politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Local By-Election Preview : March 24th 2016 (Maundy Thursday)
Dalton (Con defence) and Moss Bay (Lab defence) on Allerdale Result of council at last election (2015): Labour 29, Conservatives 17, Independents 7, United Kingdom Independence Party 3 (Labour majority of 2) Result of wards at last election (2015)
Our best finish since 1928 and a Champions League place. I would have taken that at the start of the season! Arsenal have the best run in, but too big of gap to close I think. Leicesters target is 83 points, to be certain of winning. We have consistently got 2 points average per game all season so should get 80. Its going to be tough for Spurs to catch us...
Sad to see Cruyff had an untimely death today. My earliest football memory was watching his sensational performance in the 74 world cup.
What the hell is wrong with students these days. The 6th and 7th pictures are hilarious. The 7th particularly so as two students are comforting each other after viewing the word "Trump".
Students freak out because someone chalked trump slogans on campus: Emory university president says students are scared and 'in pain'
What the hell is wrong with students these days. The 6th and 7th pictures are hilarious. The 7th particularly so as two students are comforting each other after viewing the word "Trump".
Students freak out because someone chalked trump slogans on campus: Emory university president says students are scared and 'in pain'
Our best finish since 1928 and a Champions League place. I would have taken that at the start of the season! Arsenal have the best run in, but too big of gap to close I think. Leicesters target is 83 points, to be certain of winning. We have consistently got 2 points average per game all season so should get 80. Its going to be tough for Spurs to catch us...
Sad to see Cruyff had an untimely death today. My earliest football memory was watching his sensational performance in the 74 world cup.
I think Leicester should do it - but that might be the problem. So far the players look very comfortable where they are and haven't started panicking, but I hope Arsenal (though hopefully not Spurs) can keep you honest to the end.
Yes, sad news about Cruyff. It was a shame that the Netherlands did not win the World Cup in 1974 or 1978. Whether Cruyff would have made the difference in the latter is not known, but they are certainly one of the greatest teams in the history of the game.
What the hell is wrong with students these days. The 6th and 7th pictures are hilarious. The 7th particularly so as two students are comforting each other after viewing the word "Trump".
Students freak out because someone chalked trump slogans on campus: Emory university president says students are scared and 'in pain'
O/T.on Paris and Brussels....It is difficult to imagine a time in human history when such a bunch of pathetic, group of puerile, inadequate, immature, mommy's boy, losers were able to gain such traction.
ISIS, and Islamism offers this pathetic group something. It is almost impossible to take them seriously other than the fact that they cause such carnage and unbearable heartbreak.
What the hell is wrong with students these days. The 6th and 7th pictures are hilarious. The 7th particularly so as two students are comforting each other after viewing the word "Trump".
Students freak out because someone chalked trump slogans on campus: Emory university president says students are scared and 'in pain'
The most incredible scandal is brewing in the poker / gambling industry. The head of Amaya (a company you probably won't of heard of, but it behind a lot of internet gambling) has been charged with insider trading and people have started to dig and the story is going everywhere. From his dodgy brother being involved with running an illegal lottery scheme and still owing the victims, to the CEO of the world largest porn company also being named in the insider trading case and that companies very chequered past.
Also, the small matter of one of the world largest asset manager BlackRock have pumped huge sums into Amaya.
O/T.on Paris and Brussels....It is difficult to imagine a time in human history when such a bunch of pathetic, group of puerile, inadequate, immature, mommy's boy, losers were able to gain such traction.
ISIS, and Islamism offers this pathetic group something. It is almost impossible to take them seriously other than the fact that they cause such carnage and unbearable heartbreak.
I thought for a second your first paragraph was on the Belgian police. I was thinking it seemed a bit harsh, then I saw the rest and it made sense.
I would however argue the Nazis were a similar bunch of sexual and emotional inadequates - Hitler's lusting after his teenage niece springs to mind - who had far greater traction and caused considerably more carnage and heartbreak.
It is worth further mentioning at this point that Hitler was a big admirer of Wahhabist Islam (the creed which underpins much of Daesh's dogma) and was reported as saying that would have been a much better religion for Germany than 'meek and flabby' Christianity. Which suggests there is something rather radically wrong with it.
There was some discussion in the papers a week or two back concerning at what age children are safe to be left alone. One columnist expressed a view that the reluctance of parents to let their children be alone even for very brief periods was to blame for all this "safe-spacing" and "trigger-warning" stuff. The argument was that the children never developed the independence of thought and mind to cope with the challenges of living in the outside world. Too many universities seem to treat themselves as overgrown creches.
It makes me feel old, but at 23 I was handling cardiac arrests, massive road trauma and attempts at suicide. At 21 my wife was often Nurse in charge of a chest surgery ward with deaths every day. Friends of mine were really searching out safe spaces and looking for trigger warnings in Northern Ireland at the same age.
Stifling children leads to immature adults. I blame the parents, and the Universities in Loco Parentis.
Also, the small matter of one of the world largest asset manager BlackRock have pumped huge sums into Amaya.
Oooh, dear that could be nasty. A lot of charities invest in BRIM. A charity I used to run years ago did, for example. I remember wondering at the time why its accounts were so opaque. However, as they paid out regularly and we only had about 10% of our assets in them, I decided it wasn't really that important and just let it go.
If this turns out to be the start of something big there, a lot of people who have never even heard of Black Rock but use charities that have money with it are going to get badly hurt.
Actually ydoethur, when I was sending off my post, I thought of Hitler and his repulsive bunch of inadequates, misfits and losers.
I dunno about humanity- I kind of believe that we have sufficient checks and balances in our system of governance, but then you have this kind of horror emerging.
O/T.on Paris and Brussels....It is difficult to imagine a time in human history when such a bunch of pathetic, group of puerile, inadequate, immature, mommy's boy, losers were able to gain such traction.
ISIS, and Islamism offers this pathetic group something. It is almost impossible to take them seriously other than the fact that they cause such carnage and unbearable heartbreak.
I thought for a second your first paragraph was on the Belgian police. I was thinking it seemed a bit harsh, then I saw the rest and it made sense.
I would however argue the Nazis were a similar bunch of sexual and emotional inadequates - Hitler's lusting after his teenage niece springs to mind - who had far greater traction and caused considerably more carnage and heartbreak.
It is worth further mentioning at this point that Hitler was a big admirer of Wahhabist Islam (the creed which underpins much of Daesh's dogma) and was reported as saying that would have been a much better religion for Germany than 'meek and flabby' Christianity. Which suggests there is something rather radically wrong with it.
Also, the small matter of one of the world largest asset manager BlackRock have pumped huge sums into Amaya.
Oooh, dear that could be nasty. A lot of charities invest in BRIM. A charity I used to run years ago did, for example. I remember wondering at the time why its accounts were so opaque. However, as they paid out regularly and we only had about 10% of our assets in them, I decided it wasn't really that important and just let it go.
If this turns out to be the start of something big there, a lot of people who have never even heard of Black Rock but use charities that have money with it are going to get badly hurt.
I think Blackrock will be fine, but they backed Amaya with huge funds to take over Pokerstars for $4.9 bn, when at the time Amaya at turnover of $160 million and never made a profit...
Pokerstars is still making money however, so at worst Blackrock still have a solid asset (although Amaya are running the site appallingly).
And now it seems the guy behind Amaya, his brother etc are as dodgy as hell. And then a whole list of other people are alleged to have been given privileged information about this takeover.
I mean would you do business with these brothers on a multi billion takeover?
Actually ydoethur, when I was sending off my post, I thought of Hitler and his repulsive bunch of inadequates, misfits and losers.
I dunno about humanity- I kind of believe that we have sufficient checks and balances in our system of governance, but then you have this kind of horror emerging.
O/T.on Paris and Brussels....It is difficult to imagine a time in human history when such a bunch of pathetic, group of puerile, inadequate, immature, mommy's boy, losers were able to gain such traction.
ISIS, and Islamism offers this pathetic group something. It is almost impossible to take them seriously other than the fact that they cause such carnage and unbearable heartbreak.
I thought for a second your first paragraph was on the Belgian police. I was thinking it seemed a bit harsh, then I saw the rest and it made sense.
I would however argue the Nazis were a similar bunch of sexual and emotional inadequates - Hitler's lusting after his teenage niece springs to mind - who had far greater traction and caused considerably more carnage and heartbreak.
It is worth further mentioning at this point that Hitler was a big admirer of Wahhabist Islam (the creed which underpins much of Daesh's dogma) and was reported as saying that would have been a much better religion for Germany than 'meek and flabby' Christianity. Which suggests there is something rather radically wrong with it.
What's disturbing about the Nazis is that you can't make any plausible excuse for them. They were not in a poor country, which is not to deny it had economic problems; nor was it backward or superstitious, being the cradle of enlightenment thought; nor were they marginalised in society, containing as they did Goering and Ludendorff.
They were evil and they happened. Therefore, as you say, such things could happen anywhere.
Re:student distress sufficient to necessitate counselling on seeing the word "Trump"... reminds me of my university days when an ironic rending of "Nellie the Elephant" would often feature at student discos... All together now: "Off she went with a trumpty-trump. Trump, trump, trump!".
More seriously, although my older daughter is only 15, she tells me that lots of her acquaintances at school are almost desperate to have some sort of mental illness diagnosed - depression, OCD, self-harming, eating disorder. She reckons it has become almost like a badge of honour these days or at least it has done amongst girls she knows. These are intelligent girls at a grammar school. A worrying trend.
At the age of 12 I was smoking dope quite regularly and pretty responsibly, truanting a bit, and in control of roughly all my needs,,, laundry, meals etc.. Didn't hinder me at all in getting straight A's a O level and A level either. But as my wife tells me, she was still playing with her barbie dolls until the age of 14.
There was some discussion in the papers a week or two back concerning at what age children are safe to be left alone. One columnist expressed a view that the reluctance of parents to let their children be alone even for very brief periods was to blame for all this "safe-spacing" and "trigger-warning" stuff. The argument was that the children never developed the independence of thought and mind to cope with the challenges of living in the outside world. Too many universities seem to treat themselves as overgrown creches.
It makes me feel old, but at 23 I was handling cardiac arrests, massive road trauma and attempts at suicide. At 21 my wife was often Nurse in charge of a chest surgery ward with deaths every day. Friends of mine were really searching out safe spaces and looking for trigger warnings in Northern Ireland at the same age.
Stifling children leads to immature adults. I blame the parents, and the Universities in Loco Parentis.
Stifling children leads to immature adults. I blame the parents, and the Universities in Loco Parentis.
Thank you Doctor for not mentioning the schools.
I'm sure it's only a matter of time before someone does though
Schools get enough of this nonsense from parents themselves. Kids need to learn to rub along with the wider world, and school is an excellent place to learn about bullying, verbal attacks, mindless rules and a bit of physical rough and tumble. Schools need to know when to let the kids sort it out amongst themselves and when it really does need an adult intervention.
Mind you fellow parents were aghast when my 8 year old son broke his arm jumping out of a tree. "Kids who don't break the odd bone every now and then are not getting enough exercise!" meant only slightly in jest.
Re:student distress sufficient to necessitate counselling on seeing the word "Trump"... reminds me of my university days when an ironic rending of "Nellie the Elephant" would often feature at student discos... All together now: "Off she went with a trumpty-trump. Trump, trump, trump!".
More seriously, although my older daughter is only 15, she tells me that lots of her acquaintances at school are almost desperate to have some sort of mental illness diagnosed - depression, OCD, self-harming, eating disorder. She reckons it has become almost like a badge of honour these days or at least it has done amongst girls she knows. These are intelligent girls at a grammar school. A worrying trend.
Tell them to read 'Black is the Colour of my True Love's Heart' by Ellis Peters.
After a teenage girl spends a whole page psychoanalysing herself and her disorders, she is withered with the phrase 'You're a perfectly normal adolescent who spends too much time in adult company.'
What the hell is wrong with students these days. The 6th and 7th pictures are hilarious. The 7th particularly so as two students are comforting each other after viewing the word "Trump".
Students freak out because someone chalked trump slogans on campus: Emory university president says students are scared and 'in pain'
I'll get my daughter to read the book you mention. To be honest, she feels like an observer of the angst around her, rather than a sufferer. Her own theory is that she is far too busy studying, playing sport and practicing music to spend loads of time navel-gazing. Lots of her friends seem to go to school, hang out on social media .... and that's about it.
Anyway, happy Easter. Am off to the Wye Valley tomorrow for a short holiday. Looks like it is going to be a very wet break!
Re:student distress sufficient to necessitate counselling on seeing the word "Trump"... reminds me of my university days when an ironic rending of "Nellie the Elephant" would often feature at student discos... All together now: "Off she went with a trumpty-trump. Trump, trump, trump!".
More seriously, although my older daughter is only 15, she tells me that lots of her acquaintances at school are almost desperate to have some sort of mental illness diagnosed - depression, OCD, self-harming, eating disorder. She reckons it has become almost like a badge of honour these days or at least it has done amongst girls she knows. These are intelligent girls at a grammar school. A worrying trend.
Tell them to read 'Black is the Colour of my True Love's Heart' by Ellis Peters.
After a teenage girl spends a whole page psychoanalysing herself and her disorders, she is withered with the phrase 'You're a perfectly normal adolescent who spends too much time in adult company.'
And that was in about 1960!
Goodnight all, and Happy Easter.
I was quite interested in psychiatry and considered it for a career.
One thing that troubled me was whether labelling odd behaviour helped or hindered recovery. Despite its ubiquity there is a paucity of evidence that such counselling does help much following perceived trauma. I think that neurotic personalities can be made worse by excessive dwelling on such things.
Thats not to say that certain forms of extreme trauma don't benefit from short time limited intervention. Group therapy became commonplace after being used on combat fatigued troops in WW2. It was recognised that timely and time limited discussion with fellows having had similar experiences was the quickest and surest way to get soldiers combat fit again and returned to action.
What the hell is wrong with students these days. The 6th and 7th pictures are hilarious. The 7th particularly so as two students are comforting each other after viewing the word "Trump".
Absolutely pitiful, the next generation of leaders are being moulded in these places and it, quite frankly, scares the shit out of me.
There's no reason for these dysfunctional dweebs to be leaders of anything, provided people treat them with the ridicule they deserve, demolish their imaginary 'safe spaces', and vote for people such as Donald Trump.
What the hell is wrong with students these days. The 6th and 7th pictures are hilarious. The 7th particularly so as two students are comforting each other after viewing the word "Trump".
Students freak out because someone chalked trump slogans on campus: Emory university president says students are scared and 'in pain'
WTF University organizations also offered counselling to those affected
Unbelievable. Heaven forbid that someone has a position they disagree with. Recent stories like these are making me reconsider my life in academia!
Surely this is an unintended consequence of the commodification of learning. If you are a customer paying through the nose, you are going to expect your views to be pandered to.
Serendipity. That was the song that I associate spliffing up to as a young 12/13 year old whippersnapper... That and Closer/Unknown Pleasures by Joy Division which I still love.
What the hell is wrong with students these days. The 6th and 7th pictures are hilarious. The 7th particularly so as two students are comforting each other after viewing the word "Trump".
Absolutely pitiful, the next generation of leaders are being moulded in these places and it, quite frankly, scares the shit out of me.
There's no reason for these dysfunctional dweebs to be leaders of anything, provided people treat them with the ridicule they deserve, demolish their imaginary 'safe spaces', and vote for people such as Donald Trump.
I'd be tempted to vote trump just to watch their tiny minds explode.
What the hell is wrong with students these days. The 6th and 7th pictures are hilarious. The 7th particularly so as two students are comforting each other after viewing the word "Trump".
Absolutely pitiful, the next generation of leaders are being moulded in these places and it, quite frankly, scares the shit out of me.
There's no reason for these dysfunctional dweebs to be leaders of anything, provided people treat them with the ridicule they deserve, demolish their imaginary 'safe spaces', and vote for people such as Donald Trump.
I'd be tempted to vote trump just to watch their tiny minds explode.
Not just them, but senior politicians including our very own PM.
Just a note on terror 'watch lists' . Being on a watch list doesn't actually count for too much in itself. Such lists can run to many thousands of individuals and does not, because in all practicality it can't mean actually intensively watching anyone in all encompassing manner.
The Bakraoui brothers progress to the point of these attacks actually show a notably different pattern than those that traditionally feature high on the ones to watch list.
That in itself is a serious worry because the priority filtering exercise gets more difficult if they represent a distinct subset of people coming within IS orbit. Whether these guys are an exception or a new angle will be important to assess.
The UK is lucky in any number of ways with its counter Islamist terrorist capabilities but the truth is the kind of IS controlled, directed and executed attacks seen in France and Belgium haven't really been sniffed here to a great degree. Given the widespread belief that something of this kind has been on the slate for some time the question is why has their been comparatively little concrete evidence of it yet in the UK? There are number of either/or/all possibilities:
-IS didn't have the appropriate infrastructure & people in place for some time -The spooks have kept a tremendous amount under wraps domestically -The interdiction efforts at source are proving successful -The authorities aren't seeing it and we'll get blindsided.
IS really want to hit the UK and by now could and should have the people ready to do some damage. The concern is that if and when IS do launch a truly centrally directed attack, it will be a first-time variation on a well known theme, causing a serious stretch problem and that it may not be all pure domestic citizens involved in its execution.
I'm going to sound like such an old fogey- but the Specials, Billy Bragg, UB40 et al- and my beloved Manchester music- Joy Division, New Order, Smiths, Buzzcocks, and then the Stone Roses, the Mondays, Primal Scream. And we were all living off post modernist American 70's cinema- Scorcese, Pakula, Ashby, Cimino, Allen, Coppola etc...
Musically, culturally, I cannot complain about the time and place I grew up in. Thank god it isn't as boring as Adele, the Internet, Facebook and multi channel TV.
Just a note on terror 'watch lists' . Being on a watch list doesn't actually count for too much in itself. Such lists can run to many thousands of individuals and does not, because in all practicality it can't mean actually intensively watching anyone in all encompassing manner.
The Bakraoui brothers progress to the point of these attacks actually show a notably different pattern than those that traditionally feature high on the ones to watch list.
That in itself is a serious worry because the priority filtering exercise gets more difficult if they represent a distinct subset of people coming within IS orbit. Whether these guys are an exception or a new angle will be important to assess.
The UK is lucky in any number of ways with its counter Islamist terrorist capabilities but the truth is the kind of IS controlled, directed and executed attacks seen in France and Belgium haven't really been sniffed here to a great degree. Given the widespread belief that something of this kind has been on the slate for some time the question is why has their been comparatively little concrete evidence of it yet in the UK? There are number of either/or/all possibilities:
-IS didn't have the appropriate infrastructure & people in place for some time -The spooks have kept a tremendous amount under wraps domestically -The interdiction efforts at source are proving successful -The authorities aren't seeing it and we'll get blindsided.
IS really want to hit the UK and by now could and should have the people ready to do some damage. The concern is that if and when IS do launch a truly centrally directed attack, it will be a first-time variation on a well known theme, causing a serious stretch problem and that it may not be all pure domestic citizens involved in its execution.
The scariest bit of the Panorama wasn't the numpties like the guy who paniced, shot himself and them phoned for an ambulance while in a car packed to the nines with weapons...it was that there was infrastructure that silently delivered that car to a car park and that was directed from ISIS in Syria.
I'm going to sound like such an old fogey- but the Specials, Billy Bragg, UB40 et al- and my beloved Manchester music- Joy Division, New Order, Smiths, Buzzcocks, and then the Stone Roses, the Mondays, Primal Scream. And we were all living off post modernist American 70's cinema- Scorcese, Pakula, Ashby, Cimino, Allen, Coppola etc...
Musically, culturally, I cannot complain about the time and place I grew up in. Thank god it isn't as boring as Adele, the Internet, Facebook and multi channel TV.
Can I ask that down thread the long url links are shortened or removed? As the page is unreadable. Comments bleeding into the right hand archive menu. I've only just been able to select the Post Comment button!
More anti-terror raids in Paris and Brussels tonight.
The Times has a story the cell was planning a radioactive dirty bomb.
Trump: Britain will leave EU.
The Mail had a report (that was a translation from a paper on the continent) that said they had hours of footage related to a nuclear power station and employees.
I'm going to sound like such an old fogey- but the Specials, Billy Bragg, UB40 et al- and my beloved Manchester music- Joy Division, New Order, Smiths, Buzzcocks, and then the Stone Roses, the Mondays, Primal Scream. And we were all living off post modernist American 70's cinema- Scorcese, Pakula, Ashby, Cimino, Allen, Coppola etc...
Musically, culturally, I cannot complain about the time and place I grew up in. Thank god it isn't as boring as Adele, the Internet, Facebook and multi channel TV.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
UB40!!!!?????
I saw the Jam loads of times at the Rainbow and also their final gig in Brighton. They were superb. The late 70s/early 80s was a golden time for music and much else, even as the country itself seemed to be in permanent turmoil. Maybe that was the reason. London Calling was maybe the definitive song of that era.
@JournoStephen: Congratulations to BBC #LeadersDebate audience on hiding their English accents. Think we managed to fool them this time. #OperationDundeeII
More anti-terror raids in Paris and Brussels tonight.
The Times has a story the cell was planning a radioactive dirty bomb.
Trump: Britain will leave EU.
The Mail had a report (that was a translation from a paper on the continent) that said they had hours of footage related to a nuclear power station and employees.
We are in a Long Emergency, an undeclared (civil) War in Europe, with increasing mass casualties inevitable.
More anti-terror raids in Paris and Brussels tonight.
The Times has a story the cell was planning a radioactive dirty bomb.
Trump: Britain will leave EU.
The Mail had a report (that was a translation from a paper on the continent) that said they had hours of footage related to a nuclear power station and employees.
We are in a Long Emergency, an undeclared (civil) War in Europe, with increasing mass casualties inevitable.
No no you have it all wrong, if Belgians weren't racist there wouldn't be a problem...or something like that....they just need to reaffirm their unwritten deal with the local Islamists to agree not to go disrupting them anymore and there won't be any more problems.
All because somebody called one of them a Gypsy Boy....
Joe Marler could face a four-week ban after World Rugby delivered a slap in the face to Six Nations organisers by saying that the England prop would face a misconduct hearing.
All because somebody called one of them a Gypsy Boy....
Joe Marler could face a four-week ban after World Rugby delivered a slap in the face to Six Nations organisers by saying that the England prop would face a misconduct hearing.
Given the bar being set so low, if Brian Moore still played rugby he would be permanently suspended....
I'm going to sound like such an old fogey- but the Specials, Billy Bragg, UB40 et al- and my beloved Manchester music- Joy Division, New Order, Smiths, Buzzcocks, and then the Stone Roses, the Mondays, Primal Scream. And we were all living off post modernist American 70's cinema- Scorcese, Pakula, Ashby, Cimino, Allen, Coppola etc...
Musically, culturally, I cannot complain about the time and place I grew up in. Thank god it isn't as boring as Adele, the Internet, Facebook and multi channel TV.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
Hey, don't knock 70's American paranoia...The Parallax View, Winter Kills, Three Days of the Condor, The Candidate, The Conversation, All The President's Men and it all came together in Apocalypse Now, which took everything, turned it up to eleven, then set it on fire. You had Carpenter and Romero in horror, De Niro driving a taxi, Snake Plissken on top of the WTC, Olivier telling Hoffman why don't you just act...
>Stifling children leads to immature adults. I blame the parents, and the Universities in Loco Parentis. <
I'm not sure we have a consensus on what we want kids to be. There's the sentimental "let children be children" idea, which I remember hating as a kid and wanting to grow out of as fast as possible: I've never met a child who didn't want to be older. There's the "children should be mature" idea, linked to low age of criminal responsibility and relates to the sort of stifling Fox mentions. There's the "children should be free to explore and experiment" idea, which is probably the dominant view at the moment, but adults are unnervingly inconsistent in what they mean by it - is it sinister or OK or a good thing if a 12-year tries wine, or 14-year-olds explore sex, or 18-year-olds get hammered and have sex with strangers in Spain? I'd be confused, God knows what the average young teenager thinks is desirable behaviour.
>Stifling children leads to immature adults. I blame the parents, and the Universities in Loco Parentis. <
I'm not sure we have a consensus on what we want kids to be. There's the sentimental "let children be children" idea, which I remember hating as a kid and wanting to grow out of as fast as possible: I've never met a child who didn't want to be older. There's the "children should be mature" idea, linked to low age of criminal responsibility and relates to the sort of stifling Fox mentions. There's the "children should be free to explore and experiment" idea, which is probably the dominant view at the moment, but adults are unnervingly inconsistent in what they mean by it - is it sinister or OK or a good thing if a 12-year tries wine, or 14-year-olds explore sex, or 18-year-olds get hammered and have sex with strangers in Spain? I'd be confused, God knows what the average young teenager thinks is desirable behaviour.
Inconsistency is the worst. We equip children with eyes to the world such as internet and social media then fill them with fears about it, so they become spectators rather than activists.
Its not easy being a parent, but the toughest bit is letting them go. Fox jr spent last summer backpacking in South America. I had to pull over on the road home and stifle tears after dropping him at the airport. It did him the world of good though. He is a level headed lad and matured noticeably over the couple of months. A lot better than xbox.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
Yeah, they usually used to spend ages climbing up and when they got there, they stayed around for a bit.
Radio 1 used to have a "guess the order" competition on Thursday - surprisingly no one got it that week. (yep I remember it well also). Usually a good number 1 was no 1 for 4 weeks (I don't like Mondays, We don't talk anymore). Bright Eyes made 6 weeks and Grease songs (Summer nights, you're the one that I want) - 16 weeks.
There were some exceptions - "Baker Street" was in the chart for months without doing anything really - as was "The Birdie Song" - reached #2.
More anti-terror raids in Paris and Brussels tonight.
The Times has a story the cell was planning a radioactive dirty bomb.
Trump: Britain will leave EU.
The Mail had a report (that was a translation from a paper on the continent) that said they had hours of footage related to a nuclear power station and employees.
We are in a Long Emergency, an undeclared (civil) War in Europe, with increasing mass casualties inevitable.
I have to agree. What we are seeing now are just the opening skirmishes.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
Yeah, they usually used to spend ages climbing up and when they got there, they stayed around for a bit.
Radio 1 used to have a "guess the order" competition on Thursday - surprisingly no one got it that week. (yep I remember it well also). Usually a good number 1 was no 1 for 4 weeks (I don't like Mondays, We don't talk anymore). Bright Eyes made 6 weeks and Grease songs (Summer nights, you're the one that I want) - 16 weeks.
There were some exceptions - "Baker Street" was in the chart for months without doing anything really - as was "The Birdie Song" - reached #2.
The Jam were rather good at getting straight in at number 1. Indeed, if I recall correctly, no one had done it before they did since the early 70s and Slade.
More anti-terror raids in Paris and Brussels tonight.
The Times has a story the cell was planning a radioactive dirty bomb.
Trump: Britain will leave EU.
The Mail had a report (that was a translation from a paper on the continent) that said they had hours of footage related to a nuclear power station and employees.
We are in a Long Emergency, an undeclared (civil) War in Europe, with increasing mass casualties inevitable.
I have to agree. What we are seeing now are just the opening skirmishes.
Britain may well leave the EU, but Trump won't be president when it happens.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
Yeah, they usually used to spend ages climbing up and when they got there, they stayed around for a bit.
Radio 1 used to have a "guess the order" competition on Thursday - surprisingly no one got it that week. (yep I remember it well also). Usually a good number 1 was no 1 for 4 weeks (I don't like Mondays, We don't talk anymore). Bright Eyes made 6 weeks and Grease songs (Summer nights, you're the one that I want) - 16 weeks.
There were some exceptions - "Baker Street" was in the chart for months without doing anything really - as was "The Birdie Song" - reached #2.
We are *this* close to resurrecting the Shaddap You Face/Vienna controversy...
I'm going to sound like such an old fogey- but the Specials, Billy Bragg, UB40 et al- and my beloved Manchester music- Joy Division, New Order, Smiths, Buzzcocks, and then the Stone Roses, the Mondays, Primal Scream. And we were all living off post modernist American 70's cinema- Scorcese, Pakula, Ashby, Cimino, Allen, Coppola etc...
Musically, culturally, I cannot complain about the time and place I grew up in. Thank god it isn't as boring as Adele, the Internet, Facebook and multi channel TV.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
UB40!!!!?????
I saw the Jam loads of times at the Rainbow and also their final gig in Brighton. They were superb. The late 70s/early 80s was a golden time for music and much else, even as the country itself seemed to be in permanent turmoil. Maybe that was the reason. London Calling was maybe the definitive song of that era.
Fine times. I loved London Calling. I played that record to its death.
More anti-terror raids in Paris and Brussels tonight.
The Times has a story the cell was planning a radioactive dirty bomb.
Trump: Britain will leave EU.
The Mail had a report (that was a translation from a paper on the continent) that said they had hours of footage related to a nuclear power station and employees.
We are in a Long Emergency, an undeclared (civil) War in Europe, with increasing mass casualties inevitable.
I have to agree. What we are seeing now are just the opening skirmishes.
Britain may well leave the EU, but Trump won't be president when it happens.
It was the increasing mass casualties that I was referring to.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
Yeah, they usually used to spend ages climbing up and when they got there, they stayed around for a bit.
Radio 1 used to have a "guess the order" competition on Thursday - surprisingly no one got it that week. (yep I remember it well also). Usually a good number 1 was no 1 for 4 weeks (I don't like Mondays, We don't talk anymore). Bright Eyes made 6 weeks and Grease songs (Summer nights, you're the one that I want) - 16 weeks.
There were some exceptions - "Baker Street" was in the chart for months without doing anything really - as was "The Birdie Song" - reached #2.
We are *this* close to resurrecting the Shaddap You Face/Vienna controversy...
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
Yeah, they usually used to spend ages climbing up and when they got there, they stayed around for a bit.
Radio 1 used to have a "guess the order" competition on Thursday - surprisingly no one got it that week. (yep I remember it well also). Usually a good number 1 was no 1 for 4 weeks (I don't like Mondays, We don't talk anymore). Bright Eyes made 6 weeks and Grease songs (Summer nights, you're the one that I want) - 16 weeks.
There were some exceptions - "Baker Street" was in the chart for months without doing anything really - as was "The Birdie Song" - reached #2.
Reet Petite by Jackie Wilson was Christmas #1 in 1986 - it took just 29 years to hit the top slot!
I'm going to sound like such an old fogey- but the Specials, Billy Bragg, UB40 et al- and my beloved Manchester music- Joy Division, New Order, Smiths, Buzzcocks, and then the Stone Roses, the Mondays, Primal Scream. And we were all living off post modernist American 70's cinema- Scorcese, Pakula, Ashby, Cimino, Allen, Coppola etc...
Musically, culturally, I cannot complain about the time and place I grew up in. Thank god it isn't as boring as Adele, the Internet, Facebook and multi channel TV.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
UB40!!!!?????
I saw the Jam loads of times at the Rainbow and also their final gig in Brighton. They were superb. The late 70s/early 80s was a golden time for music and much else, even as the country itself seemed to be in permanent turmoil. Maybe that was the reason. London Calling was maybe the definitive song of that era.
I'm going to sound like such an old fogey- but the Specials, Billy Bragg, UB40 et al- and my beloved Manchester music- Joy Division, New Order, Smiths, Buzzcocks, and then the Stone Roses, the Mondays, Primal Scream. And we were all living off post modernist American 70's cinema- Scorcese, Pakula, Ashby, Cimino, Allen, Coppola etc...
Musically, culturally, I cannot complain about the time and place I grew up in. Thank god it isn't as boring as Adele, the Internet, Facebook and multi channel TV.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
UB40!!!!?????
I saw the Jam loads of times at the Rainbow and also their final gig in Brighton. They were superb. The late 70s/early 80s was a golden time for music and much else, even as the country itself seemed to be in permanent turmoil. Maybe that was the reason. London Calling was maybe the definitive song of that era.
Fine times. I loved London Calling. I played that record to its death.
I didn't know whether to be proud or embarrassed about its use in Die Another Day...
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
Yeah, they usually used to spend ages climbing up and when they got there, they stayed around for a bit.
Radio 1 used to have a "guess the order" competition on Thursday - surprisingly no one got it that week. (yep I remember it well also). Usually a good number 1 was no 1 for 4 weeks (I don't like Mondays, We don't talk anymore). Bright Eyes made 6 weeks and Grease songs (Summer nights, you're the one that I want) - 16 weeks.
There were some exceptions - "Baker Street" was in the chart for months without doing anything really - as was "The Birdie Song" - reached #2.
We are *this* close to resurrecting the Shaddap You Face/Vienna controversy...
What controversy? The better song won, fair and square.
I'm going to sound like such an old fogey- but the Specials, Billy Bragg, UB40 et al- and my beloved Manchester music- Joy Division, New Order, Smiths, Buzzcocks, and then the Stone Roses, the Mondays, Primal Scream. And we were all living off post modernist American 70's cinema- Scorcese, Pakula, Ashby, Cimino, Allen, Coppola etc...
Musically, culturally, I cannot complain about the time and place I grew up in. Thank god it isn't as boring as Adele, the Internet, Facebook and multi channel TV.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
UB40!!!!?????
I saw the Jam loads of times at the Rainbow and also their final gig in Brighton. They were superb. The late 70s/early 80s was a golden time for music and much else, even as the country itself seemed to be in permanent turmoil. Maybe that was the reason. London Calling was maybe the definitive song of that era.
Fine times. I loved London Calling. I played that record to its death.
Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gave Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice an approval rating of 31%, based on 185 reviews, with an average rating was 5.1/10. According to the site's critical consensus, "Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice smothers a potentially powerful story – and some of America's most iconic superheroes – in a grim whirlwind of effects-driven action."[145] Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating to reviews from mainstream critics, gave the film an average score of 44 out of 100, based on 50 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[146]
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
Yeah, they usually used to spend ages climbing up and when they got there, they stayed around for a bit.
Radio 1 used to have a "guess the order" competition on Thursday - surprisingly no one got it that week. (yep I remember it well also). Usually a good number 1 was no 1 for 4 weeks (I don't like Mondays, We don't talk anymore). Bright Eyes made 6 weeks and Grease songs (Summer nights, you're the one that I want) - 16 weeks.
There were some exceptions - "Baker Street" was in the chart for months without doing anything really - as was "The Birdie Song" - reached #2.
We are *this* close to resurrecting the Shaddap You Face/Vienna controversy...
I'm going to sound like such an old fogey- but the Specials, Billy Bragg, UB40 et al- and my beloved Manchester music- Joy Division, New Order, Smiths, Buzzcocks, and then the Stone Roses, the Mondays, Primal Scream. And we were all living off post modernist American 70's cinema- Scorcese, Pakula, Ashby, Cimino, Allen, Coppola etc...
Musically, culturally, I cannot complain about the time and place I grew up in. Thank god it isn't as boring as Adele, the Internet, Facebook and multi channel TV.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
UB40!!!!?????
I saw the Jam loads of times at the Rainbow and also their final gig in Brighton. They were superb. The late 70s/early 80s was a golden time for music and much else, even as the country itself seemed to be in permanent turmoil. Maybe that was the reason. London Calling was maybe the definitive song of that era.
They played the O2 Academy in Brum a couple of months ago. I didn't attend, but saw the queues on the way to my hotel.
The reviews are in on Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and they don't look good for a studio hoping to start a billion-dollar superhero franchise.
They don't look good for a studio hoping to overtake an asthmatic ant. They're not Fant4Stic explode-on-the-pad awful, but lord, we were hoping for Skyfall and we got Spectre, whoops. Chris Stuckmann gave it a C+, god knows what Kermode will think. So, Zack, did you like your directing career?...
I'm going to sound like such an old fogey- but the Specials, Billy Bragg, UB40 et al- and my beloved Manchester music- Joy Division, New Order, Smiths, Buzzcocks, and then the Stone Roses, the Mondays, Primal Scream. And we were all living off post modernist American 70's cinema- Scorcese, Pakula, Ashby, Cimino, Allen, Coppola etc...
Musically, culturally, I cannot complain about the time and place I grew up in. Thank god it isn't as boring as Adele, the Internet, Facebook and multi channel TV.
I can beat that. The Jam. "Going Underground". Number 1 on this day...thirty-five years ago.
Straight in at number one as I recall, which was very rare in those days. I remember it well.
UB40!!!!?????
I saw the Jam loads of times at the Rainbow and also their final gig in Brighton. They were superb. The late 70s/early 80s was a golden time for music and much else, even as the country itself seemed to be in permanent turmoil. Maybe that was the reason. London Calling was maybe the definitive song of that era.
They played the O2 Academy in Brum a couple of months ago. I didn't attend, but saw the queues on the way to my hotel.
Despite being a fellow Brummie I was never wild about UB40. But their name? Brilliance.
The reviews are in on Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and they don't look good for a studio hoping to start a billion-dollar superhero franchise.
They don't look good for a studio hoping to overtake an asthmatic ant. They're not Fant4Stic explode-on-the-pad awful, but lord, we were hoping for Skyfall and we got Spectre, whoops. Chris Stuckmann gave it a C+, god knows what Kermode will think. So, Zack, did you like your directing career?...
Given its Easter, is Kermode away? It will be a shame if we miss out of a Kermodian rant of epic proportions.
The reviews are in on Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and they don't look good for a studio hoping to start a billion-dollar superhero franchise.
They don't look good for a studio hoping to overtake an asthmatic ant. They're not Fant4Stic explode-on-the-pad awful, but lord, we were hoping for Skyfall and we got Spectre, whoops. Chris Stuckmann gave it a C+, god knows what Kermode will think. So, Zack, did you like your directing career?...
Given its Easter, is Kermode away? It will be a shame if we miss out of a Kermodian rant of epic proportions.
I want his head to explode and cover Simon Mayo in bloodsoaked quiff. All it needs is for Michael Bay and Uwe Boll to film Sex and the City 3. In 3D. It's only a matter of time...
The reviews are in on Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and they don't look good for a studio hoping to start a billion-dollar superhero franchise.
They don't look good for a studio hoping to overtake an asthmatic ant. They're not Fant4Stic explode-on-the-pad awful, but lord, we were hoping for Skyfall and we got Spectre, whoops. Chris Stuckmann gave it a C+, god knows what Kermode will think. So, Zack, did you like your directing career?...
Given its Easter, is Kermode away? It will be a shame if we miss out of a Kermodian rant of epic proportions.
I want his head to explode and cover Simon Mayo in bloodsoaked quiff. All it needs is for Michael Bay and Uwe Boll to film Sex and the City 3. In 3D. It's only a matter of time...
The reviews are in on Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and they don't look good for a studio hoping to start a billion-dollar superhero franchise.
They don't look good for a studio hoping to overtake an asthmatic ant. They're not Fant4Stic explode-on-the-pad awful, but lord, we were hoping for Skyfall and we got Spectre, whoops. Chris Stuckmann gave it a C+, god knows what Kermode will think. So, Zack, did you like your directing career?...
Given its Easter, is Kermode away? It will be a shame if we miss out of a Kermodian rant of epic proportions.
I want his head to explode and cover Simon Mayo in bloodsoaked quiff. All it needs is for Michael Bay and Uwe Boll to film Sex and the City 3. In 3D. It's only a matter of time...
>Stifling children leads to immature adults. I blame the parents, and the Universities in Loco Parentis. <
I'm not sure we have a consensus on what we want kids to be. There's the sentimental "let children be children" idea, which I remember hating as a kid and wanting to grow out of as fast as possible: I've never met a child who didn't want to be older. There's the "children should be mature" idea, linked to low age of criminal responsibility and relates to the sort of stifling Fox mentions. There's the "children should be free to explore and experiment" idea, which is probably the dominant view at the moment, but adults are unnervingly inconsistent in what they mean by it - is it sinister or OK or a good thing if a 12-year tries wine, or 14-year-olds explore sex, or 18-year-olds get hammered and have sex with strangers in Spain? I'd be confused, God knows what the average young teenager thinks is desirable behaviour.
Inconsistency is the worst. We equip children with eyes to the world such as internet and social media then fill them with fears about it, so they become spectators rather than activists.
Its not easy being a parent, but the toughest bit is letting them go. Fox jr spent last summer backpacking in South America. I had to pull over on the road home and stifle tears after dropping him at the airport. It did him the world of good though. He is a level headed lad and matured noticeably over the couple of months. A lot better than xbox.
Crikey, Doc. You had it easy, your boy wanted to go. I had to damn near force my lad to go volunteering in Honduras. Letting him go was the easy bit, that he keeps coming back is the hard part.
He is home on leave as of Sunday, for five, whole, days - my bandwidth will disappear under his usage, I'll not be able to go to for a bath when I want, the food stocks will be ransacked, I'll have a huge pile of ironing to to do and my knowledge of the naval pacific war (1941-1945) and the 14th century will again come under great scrutiny. Actually, I am rather looking forward to it
Comments
(runs and hides).
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3508389/Abdeslam-questioned-ONE-HOUR-four-days-attacks-TIRED.html
Dupond et Dupont at it again...
Edit: I do not want this to happen.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-35895416
Sad to see Cruyff had an untimely death today. My earliest football memory was watching his sensational performance in the 74 world cup.
WTF
University organizations also offered counselling to those affected
Yes, sad news about Cruyff. It was a shame that the Netherlands did not win the World Cup in 1974 or 1978. Whether Cruyff would have made the difference in the latter is not known, but they are certainly one of the greatest teams in the history of the game.
University organizations also offered counselling to those affected
Preparing them for the real world.
ISIS, and Islamism offers this pathetic group something. It is almost impossible to take them seriously other than the fact that they cause such carnage and unbearable heartbreak.
University organizations also offered counselling to those affected
Unbelievable. Heaven forbid that someone has a position they disagree with. Recent stories like these are making me reconsider my life in academia!
Also, the small matter of one of the world largest asset manager BlackRock have pumped huge sums into Amaya.
I would however argue the Nazis were a similar bunch of sexual and emotional inadequates - Hitler's lusting after his teenage niece springs to mind - who had far greater traction and caused considerably more carnage and heartbreak.
It is worth further mentioning at this point that Hitler was a big admirer of Wahhabist Islam (the creed which underpins much of Daesh's dogma) and was reported as saying that would have been a much better religion for Germany than 'meek and flabby' Christianity. Which suggests there is something rather radically wrong with it.
It makes me feel old, but at 23 I was handling cardiac arrests, massive road trauma and attempts at suicide. At 21 my wife was often Nurse in charge of a chest surgery ward with deaths every day. Friends of mine were really searching out safe spaces and looking for trigger warnings in Northern Ireland at the same age.
Stifling children leads to immature adults. I blame the parents, and the Universities in Loco Parentis.
If this turns out to be the start of something big there, a lot of people who have never even heard of Black Rock but use charities that have money with it are going to get badly hurt.
I dunno about humanity- I kind of believe that we have sufficient checks and balances in our system of governance, but then you have this kind of horror emerging.
I'm sure it's only a matter of time before someone does though
Pokerstars is still making money however, so at worst Blackrock still have a solid asset (although Amaya are running the site appallingly).
And now it seems the guy behind Amaya, his brother etc are as dodgy as hell. And then a whole list of other people are alleged to have been given privileged information about this takeover.
I mean would you do business with these brothers on a multi billion takeover?
https://advisor1.dynamic.ca/servlet/WireFeedRedirect?cf=GlobeInvestor/dynamic/config&vg=BigAdVariableGenerator&date=20150612&archive=rtgam&slug=escenic_24950113
They were evil and they happened. Therefore, as you say, such things could happen anywhere.
More seriously, although my older daughter is only 15, she tells me that lots of her acquaintances at school are almost desperate to have some sort of mental illness diagnosed - depression, OCD, self-harming, eating disorder. She reckons it has become almost like a badge of honour these days or at least it has done amongst girls she knows. These are intelligent girls at a grammar school. A worrying trend.
Mind you fellow parents were aghast when my 8 year old son broke his arm jumping out of a tree. "Kids who don't break the odd bone every now and then are not getting enough exercise!" meant only slightly in jest.
After a teenage girl spends a whole page psychoanalysing herself and her disorders, she is withered with the phrase 'You're a perfectly normal adolescent who spends too much time in adult company.'
And that was in about 1960!
Goodnight all, and Happy Easter.
Absolutely pitiful, the next generation of leaders are being moulded in these places and it, quite frankly, scares the shit out of me.
Backs 50p tax but won't implement it
Opposes fracking but won't ban it
Prioritises education but will cut it
#LeadersDebate
(Quote doesn't seem to be working for me).
I'll get my daughter to read the book you mention. To be honest, she feels like an observer of the angst around her, rather than a sufferer. Her own theory is that she is far too busy studying, playing sport and practicing music to spend loads of time navel-gazing. Lots of her friends seem to go to school, hang out on social media .... and that's about it.
Anyway, happy Easter. Am off to the Wye Valley tomorrow for a short holiday. Looks like it is going to be a very wet break!
One thing that troubled me was whether labelling odd behaviour helped or hindered recovery. Despite its ubiquity there is a paucity of evidence that such counselling does help much following perceived trauma. I think that neurotic personalities can be made worse by excessive dwelling on such things.
Thats not to say that certain forms of extreme trauma don't benefit from short time limited intervention. Group therapy became commonplace after being used on combat fatigued troops in WW2. It was recognised that timely and time limited discussion with fellows having had similar experiences was the quickest and surest way to get soldiers combat fit again and returned to action.
Surely this is an unintended consequence of the commodification of learning. If you are a customer paying through the nose, you are going to expect your views to be pandered to.
http://ukcharts.20m.com/number1.html#enter1
Perhaps my profession shows in my choice of favourite Jam track "the Bitterest Pill"
The Bakraoui brothers progress to the point of these attacks actually show a notably different pattern than those that traditionally feature high on the ones to watch list.
That in itself is a serious worry because the priority filtering exercise gets more difficult if they represent a distinct subset of people coming within IS orbit. Whether these guys are an exception or a new angle will be important to assess.
The UK is lucky in any number of ways with its counter Islamist terrorist capabilities but the truth is the kind of IS controlled, directed and executed attacks seen in France and Belgium haven't really been sniffed here to a great degree. Given the widespread belief that something of this kind has been on the slate for some time the question is why has their been comparatively little concrete evidence of it yet in the UK? There are number of either/or/all possibilities:
-IS didn't have the appropriate infrastructure & people in place for some time
-The spooks have kept a tremendous amount under wraps domestically
-The interdiction efforts at source are proving successful
-The authorities aren't seeing it and we'll get blindsided.
IS really want to hit the UK and by now could and should have the people ready to do some damage. The concern is that if and when IS do launch a truly centrally directed attack, it will be a first-time variation on a well known theme, causing a serious stretch problem and that it may not be all pure domestic citizens involved in its execution.
Musically, culturally, I cannot complain about the time and place I grew up in. Thank god it isn't as boring as Adele, the Internet, Facebook and multi channel TV.
The Times has a story the cell was planning a radioactive dirty bomb.
Trump: Britain will leave EU.
There is some good music round now too. Just the mainstream has been drowned in look alike talent show wannabees.
Europhile Tory donor calls for leadership contest after EU referendum. http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/mar/24/tory-donor-urges-david-cameron-resign-after-eu-referendum
I saw the Jam loads of times at the Rainbow and also their final gig in Brighton. They were superb. The late 70s/early 80s was a golden time for music and much else, even as the country itself seemed to be in permanent turmoil. Maybe that was the reason. London Calling was maybe the definitive song of that era.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=P6DRNPIgOOY&feature=youtu.be
I'm not sure we have a consensus on what we want kids to be. There's the sentimental "let children be children" idea, which I remember hating as a kid and wanting to grow out of as fast as possible: I've never met a child who didn't want to be older. There's the "children should be mature" idea, linked to low age of criminal responsibility and relates to the sort of stifling Fox mentions. There's the "children should be free to explore and experiment" idea, which is probably the dominant view at the moment, but adults are unnervingly inconsistent in what they mean by it - is it sinister or OK or a good thing if a 12-year tries wine, or 14-year-olds explore sex, or 18-year-olds get hammered and have sex with strangers in Spain? I'd be confused, God knows what the average young teenager thinks is desirable behaviour.
Labour hold Moss Bay
Its not easy being a parent, but the toughest bit is letting them go. Fox jr spent last summer backpacking in South America. I had to pull over on the road home and stifle tears after dropping him at the airport. It did him the world of good though. He is a level headed lad and matured noticeably over the couple of months. A lot better than xbox.
Con 468
Lab 180
UKIP 149
Green 93
LD 28
Con hold
There were some exceptions - "Baker Street" was in the chart for months without doing anything really - as was "The Birdie Song" - reached #2.
Ind 133
Lab 118
Con 93
UKIP 53
Green 22
Allerdale -Moss Bay
Lab 411
UKIP 189
Con 33
Among one of the more hilarious lines was J.R. Jones at the Chicago Reader, who said the film 'was 'not as bad as Bush v. Gore, but close'.
According to Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batman_v_Superman:_Dawn_of_Justice
Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gave Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice an approval rating of 31%, based on 185 reviews, with an average rating was 5.1/10. According to the site's critical consensus, "Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice smothers a potentially powerful story – and some of America's most iconic superheroes – in a grim whirlwind of effects-driven action."[145] Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating to reviews from mainstream critics, gave the film an average score of 44 out of 100, based on 50 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[146]
In Brazil, 60%, yes 6-0 percentage, of their legislature face criminal proceedings including murder.
He is home on leave as of Sunday, for five, whole, days - my bandwidth will disappear under his usage, I'll not be able to go to for a bath when I want, the food stocks will be ransacked, I'll have a huge pile of ironing to to do and my knowledge of the naval pacific war (1941-1945) and the 14th century will again come under great scrutiny. Actually, I am rather looking forward to it