Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

Options

politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Latest locals: CON gains from LAB in Middlesbrough but makes h

124

Comments

  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    justin124 said:

    surbiton said:



    'Starmer vs Cooper would be a great leadership election'

    Whoever it is labour really have little choice now but to select a female MP and for that reason Starmer is not going to win. As for Cooper she is a bit old school and someone from the 2010 - 2015 would be a better choice but few have had a chance to shine under the utter destructive leadership of Corbyn

    Perhaps an Australian would appeal to Brexit Britain. Could they bring back Patricia Hewitt? :)
    If you want to go that far back, Harriet is still your best bet. Widely respected in the party.
    Not by everybody. She bears the principal responsibility for Corbyn becoming Leader.
    Thought that was Miliband's fault with his £3 membership fee
    No - it was Harman's fault for forcing the Shadow Cabinet to abstain on Osborne's Welfare proposals - leaving Corbyn as the only contender to oppose them. Had that not happened , he would have lost - indeed come third.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,412
    TORY SURGE!!!
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    BigRich said:

    Does anybody track, locale government councillors defecting from one party to another?

    We use LG by-elections as a reasonable if not prises proxy for how voters might vote in a GE, I am wondering if we could use councillors defecting as a proxy for activists moving party?

    I think there has been a few UKIP to Con defections, I was wondering have there been any/many Lab to Lib-Dem defections?

    That would be very handy indeed, though I think it would be much harder to pull together - outside of parties themselves trumpeting defections to them, there's no official announcement you'd need, so presumably you'd have to check every authorities' council meeting agendas for details of changes to political proportionality and thus committee place appointment.

    They can be odd though - I'm sure I read a Green had defected to Con somewhere in the south, and in Wiltshire in 4 years there's been 2 LD defections to Con (1 after a period of Indy), and 3 other LD defections to Indy.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,130
    tlg86 said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Everyone up for the "Day of the sun" :D ?

    It's raining in Pyongyang.
    If this report is true...

    http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20170414000689

    North Korean leader Kim Jong-un ordered 25 percent of Pyongyang residents to leave the city immediately, according to a Russian news outlet on Friday. The Pravda report said that in accordance with the order, 600,000 people should be urgently evacuated.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    Sandpit said:

    Pb brain trust...Does anybody have any suggestions for a graphic tablet which you plug into your pc, which I will only use for annotating documents, writing maths and creating organisation charts ie I won't be using it to create any art so don't need the pro level ones.

    There's only one name in graphic tablets -Wacom. Choose one to match your budget, the cheapest small tablet and pen I can see now on Amazon is £55.
    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Wacom-CTL-471-Small-Graphic-Tablet/dp/B00NFQ3H3S/
    I thought wacom tablet was just the name for a graphic tablet, so they truly must be the only name in town.
  • Options
    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    edited April 2017
    viewcode said:

    chestnut said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    The very idea that the Tories made heavy weather against the Greens(according to the thread header) when there were no other candidates and that every anti tory vote went to the Greens ... is risible.

    There was no good news for the LibDems last night. So there has be an angle somewhere that means it was a T-E-R-R-R-I-B-L-E night for the Tories.....
    Every night on which the Article 50 timebomb is still ticking is a T-E-R-R-R-I-B-L-E night for the Tories. It's just a question of degree.
    You do realise that the Conservative party was officially neutral and that TMay was pro-Remain in the EU ref campaign, do you?
    You do realise that they are in government and will carry the blame for the whole shambles?
    If it goes awry, the EU will.

    Oh, and Remainers, for constantly attempting to undermine the country.
    This is why I coined the term "failing and blaming": it is more productive for LEAVErs to fail at negotiations and blame other people than it is to actually achieve something.
    It's clear that different people value different things so differing interpretations of success and failure will come into play with any result.

    WTO entails full cancellation of contributions, full border control etc. A lot of people will regard that as success.

    I'm convinced we'll end up with Canada +. services 'equivalence' and a version of the EU blue card.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,941

    Sandpit said:

    Pb brain trust...Does anybody have any suggestions for a graphic tablet which you plug into your pc, which I will only use for annotating documents, writing maths and creating organisation charts ie I won't be using it to create any art so don't need the pro level ones.

    There's only one name in graphic tablets -Wacom. Choose one to match your budget, the cheapest small tablet and pen I can see now on Amazon is £55.
    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Wacom-CTL-471-Small-Graphic-Tablet/dp/B00NFQ3H3S/
    Are the cheap knockoff huion ones any good?
    Not sure, some of the newer Chinese stuff (in general IT, not this specific product) is 90% of the way there, other times it's the same crap it's always been.

    I would suggest you have a play with the product (of whatever brand) in a store before ordering, else order from someone with a good returns policy. Wacom is an industry standard among designers (every single customer of mine who works in this field uses them) and I know it does the job well.
  • Options
    BigRichBigRich Posts: 3,489
    DeClare said:

    BigRich said:

    Does anybody track, locale government councillors defecting from one party to another?

    We use LG by-elections as a reasonable if not prises proxy for how voters might vote in a GE, I am wondering if we could use councillors defecting as a proxy for activists moving party?

    I think there has been a few UKIP to Con defections, I was wondering have there been any/many Lab to Lib-Dem defections?

    There is a defections page on Conservative Home but it obviously only lists defections to them: http://www.conservativehome.com/tag/defections
    Thanks for the link, I make that 8 UKIP and 2 Lab, since the referendum.
  • Options
    viewcodeviewcode Posts: 18,950
    isam said:
    I read it in Costa today (we don't get it free at work anymore, godsdammit). Kelvin was his usual self: kick somebody, kick somebody, plug his website, list a firm with a funny name, kick somebody. This happens every now and then: the commentariat get used to a life fucking people up for fun, then one day they accidentally pick on somebody who can fight back and everybody abandons them.

    In this specific case, he waxed lyrical on the usual "Scouser in a suit" riff for a para or two. Ho, ho. Unfortunately, that's Kelvin McKenzie. Taking the piss out of Liverpool. After Hillsborough, that's the equivalent of standing in a tin bath wrapped in foil on a summit shouting "ALL THUNDER GODS ARE BASTARDS" during a lightning storm.

    Mind you though, he is a c**t, so my sympathy is somewhat limited.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    justin124 said:

    justin124 said:

    surbiton said:



    'Starmer vs Cooper would be a great leadership election'

    Whoever it is labour really have little choice now but to select a female MP and for that reason Starmer is not going to win. As for Cooper she is a bit old school and someone from the 2010 - 2015 would be a better choice but few have had a chance to shine under the utter destructive leadership of Corbyn

    Perhaps an Australian would appeal to Brexit Britain. Could they bring back Patricia Hewitt? :)
    If you want to go that far back, Harriet is still your best bet. Widely respected in the party.
    Not by everybody. She bears the principal responsibility for Corbyn becoming Leader.
    Thought that was Miliband's fault with his £3 membership fee
    No - it was Harman's fault for forcing the Shadow Cabinet to abstain on Osborne's Welfare proposals - leaving Corbyn as the only contender to oppose them. Had that not happened , he would have lost - indeed come third.
    They could have seen which the wind was blowing and and opposed it too.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,941
    wasd said:

    Sandpit said:

    Pb brain trust...Does anybody have any suggestions for a graphic tablet which you plug into your pc, which I will only use for annotating documents, writing maths and creating organisation charts ie I won't be using it to create any art so don't need the pro level ones.

    There's only one name in graphic tablets -Wacom. Choose one to match your budget, the cheapest small tablet and pen I can see now on Amazon is £55.
    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Wacom-CTL-471-Small-Graphic-Tablet/dp/B00NFQ3H3S/
    Unless you need it urgently then consider waiting until after the Apple dev conference in June. There's some suggestion that they're going to bake in using the iPad Pro as a graphics tablet which may cause competitors to drop their prices to compete.
    That would compete at the very top end of the market (and I hope Apple go for it) but the enquiry was for something simple to markup documents. An iPad Pro starts at £549 plus the pen.
  • Options
    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    SeanT said:

    The New European is quite something. It makes the National look sane.

    It reads like one of those newsletters created by a small mad socialist cult, which wants proper welfare, and nationalised railways, but also thinks Jews are secretly trying to kill all the badgers.
    It is indeed bonkers, I shall post a link to it whenever a Remainer refers to "swivel-eyed Brexiteers" - because I have never seen anything half as barking, not even from a kipper.
  • Options
    BigRichBigRich Posts: 3,489
    SeanT said:

    I think this is my favourite New European headline of the last week.

    "Brexit is a tower of lies swaying alarmingly - we must push it over"

    A TOWER OF LIES, SWAYING ALARMINGLY

    They put that in an actual headline. Genius.

    I've seen the new European in the new stands but never seen anybody buying one or reading it, at a guess it will be loosing money at the moment, most new newspapers are when they start. Is there a rich millionaire behind the enterprise that can keep it going? if not I cant see it brakeing even any time soon
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,130
    Ishmael_Z said:

    SeanT said:

    The New European is quite something. It makes the National look sane.

    It reads like one of those newsletters created by a small mad socialist cult, which wants proper welfare, and nationalised railways, but also thinks Jews are secretly trying to kill all the badgers.
    It is indeed bonkers, I shall post a link to it whenever a Remainer refers to "swivel-eyed Brexiteers" - because I have never seen anything half as barking, not even from a kipper.
    This headline has a point - "Why are Brexiteers so bored by their victory?"

    http://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/top-stories/why-are-brexiteers-so-bored-by-their-victory-1-4969501
  • Options
    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    viewcode said:

    isam said:
    I read it in Costa today (we don't get it free at work anymore, godsdammit). Kelvin was his usual self: kick somebody, kick somebody, plug his website, list a firm with a funny name, kick somebody. This happens every now and then: the commentariat get used to a life fucking people up for fun, then one day they accidentally pick on somebody who can fight back and everybody abandons them.

    In this specific case, he waxed lyrical on the usual "Scouser in a suit" riff for a para or two. Ho, ho. Unfortunately, that's Kelvin McKenzie. Taking the piss out of Liverpool. After Hillsborough, that's the equivalent of standing in a tin bath wrapped in foil on a summit shouting "ALL THUNDER GODS ARE BASTARDS" during a lightning storm.

    Mind you though, he is a c**t, so my sympathy is somewhat limited.
    :D
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    kle4 said:

    justin124 said:

    justin124 said:

    surbiton said:



    'Starmer vs Cooper would be a great leadership election'

    Whoever it is labour really have little choice now but to select a female MP and for that reason Starmer is not going to win. As for Cooper she is a bit old school and someone from the 2010 - 2015 would be a better choice but few have had a chance to shine under the utter destructive leadership of Corbyn

    Perhaps an Australian would appeal to Brexit Britain. Could they bring back Patricia Hewitt? :)
    If you want to go that far back, Harriet is still your best bet. Widely respected in the party.
    Not by everybody. She bears the principal responsibility for Corbyn becoming Leader.
    Thought that was Miliband's fault with his £3 membership fee
    No - it was Harman's fault for forcing the Shadow Cabinet to abstain on Osborne's Welfare proposals - leaving Corbyn as the only contender to oppose them. Had that not happened , he would have lost - indeed come third.
    They could have seen which the wind was blowing and and opposed it too.
    The other three were Shadow Cabinet members. I think they ought to have stepped down for the duration of the contest and so given themselves the freedom to vote against the proposals.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    justin124 said:

    kle4 said:

    justin124 said:

    justin124 said:

    surbiton said:



    'Starmer vs Cooper would be a great leadership election'

    Whoever it is labour really have little choice now but to select a female MP and for that reason Starmer is not going to win. As for Cooper she is a bit old school and someone from the 2010 - 2015 would be a better choice but few have had a chance to shine under the utter destructive leadership of Corbyn

    Perhaps an Australian would appeal to Brexit Britain. Could they bring back Patricia Hewitt? :)
    If you want to go that far back, Harriet is still your best bet. Widely respected in the party.
    Not by everybody. She bears the principal responsibility for Corbyn becoming Leader.
    Thought that was Miliband's fault with his £3 membership fee
    No - it was Harman's fault for forcing the Shadow Cabinet to abstain on Osborne's Welfare proposals - leaving Corbyn as the only contender to oppose them. Had that not happened , he would have lost - indeed come third.
    They could have seen which the wind was blowing and and opposed it too.
    The other three were Shadow Cabinet members. I think they ought to have stepped down for the duration of the contest and so given themselves the freedom to vote against the proposals.
    Well exactly. Now, it may be that they supported that position and did not realise Corbyn would manage to seize the opening so well, but from a political contest point of view, it's a surprise none of them figured resigning from the shadow cabinet to vote against them would be a good differentiation strategy - a new shadow cabinet would be coming with a new leader in any case, so less risk.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,941
    edited April 2017
    viewcode said:

    isam said:
    I read it in Costa today (we don't get it free at work anymore, godsdammit). Kelvin was his usual self: kick somebody, kick somebody, plug his website, list a firm with a funny name, kick somebody. This happens every now and then: the commentariat get used to a life fucking people up for fun, then one day they accidentally pick on somebody who can fight back and everybody abandons them.

    In this specific case, he waxed lyrical on the usual "Scouser in a suit" riff for a para or two. Ho, ho. Unfortunately, that's Kelvin McKenzie. Taking the piss out of Liverpool. After Hillsborough, that's the equivalent of standing in a tin bath wrapped in foil on a summit shouting "ALL THUNDER GODS ARE BASTARDS" during a lightning storm.

    Mind you though, he is a c**t, so my sympathy is somewhat limited.
    On the anniversary of Hillsborough, that's why it's been picked up. As you say, c**t.

    15/04/89. RIP the 96.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,131
    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    ydoethur said:

    justin124 said:

    I agree with you re- the likes of Cat Smith and would expect little change at all were such a person to take over. As far as charisma is concerned, I suspect for now that is not what the electorate is looking for. Theresa May is hardly charismatic and I suspect that fits the national mood quite well and explains why quite a few non - Tories such as myself have warmed to her.We have had too many shysters such as Blair and Cameron.

    Well - perhaps. But I think it's much easier for a PM to get away with a lack of charisma because while in office they can show unflappable competence and that gets attention. (Well, maybe that's an exaggeration in May's case but as PM she's always news. She doesn't have to go to the news channels, they come to her. She also doesn't have to say what she would do, she can just get on and do it.) As LotO, you need to find a way to attract that attention and get people to listen to you, because you can't prove yourself by results. That's one reason I think why ultimately Ed Miliband, who was a poor speaker and communicator although he had a number of potentially good ideas, proved a failure while Blair and Cameron succeeded.
    Ed Milliband was just too geeky and unable to connect.I suspect that people such as Yvette Cooper and Keir Starmer would do quite well up against Theresa May.
    I could see Starmer as a Kinnock/Howard figure ie an effective opposition leader but not a PM. Someone like Umunna is more likely to be a future PM after another Labour defeat, the question is whether that is a humiliating Corbyn led defeat or a respectable Starmer (or similar) led defeat
    I disagree . Umunna does not strike me as particularly authentic at all - and is rumoured to have skeletons waiting to be pulled out.
    Umunna has charisma and is telegenic, Starmer is neither just more competent and a shade more centrist than Corbyn
    Starmer is way to the right of Corbyn - probably close to Hilary Benn.
    Umunna reaks of insincerity and I suspect he would not cope well with the pressures of leadership.
    Starmer is Kinnockite Labour, Umunna is Blairite Labour and we all know which one of those won elections
    Starmer could well run the Tories as close in 2020 as Howard did in reverse in 2005. A 3% Tory lead could well mean a Hung Parliament.
    Not so likely as the Tories will pick up former UKIP voters and even then he would still lose
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,941
    kle4 said:

    Sandpit said:

    Pb brain trust...Does anybody have any suggestions for a graphic tablet which you plug into your pc, which I will only use for annotating documents, writing maths and creating organisation charts ie I won't be using it to create any art so don't need the pro level ones.

    There's only one name in graphic tablets -Wacom. Choose one to match your budget, the cheapest small tablet and pen I can see now on Amazon is £55.
    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Wacom-CTL-471-Small-Graphic-Tablet/dp/B00NFQ3H3S/
    I thought wacom tablet was just the name for a graphic tablet, so they truly must be the only name in town.
    Yep, same as Hoover, Biro, Google...
  • Options
    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
  • Options
    wasdwasd Posts: 276
    Sandpit said:

    wasd said:

    Sandpit said:

    Pb brain trust...Does anybody have any suggestions for a graphic tablet which you plug into your pc, which I will only use for annotating documents, writing maths and creating organisation charts ie I won't be using it to create any art so don't need the pro level ones.

    There's only one name in graphic tablets -Wacom. Choose one to match your budget, the cheapest small tablet and pen I can see now on Amazon is £55.
    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Wacom-CTL-471-Small-Graphic-Tablet/dp/B00NFQ3H3S/
    Unless you need it urgently then consider waiting until after the Apple dev conference in June. There's some suggestion that they're going to bake in using the iPad Pro as a graphics tablet which may cause competitors to drop their prices to compete.
    That would compete at the very top end of the market (and I hope Apple go for it) but the enquiry was for something simple to markup documents. An iPad Pro starts at £549 plus the pen.
    Yes - and it may push the rest down in price.
  • Options
    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    edited April 2017
    I would have thought that someone like Starmer would hurt the Lib Dems first and foremost.

    Their revival, what there is of it, depends on Corbyn making Labour unattractive.

    If Labour regains it's sanity, the Lib revival will the first victim.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    edited April 2017
    SeanT said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    SeanT said:

    The New European is quite something. It makes the National look sane.

    It reads like one of those newsletters created by a small mad socialist cult, which wants proper welfare, and nationalised railways, but also thinks Jews are secretly trying to kill all the badgers.
    It is indeed bonkers, I shall post a link to it whenever a Remainer refers to "swivel-eyed Brexiteers" - because I have never seen anything half as barking, not even from a kipper.
    It's got that fabulous mix you get from Mormon papers or quirky Marxist magazines. There are apparently sane and sensible pieces, even interesting stuff, then there's a sudden gush of 100% toys-in-the-attic loopyland frothing and calls for all-out war against the Rothschilds and their badger-hating Mexican gangster allies, then back to sensible discussion of exchange rates.
    It's like a Natural Law PEB then.

    'The natural law party will appoint 7000 expects in transcendental meditation and yogic flying *image of bouncing yoga man*' and 'the natural law party is the only party that can strengthen the sovereignty of the United Kingdom, and at the same time create a real union of the European Nations. In the United Kingdom and the European Union, we will eliminate unnecessary bureaucracy'.

    Wait..damnit, you all should have listened to them!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=438UKM1Av1g

    Bloke at work gushes about the New European all the time, I've not read any of it yet - as I respond generically that I'm glad of as many divergent opinions as possible, they may not have twigged I voted Brexit, if hardly on the extreme end of that spectrum.
  • Options
    viewcodeviewcode Posts: 18,950
    Sandpit said:

    viewcode said:

    isam said:
    I read it in Costa today (we don't get it free at work anymore, godsdammit). Kelvin was his usual self: kick somebody, kick somebody, plug his website, list a firm with a funny name, kick somebody. This happens every now and then: the commentariat get used to a life fucking people up for fun, then one day they accidentally pick on somebody who can fight back and everybody abandons them.

    In this specific case, he waxed lyrical on the usual "Scouser in a suit" riff for a para or two. Ho, ho. Unfortunately, that's Kelvin McKenzie. Taking the piss out of Liverpool. After Hillsborough, that's the equivalent of standing in a tin bath wrapped in foil on a summit shouting "ALL THUNDER GODS ARE BASTARDS" during a lightning storm.

    Mind you though, he is a c**t, so my sympathy is somewhat limited.
    On the anniversary of Hillsborough, that's why it's been picked up. As you say, c**t.

    15/04/89. RIP the 96.
    Jesus, really? (Checks the dates). Oh well, that's it. What in the name of arse was he thinking?
  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 40,988
    viewcode said:

    isam said:
    I read it in Costa today (we don't get it free at work anymore, godsdammit). Kelvin was his usual self: kick somebody, kick somebody, plug his website, list a firm with a funny name, kick somebody. This happens every now and then: the commentariat get used to a life fucking people up for fun, then one day they accidentally pick on somebody who can fight back and everybody abandons them.

    In this specific case, he waxed lyrical on the usual "Scouser in a suit" riff for a para or two. Ho, ho. Unfortunately, that's Kelvin McKenzie. Taking the piss out of Liverpool. After Hillsborough, that's the equivalent of standing in a tin bath wrapped in foil on a summit shouting "ALL THUNDER GODS ARE BASTARDS" during a lightning storm.

    Mind you though, he is a c**t, so my sympathy is somewhat limited.
    Would have loved to see his face when he found out Barkley is part Nigerian! It has provoked a nasty twitter argument between Ian Wright & Stan Collymore

    https://twitter.com/stancollymore/status/852979046623346689

    https://twitter.com/ianwright0/status/852983465263988736
  • Options
    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,205
    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,941
    Been out all day so coming late to the party, but the comments under Diane's Labourlist article about the wonderful Jeremy are hilarious. Difficult to know which are genuine and which are spoofs.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    Sandpit said:

    Been out all day so coming late to the party, but the comments under Diane's Labourlist article about the wonderful Jeremy are hilarious. Difficult to know which are genuine and which are spoofs.

    That's the fun. With the Tories being all conquering at the moment (well, not quite, but flush with confidence to say the least) I doubt the ones at ConHome are as amusing.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest?

    I'm a Liverpool fan and I certainly don't think Scousers are above criticism...but saying what he did in the manner he did at the time he did, MacKenzie clearly wanted a reaction of this nature - he can hardly complain if it perhaps is a bit stronger than he would have like even.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,941
    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County

    I'm a Liverpool fan so undoubtedly biased, but McKenzie saying what he said on the anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster is pouring oil on the fire. I can't imagine the date somehow escaped him as he wrote the piece.

    Hysel was unacceptable, but was at a time when stadium riots weren't particularly uncommon and all football clubs were infiltrated by organised hooligans. Wait until the Russian World Cup to see how other countries have failed to deal with the problem as well as the British authorities did.
  • Options
    OmniumOmnium Posts: 9,800
    surbiton said:

    Omnium said:

    surbiton said:

    Re: Labour's vote share and Corbyn Replacement.

    This is the general law on this matter.

    Any Labour leader [ after replacing Corbyn ] will add 5% to the Labour vote as a minimum.

    Bollocks (if you'll forgive me) - they have rubbish in depth.

    Abbott, McDonnell, Thornberry would all clearly be worse, and worse from day one. Others would only show their inadequacies a little later.
    If Corbyn is replaced, those named will not be even in the picture. Corbyn will only be replaced if the "electorate" which voted for him wakes up. They will not replace Corbyn with the above.

    I would not include Thornberry in that list anyway.

    Personally, I am sticking with Labour only to be given a chance to vote Starmer v Cooper.

    Both perfectly credible regardless what PB Tories have to say. [ After all, the PB Tories have the good of Labour in their hearts !!!!!!!!! ]
    Both Starmer or Cooper would be a substantial improvement.

    (I think all politically minded people - PB Tory or otherwise - would prefer to have people that have a degree of sense and responsibility behind their arguments in the positions of influence. The people that listen most closely to your views, and are the best critics are probably your 'enemies' after all.)
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    ydoethur said:

    justin124 said:

    I agree with you re- the likes of Cat Smith and would expect little change at all were such a person to take over. As far as charisma is concerned, I suspect for now that is not what the electorate is looking for. Theresa May is hardly charismatic and I suspect that fits the national mood quite well and explains why quite a few non - Tories such as myself have warmed to her.We have had too many shysters such as Blair and Cameron.

    /blockquote>

    Ed Milliband was just too geeky and unable to connect.I suspect that people such as Yvette Cooper and Keir Starmer would do quite well up against Theresa May.
    I could see Starmer as a Kinnock/Howard figure ie an effective opposition leader but not a PM. Someone like Umunna is more likely to be a future PM after another Labour defeat, the question is whether that is a humiliating Corbyn led defeat or a respectable Starmer (or similar) led defeat
    I disagree . Umunna does not strike me as particularly authentic at all - and is rumoured to have skeletons waiting to be pulled out.
    Umunna has charisma and is telegenic, Starmer is neither just more competent and a shade more centrist than Corbyn
    Starmer is way to the right of Corbyn - probably close to Hilary Benn.
    Umunna reaks of insincerity and I suspect he would not cope well with the pressures of leadership.
    Starmer is Kinnockite Labour, Umunna is Blairite Labour and we all know which one of those won elections
    Starmer could well run the Tories as close in 2020 as Howard did in reverse in 2005. A 3% Tory lead could well mean a Hung Parliament.
    Not so likely as the Tories will pick up former UKIP voters and even then he would still lose
    But it is quite likely that the Tories will have lost votes to the Libdems to offset any gains from UKIP. I would expect Labour to win back the support that has drifted to the LibDems in recent months.In psephological terms if Starmer managed the 3% swing that Howard enjoyed in 2005, the two main parties would be neck and neck with Labour better placed to form a minority government.
  • Options
    viewcodeviewcode Posts: 18,950
    isam said:

    viewcode said:

    isam said:
    I read it in Costa today (we don't get it free at work anymore, godsdammit). Kelvin was his usual self: kick somebody, kick somebody, plug his website, list a firm with a funny name, kick somebody. This happens every now and then: the commentariat get used to a life fucking people up for fun, then one day they accidentally pick on somebody who can fight back and everybody abandons them.

    In this specific case, he waxed lyrical on the usual "Scouser in a suit" riff for a para or two. Ho, ho. Unfortunately, that's Kelvin McKenzie. Taking the piss out of Liverpool. After Hillsborough, that's the equivalent of standing in a tin bath wrapped in foil on a summit shouting "ALL THUNDER GODS ARE BASTARDS" during a lightning storm.

    Mind you though, he is a c**t, so my sympathy is somewhat limited.
    Would have loved to see his face when he found out Barkley is part Nigerian! It has provoked a nasty twitter argument between Ian Wright & Stan Collymore

    h ttps://twitter.com/stancollymore/status/852979046623346689

    h ttps://twitter.com/ianwright0/status/852983465263988736
    There has got to be an emoji for "places palm on forehead, looks down, doesn't know whether to laugh or to cry"...
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,131
    edited April 2017
    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    ydoethur said:

    justin124 said:

    I agree with you re- the likes of Cat Smith and would expect little change at all were such a person to take over. As far as charisma is concerned, I suspect for now that is not what the electorate is looking for. Theresa May is hardly charismatic and I suspect that fits the national mood quite well and explains why quite a few non - Tories such as myself have warmed to her.We have had too many shysters such as Blair and Cameron.

    /blockquote>

    Ed Milliband was just too geeky and unable to connect.I suspect that people such as Yvette Cooper and Keir Starmer would do quite well up against Theresa May.
    I could see Starmer as a Kinnock/Howard figure ie question is whether that is a humiliating Corbyn led defeat or a respectable Starmer (or similar) led defeat
    I disagree . Umunna does not strike me as particularly authentic at all - and is rumoured to have skeletons waiting to be pulled out.
    Umunna has charisma and is telegenic, Starmer is neither just more competent and a shade more centrist than Corbyn
    Starmer is way to the right of Corbyn - probably close to Hilary Benn.
    Umunna reaks of insincerity and I suspect he would not cope well with the pressures of leadership.
    Starmer is Kinnockite Labour, Umunna is Blairite Labour and we all know which one of those won elections
    Starmer could well run the Tories as close in 2020 as Howard did in reverse in 2005. A 3% Tory lead could well mean a Hung Parliament.
    Not so likely as the Tories will pick up former UKIP voters and even then he would still lose
    But it is quite likely that the Tories will have lost votes to the Libdems to offset any gains from UKIP. I would expect Labour to win back the support that has drifted to the LibDems in recent months.In psephological terms if Starmer managed the 3% swing that Howard enjoyed in 2005, the two main parties would be neck and neck with Labour better placed to form a minority government.
    No chance. Any Tories going to the LDs would already have gone so the Tories would still make more gains from UKIP. Howard's voteshare in 2005 was less than 1% more than Hague's in 2001 and I doubt Starmer's would be much different from Ed Miliband's even if he won back a few LDs Corbyn has lost and Ed Miliband won, in 2005 of course Labour still won with a majority of over 60
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,128
    SeanT said:

    kle4 said:

    SeanT said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    SeanT said:

    The New European is quite something. It makes the National look sane.

    It reads like one of those newsletters created by a small mad socialist cult, which wants proper welfare, and nationalised railways, but also thinks Jews are secretly trying to kill all the badgers.
    It is indeed bonkers, I shall post a link to it whenever a Remainer refers to "swivel-eyed Brexiteers" - because I have never seen anything half as barking, not even from a kipper.
    It's got that fabulous mix you get from Mormon papers or quirky Marxist magazines. There are apparently sane and sensible pieces, even interesting stuff, then there's a sudden gush of 100% toys-in-the-attic loopyland frothing and calls for all-out war against the Rothschilds and their badger-hating Mexican gangster allies, then back to sensible discussion of exchange rates.
    It's like a Natural Law PEB then.

    'The natural law party will appoint 7000 expects in transcendental meditation and yogic flying *image of bouncing yoga man*' and 'the natural law party is the only party that can strengthen the sovereignty of the United Kingdom, and at the same time create a real union of the European Nations. In the United Kingdom and the European Union, we will eliminate unnecessary bureaucracy'.

    Wait..damnit, you all should have listened to them!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=438UKM1Av1g

    Bloke at work gushes about the New European all the time, I've not read any of it yet - as I respond generically that I'm glad of as many divergent opinions as possible, they may not have twigged I voted Brexit, if hardly on the extreme end of that spectrum.
    I just checked their roster of writers and it turns out I personally KNOW two of them rather well. One is an Old Etonian, the other a very very rich man. They really are the kind of people who aren't used to losing. Hence, perhaps, their crazed reaction.
    Even worse - they lost to people they look down on from places they've never heard of.
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,956
    HYUFD said:
    Mr Eagles and his hilarious Burgon betting slips will not be happy...
  • Options
    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,205
    Sandpit said:

    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County

    I'm a Liverpool fan so undoubtedly biased, but McKenzie saying what he said on the anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster is pouring oil on the fire. I can't imagine the date somehow escaped him as he wrote the piece.

    Hysel was unacceptable, but was at a time when stadium riots weren't particularly uncommon and all football clubs were infiltrated by organised hooligans. Wait until the Russian World Cup to see how other countries have failed to deal with the problem as well as the British authorities did.
    My friends' went to Heysal in 1980 for the Cup Winners' Cup Final and they say that the stadium was falling to bits then. And to be fair, the Juve fans didn't cover themselves in glory that night either. But I don't think you can dismiss Heysal as the actions of organised hooligans. They were regular Liverpool fans in the stadium. It could have been other supporters, but it wasn't.
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,128
    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County

    Did Coventry, Wimbledon, Oxford and Luton ever have another chance od European competition before or after ?
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    ydoethur said:

    justin124 said:

    /blockquote>

    Ed Milliband was just too geeky and unable to connect.I suspect that people such as Yvette Cooper and Keir Starmer would do quite well up against Theresa May.
    /blockquote>

    I disagree . Umunna does not strike me as particularly authentic at all - and is rumoured to have skeletons waiting to be pulled out.
    Umunna has charisma and is telegenic, Starmer is neither just more competent and a shade more centrist than Corbyn
    Starmer is way to the right of Corbyn - probably close to Hilary Benn.
    Umunna reaks of insincerity and I suspect he would not cope well with the pressures of leadership.
    Starmer is Kinnockite Labour, Umunna is Blairite Labour and we all know which one of those won elections
    Starmer could well run the Tories as close in 2020 as Howard did in reverse in 2005. A 3% Tory lead could well mean a Hung Parliament.
    Not so likely as the Tories will pick up former UKIP voters and even then he would still lose
    But it is quite likely that the Tories will have lost votes to the Libdems to offset any gains from UKIP. I would expect Labour to win back the support that has drifted to the LibDems in recent months.In psephological terms if Starmer managed the 3% swing that Howard enjoyed in 2005, the two main parties would be neck and neck with Labour better placed to form a minority government.
    No chance. Any Tories going to the LDs would already have gone so the Tories would still make more gains from UKIP. Howard's voteshare in 2005 was less than 1% more than Hague's in 2001 and I doubt Starmer's would be much different from Ed Miliband's, in 2005 of course Labour still won with a majority of over 60
    Disagree. By 2020 May will no longer be a new face and the Tories will have been there for 10 years. Some are likely to drift back to the LibDems who might well poll something close to the 10/11% they are currently recording in most polls. It will, however, probably be a different 10/11%.
  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 40,988
    edited April 2017
    Mortimer said:

    HYUFD said:
    Mr Eagles and his hilarious Burgon betting slips will not be happy...
    "They are ordinary decent blokes and there’s not a racist or Nazi bone in their bodies.”

    Apart from the nazi font and highlighting of the letter 'S' twice I didn't see anything wrong with it! :confounded:
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    edited April 2017
    Mortimer said:

    HYUFD said:
    Mr Eagles and his hilarious Burgon betting slips will not be happy...
    I like that the tweet says he 'faces fury', while the linked headline says 'faced scorn'. The latter seems more appropriate, if any reaction is warranted. Oh no, they use germanic lettering, let me fetch my smelling salts.

    Edit - According to wikipedia Tom Newton-Dunn's middle name is Zoltan - now that is a badass name I'd expect to see in a metal band.
  • Options
    david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 17,420
    Sandpit said:

    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County

    I'm a Liverpool fan so undoubtedly biased, but McKenzie saying what he said on the anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster is pouring oil on the fire. I can't imagine the date somehow escaped him as he wrote the piece.

    Hysel was unacceptable, but was at a time when stadium riots weren't particularly uncommon and all football clubs were infiltrated by organised hooligans. Wait until the Russian World Cup to see how other countries have failed to deal with the problem as well as the British authorities did.
    With respect, that's a pathetic response that seeks to evade responsibility because others were doing it and some still are doing it. Yes, they were and they are (and Liverpool did more than their own fair share beyond Heysal), and for that matter, UEFA and others have responsibilities for choosing an inappropriate and unsafe ground. But the primary responsibility for those deaths lies with the fans of Liverpool FC.

    When the club later played Juventus, Liverpool wanted and expected reconciliation. If they can expect that from a club which had every right to bear a deep and lasting scar against Liverpool, why can they not let go of a shoddy piece of reporting from nearly 30 years ago? The simple answer is that they don't want to let go: they want to be the victims, they want to be aggrieved and they revel in that self-perceived status.
  • Options
    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,205

    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County

    Did Coventry, Wimbledon, Oxford and Luton ever have another chance od European competition before or after ?
    Coventry played in the 70-71 Fairs Cup. Wimbledon played in the 95-96 Inter-Toto Cup which doesn't really count.

    Personally I think UEFA should have banned Liverpool for 20 years and let the rest get on with it.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,131
    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    ydoethur said:

    justin124 said:

    /blockquote>

    Ed Milliband was just too geeky and unable to connect.I suspect that people such as Yvette Cooper and Keir Starmer would do quite well up against Theresa May.
    /blockquote>

    I disagree . Umunna does not strike me as particularly authentic at all - and is rumoured to have skeletons waiting to be pulled out.
    Umunna has charisma and is telegenic, Starmer is neither just more competent and a shade more centrist than Corbyn
    Starmer is way to the right of Corbyn - probably close to Hilary Benn.
    Umunna reaks of insincerity and I suspect he would not cope well with the pressures of leadership.
    Starmer is Kinnockite Labour, Umunna is Blairite Labour and we all know which one of those won elections
    Starmer could well run the Tories as close in 2020 as Howard did in reverse in 2005. A 3% Tory lead could well mean a Hung Parliament.
    Not so likely as the Tories will pick up former UKIP voters and even then he would still lose
    But it is quite likely that the Tories will have lost votes to the Libdems to offset any gains from UKIP. I would expect Labour to win back the support that has drifted to the LibDems in recent months.In psephological terms if Starmer managed the 3% swing that Howard enjoyed in 2005, the two main parties would be neck and neck with Labour better placed to form a minority government.
    No chance. Any Tories going to the LDs would already have gone so the Tories would still make more gains from UKIP. Howard's voteshare in 2005 was less than 1% more than Hague's in 2001 and I doubt Starmer's would be much different from Ed Miliband's, in 2005 of course Labour still won with a majority of over 60
    Disagree. By 2020 May will no longer be a new face and the Tories will have been there for 10 years. Some are likely to drift back to the LibDems who might well poll something close to the 10/11% they are currently recording in most polls. It will, however, probably be a different 10/11%.
    10% for the LDS will be more than offset if UKIP are down to 8 or 9%
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,131
    Mortimer said:

    HYUFD said:
    Mr Eagles and his hilarious Burgon betting slips will not be happy...
    Looks like the Eagle has not landed here!
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    Rule #2 of PB - never keep perspective

    (Rule #1 is AV is interesting, Rule #3 is subsamples can be trusted, and Rule #4 is SCON is always about to surge, and so on and so forth)
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    SeanT said:

    tlg86 said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Everyone up for the "Day of the sun" :D ?

    It's raining in Pyongyang.
    If this report is true...

    http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20170414000689

    North Korean leader Kim Jong-un ordered 25 percent of Pyongyang residents to leave the city immediately, according to a Russian news outlet on Friday. The Pravda report said that in accordance with the order, 600,000 people should be urgently evacuated.
    Crivvens!
    I believe he classed them as "undesirables"

    Calm down dear

  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,128
    tlg86 said:

    Sandpit said:

    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County

    I'm a Liverpool fan so undoubtedly biased, but McKenzie saying what he said on the anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster is pouring oil on the fire. I can't imagine the date somehow escaped him as he wrote the piece.

    Hysel was unacceptable, but was at a time when stadium riots weren't particularly uncommon and all football clubs were infiltrated by organised hooligans. Wait until the Russian World Cup to see how other countries have failed to deal with the problem as well as the British authorities did.
    My friends' went to Heysal in 1980 for the Cup Winners' Cup Final and they say that the stadium was falling to bits then. And to be fair, the Juve fans didn't cover themselves in glory that night either. But I don't think you can dismiss Heysal as the actions of organised hooligans. They were regular Liverpool fans in the stadium. It could have been other supporters, but it wasn't.
    Hooliganism was a fundamental part of football in that era.

    While there were few hardcore hooligans many football fans appreciated the image hooliganism brought.

    'Liverpool 39 Juventus 0' was seen on school desks and graffitied walls throughout Britain - and also Italy care of Torino and Fiorentina fans.
  • Options
    GeoffMGeoffM Posts: 6,071
    SeanT said:

    The New European is quite something. It makes the National look sane.

    It reads like one of those newsletters created by a small mad socialist cult, which wants proper welfare, and nationalised railways, but also thinks Jews are secretly trying to kill all the badgers.
    Well we *were* trying to kill them secretly.
    Thanks for nothing.

    [starts packing away the badger-killing stuff]
  • Options
    rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787
    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    I'd only be scared of the building Korea crisis if I lived in or near Korea. However, if we get into a confrontation between the US and Russia in the Middle East then I'd be worried it could all go Able Archer.
  • Options
    rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787
    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    tlg86 said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Everyone up for the "Day of the sun" :D ?

    It's raining in Pyongyang.
    If this report is true...

    http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20170414000689

    North Korean leader Kim Jong-un ordered 25 percent of Pyongyang residents to leave the city immediately, according to a Russian news outlet on Friday. The Pravda report said that in accordance with the order, 600,000 people should be urgently evacuated.
    Crivvens!
    I believe he classed them as "undesirables"

    Calm down dear

    They've been told to leave so there's enough room in the bomb shelters for everyone else.
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,128
    edited April 2017
    tlg86 said:

    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County

    Did Coventry, Wimbledon, Oxford and Luton ever have another chance od European competition before or after ?
    Coventry played in the 70-71 Fairs Cup. Wimbledon played in the 95-96 Inter-Toto Cup which doesn't really count.

    Personally I think UEFA should have banned Liverpool for 20 years and let the rest get on with it.
    It could have happened to any English club, things had been building up to it for over a decade.
  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 40,988
    Here's Maggie in Denim

    https://youtu.be/Hf9rNeTN4V0
  • Options
    rpjs said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    I'd only be scared of the building Korea crisis if I lived in or near Korea. However, if we get into a confrontation between the US and Russia in the Middle East then I'd be worried it could all go Able Archer.
    The problem is that Japan is also involved and of course China. I sailed on a cruise from Vancouver four years ago to Japan, Southern Russia, past North Korea and on to South Korea and China. The relative closeness of this area is remarkable and those in the region must be very fearful at present
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,412
    kle4 said:

    Mortimer said:

    HYUFD said:
    Mr Eagles and his hilarious Burgon betting slips will not be happy...
    I like that the tweet says he 'faces fury', while the linked headline says 'faced scorn'. The latter seems more appropriate, if any reaction is warranted. Oh no, they use germanic lettering, let me fetch my smelling salts.

    Edit - According to wikipedia Tom Newton-Dunn's middle name is Zoltan - now that is a badass name I'd expect to see in a metal band.

    -Tom
    -Newton
    -Newton
    -Dunn. Gentlemen, let's get to work.
  • Options
    JasonJason Posts: 1,614

    Sandpit said:

    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County

    I'm a Liverpool fan so undoubtedly biased, but McKenzie saying what he said on the anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster is pouring oil on the fire. I can't imagine the date somehow escaped him as he wrote the piece.

    Hysel was unacceptable, but was at a time when stadium riots weren't particularly uncommon and all football clubs were infiltrated by organised hooligans. Wait until the Russian World Cup to see how other countries have failed to deal with the problem as well as the British authorities did.
    With respect, that's a pathetic response that seeks to evade responsibility because others were doing it and some still are doing it. Yes, they were and they are (and Liverpool did more than their own fair share beyond Heysal), and for that matter, UEFA and others have responsibilities for choosing an inappropriate and unsafe ground. But the primary responsibility for those deaths lies with the fans of Liverpool FC.

    When the club later played Juventus, Liverpool wanted and expected reconciliation. If they can expect that from a club which had every right to bear a deep and lasting scar against Liverpool, why can they not let go of a shoddy piece of reporting from nearly 30 years ago? The simple answer is that they don't want to let go: they want to be the victims, they want to be aggrieved and they revel in that self-perceived status.
    I wonder if there will come a time when Scousers are officially designated as 'ethnic minorities'. I'm sure they would embrace such a move, especially if it gave them certain privileges regarding housing. I don't much care for Liverpool, its football, or its people. It is a benighted city.
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    The Chinese seem to have mobilised a fair number of troops to the border:


    http://uk.businessinsider.com/china-troop-movement-north-korea-border-2017-4?r=US&IR=T

    Airspace over North Korea is empty on flight tracker too.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,941

    Sandpit said:

    tlg86 said:

    I'm a Liverpool fan so undoubtedly biased, but McKenzie saying what he said on the anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster is pouring oil on the fire. I can't imagine the date somehow escaped him as he wrote the piece.

    Hysel was unacceptable, but was at a time when stadium riots weren't particularly uncommon and all football clubs were infiltrated by organised hooligans. Wait until the Russian World Cup to see how other countries have failed to deal with the problem as well as the British authorities did.
    With respect, that's a pathetic response that seeks to evade responsibility because others were doing it and some still are doing it. Yes, they were and they are (and Liverpool did more than their own fair share beyond Heysal), and for that matter, UEFA and others have responsibilities for choosing an inappropriate and unsafe ground. But the primary responsibility for those deaths lies with the fans of Liverpool FC.

    When the club later played Juventus, Liverpool wanted and expected reconciliation. If they can expect that from a club which had every right to bear a deep and lasting scar against Liverpool, why can they not let go of a shoddy piece of reporting from nearly 30 years ago? The simple answer is that they don't want to let go: they want to be the victims, they want to be aggrieved and they revel in that self-perceived status.
    I was too young to understand Hysel at the time, but old enough to be affected by Hillsborough a few years later (born 1977). The deaths at Hysel are something I've read about subsequently, whereas the deaths at Hillsborough were a much bigger personal story at the time. As I understand it there were a number of factors in what happened at Hysel, including Juve fans in the supposedly neutral and Liverpool sections, as well as known hooligans within the Liverpool support. At the time tickets were available freely from box offices and travel agents, without questions as to which team you were supporting. It's easy to judge events of 32 years ago by modern standards, when it's almost impossible to get tickets except through your team's supporters club or hospitality.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heysel_Stadium_disaster

    Surely the one thing we can agree on is that Kelvin McKenzie is a f***ing idiot for making derogatory comments about Liverpool on the Hillsborough anniversary?
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Jason said:

    Sandpit said:

    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County

    I'm a Liverpool fan so undoubtedly biased, but McKenzie saying what he said on the anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster is pouring oil on the fire. I can't imagine the date somehow escaped him as he wrote the piece.

    Hysel was unacceptable, but was at a time when stadium riots weren't particularly uncommon and all football clubs were infiltrated by organised hooligans. Wait until the Russian World Cup to see how other countries have failed to deal with the problem as well as the British authorities did.
    With respect, that's a pathetic response that seeks to evade responsibility because others were doing it and some still are doing it. Yes, they were and they are (and Liverpool did more than their own fair share beyond Heysal), and for that matter, UEFA and others have responsibilities for choosing an inappropriate and unsafe ground. But the primary responsibility for those deaths lies with the fans of Liverpool FC.

    When the club later played Juventus, Liverpool wanted and expected reconciliation. If they can expect that from a club which had every right to bear a deep and lasting scar against Liverpool, why can they not let go of a shoddy piece of reporting from nearly 30 years ago? The simple answer is that they don't want to let go: they want to be the victims, they want to be aggrieved and they revel in that self-perceived status.
    I wonder if there will come a time when Scousers are officially designated as 'ethnic minorities'. I'm sure they would embrace such a move, especially if it gave them certain privileges regarding housing. I don't much care for Liverpool, its football, or its people. It is a benighted city.
    I really like Liverpool, great place on a night out. Lots of pubs have live music.
  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    One of the most bizarre things I've ever done was buy a ticket to Pyongyang at a train station in South Korea next to the border with North Korea.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,941

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    The Chinese seem to have mobilised a fair number of troops to the border:


    http://uk.businessinsider.com/china-troop-movement-north-korea-border-2017-4?r=US&IR=T

    Airspace over North Korea is empty on flight tracker too.
    Public internet flight trackers rely on people with aircraft radios connected to the internet in a massive crowdsourcing operation. I'd say there's not many of them in NK.

    I reckon that if NK tests another nuke, someone is going to take out all their radar and artillery near the border that's pointed at Seoul.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,412
    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    Wasn't there a scare in 1983, when the Soviets thought the Americans were launching an attack, but later found out it was a false alarm
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    Wasn't there a scare in 1983, when the Soviets thought the Americans were launching an attack, but later found out it was a false alarm
    Sounds about right, there or thereabouts. Did the public know about that one though?
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,314
    Blimey. We may not make Easter Monday.

    https://twitter.com/hendopolis/status/853003860759240705
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,986
    AndyJS said:

    One of the most bizarre things I've ever done was buy a ticket to Pyongyang at a train station in South Korea next to the border with North Korea.

    Did you go, or just for posterity ?
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,412
    Jason said:

    Sandpit said:

    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County

    I'm a Liverpool fan so undoubtedly biased, but McKenzie saying what he said on the anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster is pouring oil on the fire. I can't imagine the date somehow escaped him as he wrote the piece.

    Hysel was unacceptable, but was at a time when stadium riots weren't particularly uncommon and all football clubs were infiltrated by organised hooligans. Wait until the Russian World Cup to see how other countries have failed to deal with the problem as well as the British authorities did.
    With respect, that's a pathetic response that seeks to evade responsibility because others were doing it and some still are doing it. Yes, they were and they are (and Liverpool did more than their own fair share beyond Heysal), and for that matter, UEFA and others have responsibilities for choosing an inappropriate and unsafe ground. But the primary responsibility for those deaths lies with the fans of Liverpool FC.

    When the club later played Juventus, Liverpool wanted and expected reconciliation. If they can expect that from a club which had every right to bear a deep and lasting scar against Liverpool, why can they not let go of a shoddy piece of reporting from nearly 30 years ago? The simple answer is that they don't want to let go: they want to be the victims, they want to be aggrieved and they revel in that self-perceived status.
    I wonder if there will come a time when Scousers are officially designated as 'ethnic minorities'. I'm sure they would embrace such a move, especially if it gave them certain privileges regarding housing. I don't much care for Liverpool, its football, or its people. It is a benighted city.
    Merseyrail is OK. I did my first significant section in February last year, and completed the network in December.
  • Options

    Blimey. We may not make Easter Monday.

    https://twitter.com/hendopolis/status/853003860759240705

    Isn't tomorrow the big celebration in North Korea when Kim is expected to do something dramatic
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Pulpstar said:

    AndyJS said:

    One of the most bizarre things I've ever done was buy a ticket to Pyongyang at a train station in South Korea next to the border with North Korea.

    Did you go, or just for posterity ?
    Just wanted bragging rights over Sunil?
  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited April 2017
    Pulpstar said:

    AndyJS said:

    One of the most bizarre things I've ever done was buy a ticket to Pyongyang at a train station in South Korea next to the border with North Korea.

    Did you go, or just for posterity ?
    You can't take the journey at the moment. They sell tickets for the day when the line re-opens, presumably when the two nations reunite.
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,128
    Jason said:

    Sandpit said:

    tlg86 said:

    @Sandpit - do you think Scousers are above criticism? MacKenzie's comments are crass and unfunny, but I think they are unfair on gorillas - not Barkley. And at what point will Liverpool fans let Hillsborough rest? The rest of us don't bang on about what happened four year's earlier. Thirty nine people lost their lives and supporters of the following clubs missed out on European football:

    Everton, Arsenal, Man Utd, Coventry, Wimbledon, Tottenham, Southampton, Norwich, West Ham, Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford, Nottingham Forest, Luton Town and Derby County

    I'm a Liverpool fan so undoubtedly biased, but McKenzie saying what he said on the anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster is pouring oil on the fire. I can't imagine the date somehow escaped him as he wrote the piece.

    Hysel was unacceptable, but was at a time when stadium riots weren't particularly uncommon and all football clubs were infiltrated by organised hooligans. Wait until the Russian World Cup to see how other countries have failed to deal with the problem as well as the British authorities did.
    With respect, that's a pathetic response that seeks to evade responsibility because others were doing it and some still are doing it. Yes, they were and they are (and Liverpool did more than their own fair share beyond Heysal), and for that matter, UEFA and others have responsibilities for choosing an inappropriate and unsafe ground. But the primary responsibility for those deaths lies with the fans of Liverpool FC.

    When the club later played Juventus, Liverpool wanted and expected reconciliation. If they can expect that from a club which had every right to bear a deep and lasting scar against Liverpool, why can they not let go of a shoddy piece of reporting from nearly 30 years ago? The simple answer is that they don't want to let go: they want to be the victims, they want to be aggrieved and they revel in that self-perceived status.
    I wonder if there will come a time when Scousers are officially designated as 'ethnic minorities'. I'm sure they would embrace such a move, especially if it gave them certain privileges regarding housing. I don't much care for Liverpool, its football, or its people. It is a benighted city.
    Merseyside now has the Labour voting dominance of an ethnic minority.
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Blimey. We may not make Easter Monday.

    https://twitter.com/hendopolis/status/853003860759240705

    Isn't tomorrow the big celebration in North Korea when Kim is expected to do something dramatic
    Grandpa Kims 105th birthday, same day as the Titanic sinking.

    Perhaps Kim was the reincarnation of Leonardo DiCaprio.
  • Options
    DanSmithDanSmith Posts: 1,215

    Blimey. We may not make Easter Monday.

    https://twitter.com/hendopolis/status/853003860759240705

    We will be ok. I rather fear for our friends in Seoul though. Scary times.
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195

    Blimey. We may not make Easter Monday.

    https://twitter.com/hendopolis/status/853003860759240705

    Isn't tomorrow the big celebration in North Korea when Kim is expected to do something dramatic
    Supposedly
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,412

    Pulpstar said:

    AndyJS said:

    One of the most bizarre things I've ever done was buy a ticket to Pyongyang at a train station in South Korea next to the border with North Korea.

    Did you go, or just for posterity ?
    Just wanted bragging rights over Sunil?
    There is one section of track in Merseyside (as defined in 1974) I haven't done yet - Bidston to Neston, operated by Arriva Trains Wales.
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    kle4 said:

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    Wasn't there a scare in 1983, when the Soviets thought the Americans were launching an attack, but later found out it was a false alarm
    Sounds about right, there or thereabouts. Did the public know about that one though?
    Not at the time they didn't , no
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,314

    Blimey. We may not make Easter Monday.

    https://twitter.com/hendopolis/status/853003860759240705

    Isn't tomorrow the big celebration in North Korea when Kim is expected to do something dramatic
    Puts the FR elections somewhat in the shade.
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,989
    Floater said:

    Blimey. We may not make Easter Monday.

    twitter.com/hendopolis/status/853003860759240705

    Isn't tomorrow the big celebration in North Korea when Kim is expected to do something dramatic
    Supposedly
    Perhaps he has evacuated Pyongyang so he can nuke it in celebration.
  • Options
    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034
    Sandpit said:

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    The Chinese seem to have mobilised a fair number of troops to the border:


    http://uk.businessinsider.com/china-troop-movement-north-korea-border-2017-4?r=US&IR=T

    Airspace over North Korea is empty on flight tracker too.
    Public internet flight trackers rely on people with aircraft radios connected to the internet in a massive crowdsourcing operation. I'd say there's not many of them in NK.

    I reckon that if NK tests another nuke, someone is going to take out all their radar and artillery near the border that's pointed at Seoul.
    That would be an awful lot of artillery. Personally, I'd expect to see missile-related sites, including the R&D locations, and perhaps some sites personally important to Kim, taken out, rather than focusing on small-ticket items, like artillery.

    Now, if the DPRK start firing those artillery at Seoul, then expect all sorts of specialized munitions to be deployed to take them out.
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    Sandpit said:

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    The Chinese seem to have mobilised a fair number of troops to the border:


    http://uk.businessinsider.com/china-troop-movement-north-korea-border-2017-4?r=US&IR=T

    Airspace over North Korea is empty on flight tracker too.
    Public internet flight trackers rely on people with aircraft radios connected to the internet in a massive crowdsourcing operation. I'd say there's not many of them in NK.

    I reckon that if NK tests another nuke, someone is going to take out all their radar and artillery near the border that's pointed at Seoul.
    Taking out all the artillery would be a huge job

  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,941

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    Wasn't there a scare in 1983, when the Soviets thought the Americans were launching an attack, but later found out it was a false alarm
    Yes, there were several during the Cold War, of which Cuba was the most famous but which made the generals and politicians on both sides rather nervous. There was a rumour that a US President authorised a nuke strike while drunk, and after a lot of phone calls it was called off when someone important enough to do so threatened the use of the 25th Amendment. :o
  • Options
    viewcodeviewcode Posts: 18,950
    Jason said:

    I wonder if there will come a time when Scousers are officially designated as 'ethnic minorities'. I'm sure they would embrace such a move, especially if it gave them certain privileges regarding housing. I don't much care for Liverpool, its football, or its people. It is a benighted city.

    For reasons I don't fully understand, I have a big grin on my face whenever I visit there and keep it until the minute I leave. I know about the disadvantages: it's bloody difficult to get to, the sense of entitlement, the 19th century politics, the trading on past glories. But even after saying that, it does cheer me up. Some places I take an irrational like/dislike to, and Liverpool is just one of them: it's fun.
  • Options
    DanSmith said:

    Blimey. We may not make Easter Monday.

    https://twitter.com/hendopolis/status/853003860759240705

    We will be ok. I rather fear for our friends in Seoul though. Scary times.
    We may be a long way away but the markets are not and the uncertainty may well cause problems across the globe
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    If anyone has the time and inclination the Bluffers guides can be quite interesting

    http://www.matrixgames.com/forums/tm.asp?m=2631562&mpage=1&key=Strat,guide&#2631562
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    The Chinese seem to have mobilised a fair number of troops to the border:


    http://uk.businessinsider.com/china-troop-movement-north-korea-border-2017-4?r=US&IR=T

    Airspace over North Korea is empty on flight tracker too.
    LOL - do you think much air traffic passes over North Korea?
  • Options
    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034
    Floater said:

    Sandpit said:

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    The Chinese seem to have mobilised a fair number of troops to the border:


    http://uk.businessinsider.com/china-troop-movement-north-korea-border-2017-4?r=US&IR=T

    Airspace over North Korea is empty on flight tracker too.
    Public internet flight trackers rely on people with aircraft radios connected to the internet in a massive crowdsourcing operation. I'd say there's not many of them in NK.

    I reckon that if NK tests another nuke, someone is going to take out all their radar and artillery near the border that's pointed at Seoul.
    Taking out all the artillery would be a huge job

    Snap!
  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited April 2017
    It's about time an American president stood up to North Korea IMO. Enough is enough. Most of their supposed weaponry is probably fantasy.
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,128
    kle4 said:

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    Wasn't there a scare in 1983, when the Soviets thought the Americans were launching an attack, but later found out it was a false alarm
    Sounds about right, there or thereabouts. Did the public know about that one though?
    Able Archer wasn't known about at the time but it was the era of Grenada, the Korean 747 being shot down by the Soviets and continual Middle Eastern crises.

    Culturally you had Threads and Two Tribes:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXWVpcypf0w

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NxkEDpl-40

    Before that the 1973 Yom Kippur war would have been far more worrying than now and with real consequences with an energy crisis leading to a recession.
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    The Chinese seem to have mobilised a fair number of troops to the border:


    http://uk.businessinsider.com/china-troop-movement-north-korea-border-2017-4?r=US&IR=T

    Airspace over North Korea is empty on flight tracker too.
    LOL - do you think much air traffic passes over North Korea?
    Not much is even going close at the moment.
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    kle4 said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    Rule #2 of PB - never keep perspective

    (Rule #1 is AV is interesting, Rule #3 is subsamples can be trusted, and Rule #4 is SCON is always about to surge, and so on and so forth)
    /isn't rule 1 - tories are always right?

  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,989
    Floater said:

    kle4 said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    Rule #2 of PB - never keep perspective

    (Rule #1 is AV is interesting, Rule #3 is subsamples can be trusted, and Rule #4 is SCON is always about to surge, and so on and so forth)
    /isn't rule 1 - tories are always right?

    What about "PB Tories always learn"? :p
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Floater said:

    Sandpit said:

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    The Chinese seem to have mobilised a fair number of troops to the border:


    http://uk.businessinsider.com/china-troop-movement-north-korea-border-2017-4?r=US&IR=T

    Airspace over North Korea is empty on flight tracker too.
    Public internet flight trackers rely on people with aircraft radios connected to the internet in a massive crowdsourcing operation. I'd say there's not many of them in NK.

    I reckon that if NK tests another nuke, someone is going to take out all their radar and artillery near the border that's pointed at Seoul.
    Taking out all the artillery would be a huge job

    Which is why MOAB was field tested...
  • Options
    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034
    Sandpit said:

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    Wasn't there a scare in 1983, when the Soviets thought the Americans were launching an attack, but later found out it was a false alarm
    Yes, there were several during the Cold War, of which Cuba was the most famous but which made the generals and politicians on both sides rather nervous. There was a rumour that a US President authorised a nuke strike while drunk, and after a lot of phone calls it was called off when someone important enough to do so threatened the use of the 25th Amendment. :o

    Hah! It was the President I suspected, based on your post.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,314
    MTimT said:

    Sandpit said:

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    Wasn't there a scare in 1983, when the Soviets thought the Americans were launching an attack, but later found out it was a false alarm
    Yes, there were several during the Cold War, of which Cuba was the most famous but which made the generals and politicians on both sides rather nervous. There was a rumour that a US President authorised a nuke strike while drunk, and after a lot of phone calls it was called off when someone important enough to do so threatened the use of the 25th Amendment. :o

    Hah! It was the President I suspected, based on your post.
    I dream of someone using the 25th Amendment at the moment.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,941
    MTimT said:

    Sandpit said:

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    SeanT said:

    We are rapidly headed to something like the Cuban Missile crisis. Obviously not as apocalyptic - North Korea can't wipe anyone out - but eeeek, nonetheless.

    I think, regretably, we are there already. I remember the Cuban missile crisis like yesterday and we were all very worried and even scared
    This is nothing like the Cuban crisis - lets all try to keep a sense of perspective here.
    How boring if we all kept a sense of bloody perspective. Boo.

    Besides, I think this probably is the closest we've been to seeing a nuke dropped, since Cuba. That's no small thing.
    The Chinese seem to have mobilised a fair number of troops to the border:


    http://uk.businessinsider.com/china-troop-movement-north-korea-border-2017-4?r=US&IR=T

    Airspace over North Korea is empty on flight tracker too.
    Public internet flight trackers rely on people with aircraft radios connected to the internet in a massive crowdsourcing operation. I'd say there's not many of them in NK.

    I reckon that if NK tests another nuke, someone is going to take out all their radar and artillery near the border that's pointed at Seoul.
    That would be an awful lot of artillery. Personally, I'd expect to see missile-related sites, including the R&D locations, and perhaps some sites personally important to Kim, taken out, rather than focusing on small-ticket items, like artillery.

    Now, if the DPRK start firing those artillery at Seoul, then expect all sorts of specialized munitions to be deployed to take them out.
    Well you know way more about this than I do, but a couple of F16s taking out the radars followed by a few more MOABs along the border would neutralise the immediate threat to Seoul, without making Kim think he's really at war.

    Obviously if he tries anything really stupid, like showing he's got an ICBM or anything nuclear that's capable of being delivered, then he's toast, Seoul is too close to avert a strike so it's going to be pre-emptive and hard against him. The US don't need to use nuclear weapons to devastate a whole city.
  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited April 2017
    nunu said:
    Seems like the British rust-belt is starting to imitate the American in lots of ways, including drug addiction. Worrying, but maybe not surprising.
  • Options
    See there has been a joint statement tonight by Boris and his French counterpart condemning Russia over Syria
This discussion has been closed.