ex-members, a legacy from when the Conservative Party was a centre-right party, not the Liberal Democrats with less sandals.
    Also a legacy from when the party was losing?

    As for centre right, spending as a proportion of GDP has come down by 5% and counting. Centre right 7nder my definition.
    Yes, I remember Mr Thatcher "losing" those 3 elections... maybe you are too young :smirk:

    As to spending, you are basically applauding a 30st man for losing a few pounds, when you are that overweight anyone but a idiot (ie Labour) can lose weight, but Osbrown has cut far too little and spent far too much.
    First six years of Thatcher
    1979 42.75%
    1980 44.54%
    1981 45.29%
    1982 45.56%
    1983 43.20%
    1984 42.59%

    First six years of Cameron
    2010 44.86%
    2011 45.31%
    2012 43.97%
    2013 44.05%
    2014 42.40%
    2015 41.39%

    Cameron and Osborne inherited a worse proportion spend of GDP than Thatcher did and have already got it significantly below what Thatcher did in the same period of time. But don't let facts get in your way.
    Damn, I didnt realise that being right-wing was just about public spending, now I realise it has nothing to do with values or a program of government, all becomes clear.

    So Labour 1975-79 was right-wing, who knew it..
    A little disingenuous with your side-by-side comparison of the government spends there, Mr Thompson. Thatcher took over at the nadir of a recession, Cameron 2 years after. Adjusting for that we have:

    45.29% vs 44.86%
    45.56% vs 45.31%
    43.20% vs 43.97%
    42.59% vs 44.05%

    That would argue that Thatcher indeed moved faster to get spending under control.

    Those who lived through the late seventies and early 80s remember how quickly unemployment exploded from around 440k to 1.5m (5.2%-14.8% by 1986). That probably accounted for all the Thatcher increases in GDP spending.
    Adjusting like that is disingenuous because a new governments policies tend to cause a slight uptick at first as they spend money to resolve the problems before it comes down. As happened tor both governments.

    When Cameron took over all the talk was about a double dip recession so to dismiss the recession as two year old history is shall we say interesting.
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    SeanT said:

    Cyclefree said:

    At the risk of enraging (again) dear old @SeanT, this quote from a certain Mr S Heaney, written at the time when Ireland was being beaten up by the Germans to pay the debts of German banks, is apposite, I think, to the EU debate and also the US election.

    There is a sense in which people want to feel that the political class is on their side. And they - or a proportion of them - don't feel that. Hence the Trumps and Corbyns and Sanders and the unease about immigration and so forth.

    "We are not simply a credit rating or an economy but a history and a culture, a human population rather than a statistical phenomenon."

    Politicians would do well, occasionally, to remember this.

    I may not be a huge fan of his poems, but Heaney was a good man, and a wise old owl, and he was right about culture and nationhood.

    Incidentally I met Heaney at the launch of his famous volume of assorted verse: The Rattle Bag. I got him and Ted Hughes to sign it. A treasured possession.

    The evening was very memorable in many ways. I propositioned Joanna Lumley, for a start.
    Was that the night you got hog-whimperingly drunk and stuck your hand up the skirt of your subsequent, but now ex, squeeze while on the rebound from Ms Lumley's crushing putdown?
  • Options
    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034
    edited February 2016

    Adjusting like that is disingenuous because a new governments policies tend to cause a slight uptick at first as they spend money to resolve the problems before it comes down. As happened tor both governments.

    When Cameron took over all the talk was about a double dip recession so to dismiss the recession as two year old history is shall we say interesting.

    You can't get away from the fact that recessions follow cycles. You can argue the details, but it is simply wrong to start side-by-side analyses from different points in a cycle, as you did.
  • Options
    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,216

    http://order-order.com/2016/02/29/pro-migrant-campaigner-pelted-with-rocks-by-migrants/

    Maybe one day the media might ask all these campaigners why they aren't lobbying the French government to do something. The way they go on, you would think they were in the middle of the nowhere in a war torn country, not a stones throw away from a major housing estate, sport facilities, shops etc.

    Also the Guardian wing of the media bashed the hell out of "benefits street" as poverty porn, but don't seem to have an issue calling this place the "Jungle" (which I don't know, seems kinda of racist, especially if we are judging it by Rhodes Must Fall, can't call Harvard academics "Master" standards etc) and spending weeks on end shoving cameras in people faces.

    Ah but you are forgetting that the campaigners are part of the "I want" generation. So since those in the camp want to go to Britain then it automatically follows that they are our problem, you see. They want. That's all that matters. The law, other people's wants or needs are all irrelevant to the very great "wants" of those in the camp.

    "I want must get" seems to be the mantra.

  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,013

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
    It's almost certain that at least some of their ancestors arrived illegally. So, your point is moot.
  • Options
    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
    How many would you like before you decide your policy is ill advised.

    You appear to be adopting the approach of a bank manager that feels adding doors to his safe is a little expensive as he hasn't been robbed yet.

    The first duty of government is the protection of its citizens
    At least one. If we decide each imagined problem is real then we'd all be paranoid. The government is protecting it's citizens. While you can never be perfect the police and security services do a good job and should not be dismissed so flippantly by you.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,329

    It certainly does look as though it's going to be Trump vs Clinton, unless the email scandal explodes. From a betting point of view, it is very hard to assess the likelihood of such an explosion, but I don't think we can rule it out.

    This article summarises the case for the prosecution quite well, I think:

    http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2016/02/29/hillarys_victories_mean_painful_legal_choices_for_doj_wh.html

    On a day when Roger has delivered an 80/1 shot in the Oscars I feel quite modest about having a bet on Trump at 9/2 but it is looking better all the time.

    Hillary will find Trump almost impossible to handle and he can reach and enthuse parts of the electorate who have not even thought about the republicans for a long time.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,013
    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
    How many would you like before you decide your policy is ill advised.

    You appear to be adopting the approach of a bank manager that feels adding doors to his safe is a little expensive as he hasn't been robbed yet.

    The first duty of government is the protection of its citizens
    If that were true then the speed limit would be 20mph.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966

    MTimT said:

    Indigo said:

    Damn, I didnt realise that being right-wing was just about public spending, now I realise it has nothing to do with values or a program of government, all becomes clear.

    So Labour 1975-79 was right-wing, who knew it..

    A little disingenuous with your side-by-side comparison of the government spends there, Mr Thompson. Thatcher took over at the nadir of a recession, Cameron 2 years after. Adjusting for that we have:

    45.29% vs 44.86%
    45.56% vs 45.31%
    43.20% vs 43.97%
    42.59% vs 44.05%

    That would argue that Thatcher indeed moved faster to get spending under control.

    Those who lived through the late seventies and early 80s remember how quickly unemployment exploded from around 440k to 1.5m (5.2%-14.8% by 1986). That probably accounted for all the Thatcher increases in GDP spending.
    Adjusting like that is disingenuous because a new governments policies tend to cause a slight uptick at first as they spend money to resolve the problems before it comes down. As happened tor both governments.

    When Cameron took over all the talk was about a double dip recession so to dismiss the recession as two year old history is shall we say interesting.
    That would be most unusual. Most government cut at beginning of their term because its unpopular and they want it done as far from the election as possible, then they turn of the spending taps closer to the election to buy votes... see Osborne and pensioner benefits.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    rcs1000 said:

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
    How many would you like before you decide your policy is ill advised.

    You appear to be adopting the approach of a bank manager that feels adding doors to his safe is a little expensive as he hasn't been robbed yet.

    The first duty of government is the protection of its citizens
    If that were true then the speed limit would be 20mph.
    Did you misread the word "first" as "only" ?
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    edited February 2016

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:



    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.

    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
    How many would you like before you decide your policy is ill advised.

    You appear to be adopting the approach of a bank manager that feels adding doors to his safe is a little expensive as he hasn't been robbed yet.

    The first duty of government is the protection of its citizens
    At least one. If we decide each imagined problem is real then we'd all be paranoid. The government is protecting it's citizens. While you can never be perfect the police and security services do a good job and should not be dismissed so flippantly by you.
    Conjecture. They may do a good job, they may not, you only have the word of a man who told us the EU deal was excellent, I would no long trust him to order a bacon sandwich.
  • Options
    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Has Dan been reading PB?

    @DPJHodges: If Out want people to vote for Brexit they're going to have to explain what it looks like. Not what it doesn't look like.
  • Options
    rcs1000 said:

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
    It's almost certain that at least some of their ancestors arrived illegally. So, your point is moot.
    No its not. It isn't illegal immigrants who are blowing up skyscraper. The key to tackle the threat of terrorism is a well funded and highly skilled intelligence and police service. Not scaremongering and scapegoating.
  • Options
    Mr Herdson on a Monday? – err, it is Monday, right?
  • Options
    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    rcs1000 said:

    TOPPING said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    £55m? You'd leave the EU for that?
    Give benefits of any sort.
    The collaterals on this are enormous as well. Housing, school places, healthcare, transport pressures etc.

  • Options
    Indigo said:

    MTimT said:

    Indigo said:

    Damn, I didnt realise that being right-wing was just about public spending, now I realise it has nothing to do with values or a program of government, all becomes clear.

    So Labour 1975-79 was right-wing, who knew it..

    A little disingenuous with your side-by-side comparison of the government spends there, Mr Thompson. Thatcher took over at the nadir of a recession, Cameron 2 years after. Adjusting for that we have:

    45.29% vs 44.86%
    45.56% vs 45.31%
    43.20% vs 43.97%
    42.59% vs 44.05%

    That would argue that Thatcher indeed moved faster to get spending under control.

    Those who lived through the late seventies and early 80s remember how quickly unemployment exploded from around 440k to 1.5m (5.2%-14.8% by 1986). That probably accounted for all the Thatcher increases in GDP spending.
    Adjusting like that is disingenuous because a new governments policies tend to cause a slight uptick at first as they spend money to resolve the problems before it comes down. As happened tor both governments.

    When Cameron took over all the talk was about a double dip recession so to dismiss the recession as two year old history is shall we say interesting.
    That would be most unusual. Most government cut at beginning of their term because its unpopular and they want it done as far from the election as possible, then they turn of the spending taps closer to the election to buy votes... see Osborne and pensioner benefits.
    It is quicker to boost spending than to cut. Even if you announce a cut on day one it may not show on the accounts for another year. If you announce extra spending on day one it can show in the account immediately.
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,930

    tpfkar said:

    I see they are still counting votes in Ireland. STV: Nonsense on stilts.

    A 2 day wait to actually get what you voted for. Seems a decent trade-off to me.
    Except that no-one is going to get what they voted for. What they are going to get is lots of opposition parties.
    Changes from first pref:

    +1 PBP
    +1 IND
    +1 G
    +1 LAB
    0 SF
    -2 FG
    -2 FF

    So, not alot of difference from multi member FPTP.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,013
    chestnut said:

    rcs1000 said:

    TOPPING said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    £55m? You'd leave the EU for that?
    Give benefits of any sort.
    The collaterals on this are enormous as well. Housing, school places, healthcare, transport pressures etc.

    I think it is not unreasonable to ask non-citizens to pay an annual Services Charge of - say - £2,000.
  • Options
    MTimT said:

    Indigo said:

    FPT

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    JohnO said:

    Not on pb they aren't.

    And the majority of card-carrying Tories on here will be voting Remain by my calculations.

    ...
    Also a legacy from when the party was losing?

    As for centre right, spending as a proportion of GDP has come down by 5% and counting. Centre right 7nder my definition.
    Yes, I remember Mr Thatcher "losing" those 3 elections... maybe you are too young :smirk:

    As to spending, you are basically applauding a 30st man for losing a few pounds, when you are that overweight anyone but a idiot (ie Labour) can lose weight, but Osbrown has cut far too little and spent far too much.
    First six years of Thatcher
    1979 42.75%
    1980 44.54%
    1981 45.29%
    1982 45.56%
    1983 43.20%
    1984 42.59%

    First six years of Cameron
    2010 44.86%
    2011 45.31%
    2012 43.97%
    2013 44.05%
    2014 42.40%
    2015 41.39%

    Cameron and Osborne inherited a worse proportion spend of GDP than Thatcher did and have already got it significantly below what Thatcher did in the same period of time. But don't let facts get in your way.
    Damn, I didnt realise that being right-wing was just about public spending, now I realise it has nothing to do with values or a program of government, all becomes clear.

    So Labour 1975-79 was right-wing, who knew it..
    A little disingenuous with your side-by-side comparison of the government spends there, Mr Thompson. Thatcher took over at the nadir of a recession, Cameron 2 years after. Adjusting for that we have:

    45.29% vs 44.86%
    45.56% vs 45.31%
    43.20% vs 43.97%
    42.59% vs 44.05%

    That would argue that Thatcher indeed moved faster to get spending under control.

    Those who lived through the late seventies and early 80s remember how quickly unemployment exploded from around 440k to 1.5m (5.2%-14.8% by 1986). That probably accounted for all the Thatcher increases in GDP spending.
    The 2008 depression wiped out a substantial chunk of the economy and Brown had massively increased government spending in his time. The nature of the two periods is different. In 1979 the deficit was something like £10 billion. In 2009 it was something like £160bn. The 2010 deficit was not much different. Over £300bn in deficits in just 2 years.
    Brown spent 18 months lowering VAT and 'bringing forward' spending to prop up the economy (and his election chances). If you think the economy 2 years after the crash was in anything other than a nadir then you are a snake oil salesman who will get no custom from me.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:



    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.

    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
    How many would you like before you decide your policy is ill advised.

    You appear to be adopting the approach of a bank manager that feels adding doors to his safe is a little expensive as he hasn't been robbed yet.

    The first duty of government is the protection of its citizens
    At least one. If we decide each imagined problem is real then we'd all be paranoid. The government is protecting it's citizens. While you can never be perfect the police and security services do a good job and should not be dismissed so flippantly by you.
    You could start by not having a free travel area with a group of countries which don't have any meaningful borders and are attracting several million illegal migrants per year some of which are known to be terrorists, and a significant number are claimed (by both terrorists and security sources) to be terrorists. You are rather blase about other peoples lives, I hope it doesn't come to haunt you.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    edited February 2016

    rcs1000 said:

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:



    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.

    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
    It's almost certain that at least some of their ancestors arrived illegally. So, your point is moot.
    No its not. It isn't illegal immigrants who are blowing up skyscraper. The key to tackle the threat of terrorism is a well funded and highly skilled intelligence and police service. Not scaremongering and scapegoating.
    Ah that's relief I thought you understood something about security.

    At the time of Lee Rigby it was revealed that the security services had the capability to put full time surveillance on about 400 people. The people that murdered him had come to their notice, but they did not have the resources to watch everyone. How many people are arriving now from countries that don't like us very much ? How many returning jihadis ? They will never have enough resources to come even close.
  • Options
    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    edited February 2016
    Indigo said:

    You could start by not having a free travel area with a group of countries which don't have any meaningful borders and are attracting several million illegal migrants per year some of which are known to be terrorists, and a significant number are claimed (by both terrorists and security sources) to be terrorists.

    Good point.

    That's why we don't have a free travel area with such a group.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,013

    rcs1000 said:

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
    It's almost certain that at least some of their ancestors arrived illegally. So, your point is moot.
    No its not. It isn't illegal immigrants who are blowing up skyscraper. The key to tackle the threat of terrorism is a well funded and highly skilled intelligence and police service. Not scaremongering and scapegoating.
    image
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,850
    Cyclefree said:

    http://order-order.com/2016/02/29/pro-migrant-campaigner-pelted-with-rocks-by-migrants/

    Maybe one day the media might ask all these campaigners why they aren't lobbying the French government to do something. The way they go on, you would think they were in the middle of the nowhere in a war torn country, not a stones throw away from a major housing estate, sport facilities, shops etc.

    Also the Guardian wing of the media bashed the hell out of "benefits street" as poverty porn, but don't seem to have an issue calling this place the "Jungle" (which I don't know, seems kinda of racist, especially if we are judging it by Rhodes Must Fall, can't call Harvard academics "Master" standards etc) and spending weeks on end shoving cameras in people faces.

    Ah but you are forgetting that the campaigners are part of the "I want" generation. So since those in the camp want to go to Britain then it automatically follows that they are our problem, you see. They want. That's all that matters. The law, other people's wants or needs are all irrelevant to the very great "wants" of those in the camp.

    "I want must get" seems to be the mantra.

    Their getting stoned by the migrants is still a heart-warming story, though.
  • Options

    Indigo said:

    You could start by not having a free travel area with a group of countries which don't have any meaningful borders and are attracting several million illegal migrants per year some of which are known to be terrorists, and a significant number are claimed (by both terrorists and security sources) to be terrorists.

    Good point.

    That's why we don't have a free travel area with such a group.
    Correct
    Some people really are idiots aren't they.
  • Options
    Pulpstar said:

    tpfkar said:

    I see they are still counting votes in Ireland. STV: Nonsense on stilts.

    A 2 day wait to actually get what you voted for. Seems a decent trade-off to me.
    Except that no-one is going to get what they voted for. What they are going to get is lots of opposition parties.
    Changes from first pref:

    +1 PBP
    +1 IND
    +1 G
    +1 LAB
    0 SF
    -2 FG
    -2 FF

    So, not alot of difference from multi member FPTP.
    What about single member FPTP?
  • Options
    runnymederunnymede Posts: 2,536
    'I think it is not unreasonable to ask non-citizens to pay an annual Services Charge of - say - £2,000'

    Make it £5000 and I suspect much of the current problem would go away. And if it doesn't, you make it £10000
  • Options
    rcs1000 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    If we could also throw out criminals, potential terrorists, hate preachers, vagrant and other malcontents that are not citizens I might agree with you... and if we gave people applying at embassies and consulates an absolute priority over people arriving unlawfully. Most states have the ability to declare a non-citizen persona non grata and have them expelled from the country.
    The people who arrive illegally are a tiny fraction of those who arrived legally.
    Yes I am well aware of that.

    How many does it take to blow up a skyscraper in London ? or preach hate to our public ?
    How many skyscrapers have been blown up in the UK by people who entered the country illegally? How many in fact by those who weren't born in the country?
    It's almost certain that at least some of their ancestors arrived illegally. So, your point is moot.
    No its not. It isn't illegal immigrants who are blowing up skyscraper. The key to tackle the threat of terrorism is a well funded and highly skilled intelligence and police service. Not scaremongering and scapegoating.
    image
    Too many people make remarks like that seriously so didn't realise you were joking.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966

    Indigo said:

    You could start by not having a free travel area with a group of countries which don't have any meaningful borders and are attracting several million illegal migrants per year some of which are known to be terrorists, and a significant number are claimed (by both terrorists and security sources) to be terrorists.

    Good point.

    That's why we don't have a free travel area with such a group.
    That's a very small nit to pick. We are not in Schengen its true, but we still cannot stop an EU citizen from coming here no matter how unsavoury their record.
  • Options
    MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584

    Too many people make remarks like that seriously so didn't realise you were joking.

    :wink: is the usual method
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,013
    runnymede said:

    'I think it is not unreasonable to ask non-citizens to pay an annual Services Charge of - say - £2,000'

    Make it £5000 and I suspect much of the current problem would go away. And if it doesn't, you make it £10000

    Even if you made it just £2,000, you would have a massive effect. Actually paying money to be here would mean that only the most ambitious and hard working would want to come. We'd also net a really good profit that would enable you to lower taxes for most people.

    The final advantage is that - unlike all the micromanaging solutions - it needs no bureaucracy and (as you say) if we still feel we're getting too many people we can raise the cost the next year.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    edited February 2016

    Indigo said:

    You could start by not having a free travel area with a group of countries which don't have any meaningful borders and are attracting several million illegal migrants per year some of which are known to be terrorists, and a significant number are claimed (by both terrorists and security sources) to be terrorists.

    Good point.

    That's why we don't have a free travel area with such a group.
    Correct
    Some people really are idiots aren't they.
    Oh its Flightbot, sticking in his oar again.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markov_chain#Markov_text_generators
  • Options
    Indigo said:

    Indigo said:

    You could start by not having a free travel area with a group of countries which don't have any meaningful borders and are attracting several million illegal migrants per year some of which are known to be terrorists, and a significant number are claimed (by both terrorists and security sources) to be terrorists.

    Good point.

    That's why we don't have a free travel area with such a group.
    That's a very small nit to pick. We are not in Schengen its true, but we still cannot stop an EU citizen from coming here no matter how unsavoury their record.
    But we can stop illegal migrants to Schengen known to be terrorists.
  • Options
    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034

    rcs1000 said:



    It's almost certain that at least some of their ancestors arrived illegally. So, your point is moot.

    No its not. It isn't illegal immigrants who are blowing up skyscraper. The key to tackle the threat of terrorism is a well funded and highly skilled intelligence and police service. Not scaremongering and scapegoating.
    I would hope that security would have more elements than just intelligence and policing. In most safety and security systems, these tend to be smaller elements - hazard identification and removal/mitigation where possible, universal (i.e. all users) situation awareness of hazards, resilience, robustness, physical defence in depth, contingency planning, rapid emergency response and the training and education that makes all these work (the list goes on), tend to contribute much more to prevention and mitigation than interdiction.

    I grant that in certain fields greater emphasis has to be on intelligence, but even in such fields, as bioterrorism, the aim surely should be on making the effects of any attack no worse than, say, a train crash than on trying to prevent all incidents.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    rcs1000 said:

    runnymede said:

    'I think it is not unreasonable to ask non-citizens to pay an annual Services Charge of - say - £2,000'

    Make it £5000 and I suspect much of the current problem would go away. And if it doesn't, you make it £10000

    Even if you made it just £2,000, you would have a massive effect. Actually paying money to be here would mean that only the most ambitious and hard working would want to come. We'd also net a really good profit that would enable you to lower taxes for most people.

    The final advantage is that - unlike all the micromanaging solutions - it needs no bureaucracy and (as you say) if we still feel we're getting too many people we can raise the cost the next year.
    Its really what the Danes proposed last month which caused convulsions in left, about confiscating goods to pay for their board and lodging. Not the faintest chance of it happening in the UK, half the Tory party would have an attack of the vapours, never mind Labour.
  • Options
    rcs1000 said:

    runnymede said:

    'I think it is not unreasonable to ask non-citizens to pay an annual Services Charge of - say - £2,000'

    Make it £5000 and I suspect much of the current problem would go away. And if it doesn't, you make it £10000

    Even if you made it just £2,000, you would have a massive effect. Actually paying money to be here would mean that only the most ambitious and hard working would want to come. We'd also net a really good profit that would enable you to lower taxes for most people.

    The final advantage is that - unlike all the micromanaging solutions - it needs no bureaucracy and (as you say) if we still feel we're getting too many people we can raise the cost the next year.
    Cayman Islands 10+ years ago had about 20,000 work permits and 35,000 nationals. Work permits charged up to £10000 a year, though some as low as £2000. No income or NI tax. All expat medical and schools had to be self funded. Worked fine, people who did not like it did not come or left.

    Now if we just had a work permit charge, scaled by types or a % of salary.
  • Options
    MTimT said:

    rcs1000 said:



    It's almost certain that at least some of their ancestors arrived illegally. So, your point is moot.

    No its not. It isn't illegal immigrants who are blowing up skyscraper. The key to tackle the threat of terrorism is a well funded and highly skilled intelligence and police service. Not scaremongering and scapegoating.
    I would hope that security would have more elements than just intelligence and policing. In most safety and security systems, these tend to be smaller elements - hazard identification and removal/mitigation where possible, universal (i.e. all users) situation awareness of hazards, resilience, robustness, physical defence in depth, contingency planning, rapid emergency response and the training and education that makes all these work (the list goes on), tend to contribute much more to prevention and mitigation than interdiction.

    I grant that in certain fields greater emphasis has to be on intelligence, but even in such fields, as bioterrorism, the aim surely should be on making the effects of any attack no worse than, say, a train crash than on trying to prevent all incidents.
    Indeed you make my point that there is a plethora the government is doing.
  • Options
    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Damn, I wish the losers would shut up about rerunning the result...

    @jennirsl: .@NicolaSturgeon: Disastrous for UK to vote No. If do, of course Scots may have new ref.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,013
    SeanT said:

    Those migrants trying to smash their way into Macedonia must be thankful they aren't Mexicans trying to smash their way into Texas.

    One can imagine what might happen in the latter case.

    Perhaps we need to learn from the Americans.

    Yes, but I don't need an illegal maid.
  • Options
    john_zimsjohn_zims Posts: 3,399
    edited February 2016
    @rcs1000


    'I think it is not unreasonable to ask non-citizens to pay an annual Services Charge of - say - £2,000. '

    Excellent idea.

    What if the UK government passed a law that benefits were only payable to UK & EU nationals if their families had a record of at least 5 years of tax contributions ?

    The EU discrimination argument goes out the window ?

  • Options
    taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    edited February 2016
    SeanT said:

    Cyclefree said:

    http://order-order.com/2016/02/29/pro-migrant-campaigner-pelted-with-rocks-by-migrants/

    Maybe one day the media might ask all these campaigners why they aren't lobbying the French government to do something. The way they go on, you would think they were in the middle of the nowhere in a war torn country, not a stones throw away from a major housing estate, sport facilities, shops etc.

    Also the Guardian wing of the media bashed the hell out of "benefits street" as poverty porn, but don't seem to have an issue calling this place the "Jungle" (which I don't know, seems kinda of racist, especially if we are judging it by Rhodes Must Fall, can't call Harvard academics "Master" standards etc) and spending weeks on end shoving cameras in people faces.

    Ah but you are forgetting that the campaigners are part of the "I want" generation. So since those in the camp want to go to Britain then it automatically follows that they are our problem, you see. They want. That's all that matters. The law, other people's wants or needs are all irrelevant to the very great "wants" of those in the camp.

    "I want must get" seems to be the mantra.

    Has anyone told the mgrants that literally trying to ram and smash your way through frontiers, as here

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-02-29/caught-tape-500-syrians-storm-greek-border-fence-homemade-battering-ram

    ... is not necessarily the best way to persuade your host countries to accept you?

    It gets evermore difficult to see what differentiates these people from an invading army.
    How many people at Calais are, in effect, expecting a menu of wealthy countries to be unfurled in front of them, for them to choose where to claim asylum?
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966

    MTimT said:

    rcs1000 said:



    It's almost certain that at least some of their ancestors arrived illegally. So, your point is moot.

    No its not. It isn't illegal immigrants who are blowing up skyscraper. The key to tackle the threat of terrorism is a well funded and highly skilled intelligence and police service. Not scaremongering and scapegoating.
    I would hope that security would have more elements than just intelligence and policing. In most safety and security systems, these tend to be smaller elements - hazard identification and removal/mitigation where possible, universal (i.e. all users) situation awareness of hazards, resilience, robustness, physical defence in depth, contingency planning, rapid emergency response and the training and education that makes all these work (the list goes on), tend to contribute much more to prevention and mitigation than interdiction.

    I grant that in certain fields greater emphasis has to be on intelligence, but even in such fields, as bioterrorism, the aim surely should be on making the effects of any attack no worse than, say, a train crash than on trying to prevent all incidents.
    Indeed you make my point that there is a plethora the government is doing.
    Pure speculation. I hope you are right, but its pure speculation.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,013
    john_zims said:

    @rcs1000


    'I think it is not unreasonable to ask non-citizens to pay an annual Services Charge of - say - £2,000. '

    Excellent idea.

    What if the UK government passed a law that benefits were only payable to UK & EU nationals if their families had a record of at least 5 years of tax contributions ?

    The EU discrimination argument goes out the window ?

    It is also the right thing to do, irrespective of whether we're in the EU.
  • Options
    Indigo said:

    MTimT said:

    rcs1000 said:



    It's almost certain that at least some of their ancestors arrived illegally. So, your point is moot.

    No its not. It isn't illegal immigrants who are blowing up skyscraper. The key to tackle the threat of terrorism is a well funded and highly skilled intelligence and police service. Not scaremongering and scapegoating.
    I would hope that security would have more elements than just intelligence and policing. In most safety and security systems, these tend to be smaller elements - hazard identification and removal/mitigation where possible, universal (i.e. all users) situation awareness of hazards, resilience, robustness, physical defence in depth, contingency planning, rapid emergency response and the training and education that makes all these work (the list goes on), tend to contribute much more to prevention and mitigation than interdiction.

    I grant that in certain fields greater emphasis has to be on intelligence, but even in such fields, as bioterrorism, the aim surely should be on making the effects of any attack no worse than, say, a train crash than on trying to prevent all incidents.
    Indeed you make my point that there is a plethora the government is doing.
    Pure speculation. I hope you are right, but its pure speculation.
    Whether it's enough is speculation. Whether the government is doing a lot is not. Of course no system is perfect.
  • Options
    blackburn63blackburn63 Posts: 4,492
    I'm not overly fussed by immigration, although I'm realistic enough to understand how it impacts on public services. I do find it peculiar that people can arrive here and be given money they aren't entitled to at home. I have zero interest in religion or "culture", whatever it is.

    What I strongly object to is the number of politicians we have imposing their will on us. Especially in the case of the EU when we can't do anything to boot them out.

    What's needed is a global Yellow Pages where people selling things can contact people who might want to buy them. Politicians can fuck off out of the way, none of them have the slightest knowledge of how trade works. People buy things they want or need, they don't need idiots with stupid titles telling them what those things are.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966

    Indigo said:

    MTimT said:

    rcs1000 said:



    It's almost certain that at least some of their ancestors arrived illegally. So, your point is moot.

    No its not. It isn't illegal immigrants who are blowing up skyscraper. The key to tackle the threat of terrorism is a well funded and highly skilled intelligence and police service. Not scaremongering and scapegoating.
    I would hope that security would have more elements than just intelligence and policing. In most safety and security systems, these tend to be smaller elements - hazard identification and removal/mitigation where possible, universal (i.e. all users) situation awareness of hazards, resilience, robustness, physical defence in depth, contingency planning, rapid emergency response and the training and education that makes all these work (the list goes on), tend to contribute much more to prevention and mitigation than interdiction.

    I grant that in certain fields greater emphasis has to be on intelligence, but even in such fields, as bioterrorism, the aim surely should be on making the effects of any attack no worse than, say, a train crash than on trying to prevent all incidents.
    Indeed you make my point that there is a plethora the government is doing.
    Pure speculation. I hope you are right, but its pure speculation.
    Whether it's enough is speculation. Whether the government is doing a lot is not. Of course no system is perfect.
    Even that is. You only have their word for it. A lot of what happens is https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_theater
  • Options

    rcs1000 said:

    runnymede said:

    'I think it is not unreasonable to ask non-citizens to pay an annual Services Charge of - say - £2,000'

    Make it £5000 and I suspect much of the current problem would go away. And if it doesn't, you make it £10000

    Even if you made it just £2,000, you would have a massive effect. Actually paying money to be here would mean that only the most ambitious and hard working would want to come. We'd also net a really good profit that would enable you to lower taxes for most people.

    The final advantage is that - unlike all the micromanaging solutions - it needs no bureaucracy and (as you say) if we still feel we're getting too many people we can raise the cost the next year.
    Cayman Islands 10+ years ago had about 20,000 work permits and 35,000 nationals. Work permits charged up to £10000 a year, though some as low as £2000. No income or NI tax. All expat medical and schools had to be self funded. Worked fine, people who did not like it did not come or left.

    Now if we just had a work permit charge, scaled by types or a % of salary.
    There is another deterrent to people wanting on mass to go to the Cayman Islands. Essentials such as food as incredibly expensive.
  • Options
    SeanT said:

    Indigo said:

    rcs1000 said:

    runnymede said:

    'I think it is not unreasonable to ask non-citizens to pay an annual Services Charge of - say - £2,000'

    Make it £5000 and I suspect much of the current problem would go away. And if it doesn't, you make it £10000

    Even if you made it just £2,000, you would have a massive effect. Actually paying money to be here would mean that only the most ambitious and hard working would want to come. We'd also net a really good profit that would enable you to lower taxes for most people.

    The final advantage is that - unlike all the micromanaging solutions - it needs no bureaucracy and (as you say) if we still feel we're getting too many people we can raise the cost the next year.
    Its really what the Danes proposed last month which caused convulsions in left, about confiscating goods to pay for their board and lodging. Not the faintest chance of it happening in the UK, half the Tory party would have an attack of the vapours, never mind Labour.
    It will happen here in the end. Nordic countries used to be the most liberal and welcoming of nations; under the pressures of migration, and with the rise of the populist right, that is changing very fast.
    The irony is that because we have had centre right governments first refuse to sign up to Schengen and now refuse to join in with Merkel's madness that we are not under the same migration pressures.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited February 2016
    taffys said:

    SeanT said:

    Cyclefree said:

    http://order-order.com/2016/02/29/pro-migrant-campaigner-pelted-with-rocks-by-migrants/

    Maybe one day the media might ask all these campaigners why they aren't lobbying the French government to do something. The way they go on, you would think they were in the middle of the nowhere in a war torn country, not a stones throw away from a major housing estate, sport facilities, shops etc.

    Also the Guardian wing of the media bashed the hell out of "benefits street" as poverty porn, but don't seem to have an issue calling this place the "Jungle" (which I don't know, seems kinda of racist, especially if we are judging it by Rhodes Must Fall, can't call Harvard academics "Master" standards etc) and spending weeks on end shoving cameras in people faces.

    Ah but you are forgetting that the campaigners are part of the "I want" generation. So since those in the camp want to go to Britain then it automatically follows that they are our problem, you see. They want. That's all that matters. The law, other people's wants or needs are all irrelevant to the very great "wants" of those in the camp.

    "I want must get" seems to be the mantra.

    Has anyone told the mgrants that literally trying to ram and smash your way through frontiers, as here

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-02-29/caught-tape-500-syrians-storm-greek-border-fence-homemade-battering-ram

    ... is not necessarily the best way to persuade your host countries to accept you?

    It gets evermore difficult to see what differentiates these people from an invading army.
    How many people at Calais are, in effect, expecting a menu of wealthy countries to be unfurled in front of them, for them to choose where to claim asylum?
    The mayor of Zeebrugge said last week that the growing numbers camped there has all been offered support in going through the process of claiming asylum and basically none has gone through with the process.
  • Options
    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    edited February 2016
    rcs1000 said:

    chestnut said:

    rcs1000 said:

    TOPPING said:

    rcs1000 said:

    FPT:

    TOPPING said:

    @SeanT

    re competitiveness - so you're telling me that the "burden reduction implementation mechanism” is not going to make life easier for SMEs??!! Pah!

    Look I think it is less than brilliant but upon examination I think it is ok. He got the biggies - the UK's exemption of no ECU codified in EU law; specific opt-outs from eurozone discrimination; and exemption from the single rulebook.

    It costs us about £55m to pay for absent childrens' child benefit so I can live with that.

    I would be interested in what those with a genuinely open mind wanted. EEA maintains ironically the one objective he failed in - controlling migration.

    What do they want and if no renegotiation would have worked, then why worry about its contents or the spin put on it?

    I am perfectly happy with people coming here to work. I think London is one of the world's great cities because it draws the ambitious and the talented and the hungry from across Europe, acting as a magnet as only a few cities can.

    But I don't see why the UK taxpayer should give benefits to non-UK citizens. Really, it seems like a no brainer to me. And I believe we can best achieve that goal outside the EU.
    £55m? You'd leave the EU for that?
    Give benefits of any sort.
    The collaterals on this are enormous as well. Housing, school places, healthcare, transport pressures etc.

    I think it is not unreasonable to ask non-citizens to pay an annual Services Charge of - say - £2,000.
    On the basis of what I see I think there needs to be a salary minimum for entry, something that will generate an amount of direct and indirect taxation that will exceed the cost of residence or at least break-even.

    One rate for single individuals, another for those bringing family.
This discussion has been closed.