She’s treating and humiliating David Davis the way I would.
Now if Theresa makes Nadine Dorries Ambassador to the Islamic State then Mrs May is perfection.
#TheresaMustStay
Do you seriously think this is the correct way for the PM to behave ? It wasn't right when she did to Osborne and it isn't right now.
Cameron and May both afforded Davis a lot of latitude in his roles and he threw it back in their faces.
His smug superior schtick coupled with his repeated threats to resign grate.
If the Exchequer had a penny for every time Davis threatened to resign the UK plc wouldn’t have any national debt.
This is all from Davis winging it in December and only realising what he signed up to.
Davis has been poor. He should have begun WTO Brexit planning on day one. If he had then the threat of no deal Brexit would be much less potent and the EU would be much more amenable to a longer term deal knowing that any losses from no deal would be relatively minor.
The whole of the City has countless reports which outline that path, Davis chose to ignore the advice.
Again that decision was not his. The fault for all of this lies squarely with May.
Then he should have resigned from the off, there's no point in negotiating if no fallback position can be planned for. If he had any kind of honour he would have fallen on his sword in late 2016.
She’s treating and humiliating David Davis the way I would.
Now if Theresa makes Nadine Dorries Ambassador to the Islamic State then Mrs May is perfection.
#TheresaMustStay
Do you seriously think this is the correct way for the PM to behave ? It wasn't right when she did to Osborne and it isn't right now.
Cameron and May both afforded Davis a lot of latitude in his roles and he threw it back in their faces.
His smug superior schtick coupled with his repeated threats to resign grate.
If the Exchequer had a penny for every time Davis threatened to resign the UK plc wouldn’t have any national debt.
This is all from Davis winging it in December and only realising what he signed up to.
Davis has been poor. He should have begun WTO Brexit planning on day one. If he had then the threat of no deal Brexit would be much less potent and the EU would be much more amenable to a longer term deal knowing that any losses from no deal would be relatively minor.
The whole of the City has countless reports which outline that path, Davis chose to ignore the advice.
In fairness to DD etc., WTO terms were laughingly dismissed during the campaign as part of Project Fear. Amidst the fervid atmosphere immediately after the vote, It would have been a brave man to then pipe up and declare they were on the cards all along. The country would have exploded into civil war if the Leavers had pulled that one!
The whole point would be to have it as a fall back position in case of a no deal Brexit. At the moment the EU has us over a barrell, we have done basically no planning for no deal which means none of our trade infrastructure is prepared for it (hence the dire warnings in the Sunday Times this weekend). At the moment the fallback is staying in the customs union indefinitely which massively favours the EU (which is why I'm sure you have no issues with it) but all it does is store up the issues again just like our membership did.
The way things are going, must be a serious prospect of Farage and Banks founding a new party (with a constitution designed to stop it eating its own face).
When looking ahead to the next election, if such a party has a head of steam that could make things very complicated for both the blues and the reds, as well as anyone trying to forecast things.
F1: just checked the calendar. There's the usual fortnight between Canada and France, but then France-Austria-UK all take place over three weeks, which seems rather rushed.
Edited extra bit: I should be off. Play nicely, children.
Back to Grenfell it seems everyone is blaming everyone else. RBKC says it was the TMO responsible for the refurb; TMO says it submitted the plans to RBKC; the cladding manufacturer says it was up to the buyers to work out whether their "obviously combustible" cladding should be used; the fire safety advisor says he was not asked to inspect the outside of the building; and the FBU, LFB et al (pretty amazingly IMO) say that the "stay put" strategy was the responsibility of...RBKC!
My bet is that the inquiry will share out the blame between multiple people and organisations; no-one wanted this to happen, and no one single action has led to it (all IMO). Therefore the CYA actions are, whilst fairly reprehensible, understandable given the point-scoring that is being made out of it.
As someone noted the other day, the council might actually come out of this better than some of the more fevered voices might like.
I'd expect (and hope) half-a-dozen or so major recommendations to come out of the inquiry to prevent similar future tragedies, and many more minor recommendations.
Unless someone did something obviously and clearly wrong, I don’t think anyone should be ‘blamed”. This should be looked at in the same way as aircraft crashes are; almost certainly no-one is blamed, but a whole lot of recomendations are made.
I doubt that this will satisfy some at least of the residents or at least their ‘supporters’ who are taking the line that, in the words of the late Stanley Holloway ‘somebody ought to be summonsed’.
Well, yes. That's the logical and sane way for it to be done (as myself and Mr Pit have been calling for since the morning of the tragedy).
But sadly your last paragraph is also correct: there will be a clamour for someone to blame, and significant disquiet if that person/organisation is not the one that the hangers-on have already decided is to blame. Sadly, Mr Khan and Mr Corbyn are likely to be amongst those people as I reckon there is a good chance they won't like the inquiries answers.
nah, you're just a bit of a fruitloop, Richard. Which is fine and it all adds to the gaiety of the site so keep at it.
Whereas your continual dishonesty just brings the site into disrepute.
Um, guys, I like you both but these exchanges don't really help the rest of us, and I can't be bothered to work out who's right. Could you possibly pursue them by email or something?
The way things are going, must be a serious prospect of Farage and Banks founding a new party (with a constitution designed to stop it eating its own face).
When looking ahead to the next election, if such a party has a head of steam that could make things very complicated for both the blues and the reds, as well as anyone trying to forecast things.
F1: just checked the calendar. There's the usual fortnight between Canada and France, but then France-Austria-UK all take place over three weeks, which seems rather rushed.
Edited extra bit: I should be off. Play nicely, children.
Yes, I would be very surprised if there is not an English Nationalist party by the next GE. FPTP of course makes it much harder for them than say AfD in Germany.
She’s treating and humiliating David Davis the way I would.
Now if Theresa makes Nadine Dorries Ambassador to the Islamic State then Mrs May is perfection.
#TheresaMustStay
Do you seriously think this is the correct way for the PM to behave ? It wasn't right when she did to Osborne and it isn't right now.
Cameron and May both afforded Davis a lot of latitude in his roles and he threw it back in their faces.
His smug superior schtick coupled with his repeated threats to resign grate.
If the Exchequer had a penny for every time Davis threatened to resign the UK plc wouldn’t have any national debt.
This is all from Davis winging it in December and only realising what he signed up to.
Davis has been poor. He should have begun WTO Brexit planning on day one. If he had then the threat of no deal Brexit would be much less potent and the EU would be much more amenable to a longer term deal knowing that any losses from no deal would be relatively minor.
The whole of the City has countless reports which outline that path, Davis chose to ignore the advice.
Again that decision was not his. The fault for all of this lies squarely with May.
Then he should have resigned from the off, there's no point in negotiating if no fallback position can be planned for. If he had any kind of honour he would have fallen on his sword in late 2016.
Trump's former strategist Steve Bannon 'Etonians are the biggest scumbags in the world', 'Macron's masturbatory Napoleon fantasy', 'Italy is the centre of the world right now' after the election of its new populist government.
He also argues left v right is over now, it is populist v globalist and he is in touch with Bernie Sanders people 'all the time'
Baffling how as many as 10% can possibly think this is going well. Then again weren't there some Remain-backing UKIP voters? Nowt so queer as folk, eh?
Trump's former strategist Steve Bannon 'Etonians are the biggest scumbags in the world', 'Macron's masturbatory Napoleon fantasy', 'Italy is the centre of the world right now'.
He also argues left v right is over now, it is populist v globalist and he is is touch with Bernie Sanders people 'all the time'
There was an interesting article on unHerd about Trump supports in the rust belt and it was quoting democrats saying they voted for Sanders but when Hillary won they voted for Trump in the Presidential Election. Reason Trump understand their lifestyles.
Back to Grenfell it seems everyone is blaming everyone else. RBKC says it was the TMO responsible for the refurb; TMO says it submitted the plans to RBKC; the cladding manufacturer says it was up to the buyers to work out whether their "obviously combustible" cladding should be used; the fire safety advisor says he was not asked to inspect the outside of the building; and the FBU, LFB et al (pretty amazingly IMO) say that the "stay put" strategy was the responsibility of...RBKC!
My bet is that the inquiry will share out the blame between multiple people and organisations; no-one wanted this to happen, and no one single action has led to it (all IMO). Therefore the CYA actions are, whilst fairly reprehensible, understandable given the point-scoring that is being made out of it.
As someone noted the other day, the council might actually come out of this better than some of the more fevered voices might like.
I'd expect (and hope) half-a-dozen or so major recommendations to come out of the inquiry to prevent similar future tragedies, and many more minor recommendations.
Well the most obvious one is the cladding but it seems that that scare in Camden aside, I don't believe anyone has done anything to address the issue. Cost, presumably, being the reason.
But the cladding is not the only failure; it was part of a chain. E.g.: *If* the appliance had not caught fire (if that was the trigger). *If* the fire had not spread out of the flat. *If* the cladding material had not been flammable. *If* the cladding system design had not allowed the flames to spread. *If* the alterations had not allowed flames to get from the exterior into the flats. Etc.
Any one of these could have prevented the fire, and all failed. And that's leaving aside the human factors on the night.
As I said earlier, all IMO from what I've heard so far.
On a side note, I've got copies of 'Risk analysis in Building Fire Safety Engineering' and 'Structural Design for Fire Safety' on my bookshelf, and these are more about preventing structures from falling down than preventing a fire spreading. From the former: "Another potential path for vertical fire is through gaps at the junction of the floor and exterior wall, just inside the facade. This is particularly important for 'curtain wall' constructions where the exterior panels are not part of the structure."
It amounts to half a page in a 370-page book. I do wonder if the industry has rather neglected this sort of failure mode, despite warning incidents before ...
Trump's former strategist Steve Bannon 'Etonians are the biggest scumbags in the world', 'Macron's masturbatory Napoleon fantasy', 'Italy is the centre of the world right now' after the election of its new populist government.
He also argues left v right is over now, it is populist v globalist and he is in touch with Bernie Sanders people 'all the time'
The way things are going, must be a serious prospect of Farage and Banks founding a new party (with a constitution designed to stop it eating its own face).
When looking ahead to the next election, if such a party has a head of steam that could make things very complicated for both the blues and the reds, as well as anyone trying to forecast things.
Nah. For all the "This is not REAL Brexit" from some highly politically invested Leavers, the vast majority of people don't really have that much interest in trade deals, customs unions, single markets, etc. If we're outside of the EU, and if immigration appears more controlled, that's it. Job done.
There will always be some, of course, but particularly under FPTP and the sure and certain knowledge that unless there's a huge jump to this new party, your vote will get wasted (the number of seats won by UKIP last time testify), coupled with partisan loyalty, and the tendency of many to have things other than Brexit on their minds while voting will mean any such new party will suffer the fate of new parties over the past several decades.
Trump's former strategist Steve Bannon 'Etonians are the biggest scumbags in the world', 'Macron's masturbatory Napoleon fantasy', 'Italy is the centre of the world right now' after the election of its new populist government.
He also argues left v right is over now, it is populist v globalist and he is in touch with Bernie Sanders people 'all the time'
What does a $400 hotel room tell us about the price of oil?
Remember to watch, and subscribe. And share.
Cracking video Robert.
Interesting to see what this would mean for the UK Kimmeridge Clay which is the main source rock for most of the Jurassic and post Jurassic plays in the North Sea.
What does a $400 hotel room tell us about the price of oil?
Remember to watch, and subscribe. And share.
Will hotel rooms near say Marsh Lane in Derbyshire head north in price (There aren't many !) or is the spike in room prices in Texas due to people basically owning the oil and minerals under their land compared to here where so far as I can work out it is all Dart/Ineos/Upstream ?
Good to hear about money left over for cocktails !
I'm also not convinced the public humiliation of a colleague is a sound strategy in the medium to long term - it didn't work well for Margaret Thatcher.
That is probably true, although I suppose the questions come down to
a) How much did said colleague contribute to their own humiliation?
b) Are they even thinking of the long term, or are they just struggling through from crisis to crisis?
What does a $400 hotel room tell us about the price of oil?
Remember to watch, and subscribe. And share.
Will hotel rooms near say Marsh Lane in Derbyshire head north in price (There aren't many !) or is the spike in room prices in Texas due to people basically owning the oil and minerals under their land compared to here where so far as I can work out it is all Dart/Ineos/Upstream ?
Good to hear about money left over for cocktails !
Hotel prices in Aberdeen were up in the £250 to £300 a night mark for much of the decade leading up to 2014. Lots of people passing through vs not enough rooms. It was why there has been a rash of hotel building around the airport and in the town centre since then. There is the expectation that rates will get back up that way but I think it is a false hope.
The way things are going, must be a serious prospect of Farage and Banks founding a new party (with a constitution designed to stop it eating its own face).
When looking ahead to the next election, if such a party has a head of steam that could make things very complicated for both the blues and the reds, as well as anyone trying to forecast things.
Nah. For all the "This is not REAL Brexit" from some highly politically invested Leavers, the vast majority of people don't really have that much interest in trade deals, customs unions, single markets, etc. If we're outside of the EU, and if immigration appears more controlled, that's it. Job done.
There will always be some, of course, but particularly under FPTP and the sure and certain knowledge that unless there's a huge jump to this new party, your vote will get wasted (the number of seats won by UKIP last time testify), coupled with partisan loyalty, and the tendency of many to have things other than Brexit on their minds while voting will mean any such new party will suffer the fate of new parties over the past several decades.
It was always nonsense that only one type of Brexit would be 'real' Brexit, and it is just a question of enough people can be satisfied sufficiently to not break the existing structures. I think Labour are fine on that score despite their divisions, but I'm less sure about the Tories not being vulnerable since the pressure of actually delivering things, or not, seems to have a higher chance of breaking them.
What does a $400 hotel room tell us about the price of oil?
Remember to watch, and subscribe. And share.
Cracking video Robert.
Interesting to see what this would mean for the UK Kimmeridge Clay which is the main source rock for most of the Jurassic and post Jurassic plays in the North Sea.
I should organise a call with some of my new Midland friends (some of whom have become obscenely wealthy very quickly), you and some people that know the Kimmeridge Clay well. It would be nice to get in close to ground zero
So May has agreed to 'aspire' to a backstop endpoint which is apparently a 'victory' for Davis and the ERG
'Never in the field of political negotiation has so much press and hot air been expended for such a little matter'
I've not been in a position to follow all this - does the proposal actually say 'aspire' in it? As what silliness that would be, everyone knows aspire means 'nice but not going to happen'
What does a $400 hotel room tell us about the price of oil?
Remember to watch, and subscribe. And share.
Cracking video Robert.
Interesting to see what this would mean for the UK Kimmeridge Clay which is the main source rock for most of the Jurassic and post Jurassic plays in the North Sea.
I should organise a call with some of my new Midland friends (some of whom have become obscenely wealthy very quickly), you and some people that know the Kimmeridge Clay well. It would be nice to get in close to ground zero
Since Apache are a big player in the North Sea I suspect that ship has already sailed.
Although there is the basic issue that Offshore operations are massively more expensive than onshore so I suspect there will be a lot more basins being developed with this technology before the N.Sea.
What does a $400 hotel room tell us about the price of oil?
Remember to watch, and subscribe. And share.
These are very good and each one better than the last, well done on an informative and instructive series.
Am interested to know where are you going with these though, who are your intended audience and what level of knowledge are you assuming? The reason for asking is that it would be good to see some more in-depth videos on the subjects you’re covering (which might get your viewed hours up if YouTube monetisation is something that interests you) but can understand why not if you’re happy talking to the man in the street, or using the vids to drum up billable consultancy hours etc...
Back to Grenfell it seems everyone is blaming everyone else. RBKC says it was the TMO responsible for the refurb; TMO says it submitted the plans to RBKC; the cladding manufacturer says it was up to the buyers to work out whether their "obviously combustible" cladding should be used; the fire safety advisor says he was not asked to inspect the outside of the building; and the FBU, LFB et al (pretty amazingly IMO) say that the "stay put" strategy was the responsibility of...RBKC!
My bet is that the inquiry will share out the blame between multiple people and organisations; no-one wanted this to happen, and no one single action has led to it (all IMO). Therefore the CYA actions are, whilst fairly reprehensible, understandable given the point-scoring that is being made out of it.
As someone noted the other day, the council might actually come out of this better than some of the more fevered voices might like.
I'd expect (and hope) half-a-dozen or so major recommendations to come out of the inquiry to prevent similar future tragedies, and many more minor recommendations.
Unless someone did something obviously and clearly wrong, I don’t think anyone should be ‘blamed”. This should be looked at in the same way as aircraft crashes are; almost certainly no-one is blamed, but a whole lot of recomendations are made.
I doubt that this will satisfy some at least of the residents or at least their ‘supporters’ who are taking the line that, in the words of the late Stanley Holloway ‘somebody ought to be summonsed’.
Well, yes. That's the logical and sane way for it to be done (as myself and Mr Pit have been calling for since the morning of the tragedy).
But sadly your last paragraph is also correct: there will be a clamour for someone to blame, and significant disquiet if that person/organisation is not the one that the hangers-on have already decided is to blame. Sadly, Mr Khan and Mr Corbyn are likely to be amongst those people as I reckon there is a good chance they won't like the inquiries answers.
The way things are going, must be a serious prospect of Farage and Banks founding a new party (with a constitution designed to stop it eating its own face).
When looking ahead to the next election, if such a party has a head of steam that could make things very complicated for both the blues and the reds, as well as anyone trying to forecast things.
F1: just checked the calendar. There's the usual fortnight between Canada and France, but then France-Austria-UK all take place over three weeks, which seems rather rushed.
Edited extra bit: I should be off. Play nicely, children.
Indeed, and I was rather hoping we’d managed to rid ourselves of Farage and his ilk, something that looks like Brexit in name only is going to bring them back with a vengeance before the next election.
Yes, the first F1 triple-header, when the many logisticians (?) in the F1 circus will earn their money.
What does a $400 hotel room tell us about the price of oil?
Remember to watch, and subscribe. And share.
These are very good and each one better than the last, well done on an informative and instructive series.
Am interested to know where are you going with these though, who are your intended audience and what level of knowledge are you assuming? The reason for asking is that it would be good to see some more in-depth videos on the subjects you’re covering (which might get your viewed hours up if YouTube monetisation is something that interests you) but can understand why not if you’re happy talking to the man in the street, or using the vids to drum up billable consultancy hours etc...
The answer is... I don't know where I'm going.
I'm enjoying learning new skills, and making bite sized videos on things I'm interested in.
What does a $400 hotel room tell us about the price of oil?
Remember to watch, and subscribe. And share.
These are very good and each one better than the last, well done on an informative and instructive series.
Am interested to know where are you going with these though, who are your intended audience and what level of knowledge are you assuming? The reason for asking is that it would be good to see some more in-depth videos on the subjects you’re covering (which might get your viewed hours up if YouTube monetisation is something that interests you) but can understand why not if you’re happy talking to the man in the street, or using the vids to drum up billable consultancy hours etc...
The answer is... I don't know where I'm going.
I'm enjoying learning new skills, and making bite sized videos on things I'm interested in.
In that case keep up the good work and see where it takes you!
Anti immigration Swedish Democrats take the lead from the governing Social Democrats in shock new Swedish poll ahead of September's Swedish general election
Have the owners of the Daily Mail decided to "crush the saboteurs" ??
Apparently the Rothermeres are becoming outcasts in their well heeled social circle due to the Mail’s hardline Brexit position (and on the HoL, one presumes)
So May has agreed to 'aspire' to a backstop endpoint which is apparently a 'victory' for Davis and the ERG
'Never in the field of political negotiation has so much press and hot air been expended for such a little matter'
I've not been in a position to follow all this - does the proposal actually say 'aspire' in it? As what silliness that would be, everyone knows aspire means 'nice but not going to happen'
It doesn't say "aspire". It says
The UK is clear that the future customs arrangement needs to deliver on the commitments made in relation to Northern Ireland. The UK expects the future arrangement to be in place by the end of December 2021 at the latest.
Off-topic: NASA say they found organic molecules on Mars.
Everything else in our solar system has been replicated in other solar systems we have discovered and examined. I expect life to be no exception.
As to whether it's intelligent? On other solar systems maybe......
One of the fascinating aspects of the search for life is the way we so often think we are exceptional. Two decades ago, I remember reading in serious journals about issues realting to the Drake equation. They went like: "It is possible that our solar system is the only one with planets," a few years before we discovered the first exoplanet. Then it became: "It is possible that other solar systems only have gas giants," etc, etc.
The thinking is that we, and our situation, is exceptional. Yet every time such barriers are probed, we find that we are not exceptional.
This makes me think that life is common, and intelligent life probable.
In which case the Fermi Paradox becomes a vital question.
Anti immigration Swedish Democrats take the lead from the governing Social Democrats in shock new Swedish poll ahead of September's Swedish general election
Comments
When looking ahead to the next election, if such a party has a head of steam that could make things very complicated for both the blues and the reds, as well as anyone trying to forecast things.
F1: just checked the calendar. There's the usual fortnight between Canada and France, but then France-Austria-UK all take place over three weeks, which seems rather rushed.
Edited extra bit: I should be off. Play nicely, children.
But sadly your last paragraph is also correct: there will be a clamour for someone to blame, and significant disquiet if that person/organisation is not the one that the hangers-on have already decided is to blame. Sadly, Mr Khan and Mr Corbyn are likely to be amongst those people as I reckon there is a good chance they won't like the inquiries answers.
I hope you'll all watch - and enjoy - my latest piece:
https://youtu.be/xHo82501394
What does a $400 hotel room tell us about the price of oil?
Remember to watch, and subscribe. And share.
https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1004769364925714432
Fifty ounces of that flogged in the right place and I could clear the national debt!
He also argues left v right is over now, it is populist v globalist and he is in touch with Bernie Sanders people 'all the time'
https://spectator-usa.com/2018/06/steve-bannon-rome/
E.g.:
*If* the appliance had not caught fire (if that was the trigger).
*If* the fire had not spread out of the flat.
*If* the cladding material had not been flammable.
*If* the cladding system design had not allowed the flames to spread.
*If* the alterations had not allowed flames to get from the exterior into the flats.
Etc.
Any one of these could have prevented the fire, and all failed. And that's leaving aside the human factors on the night.
As I said earlier, all IMO from what I've heard so far.
On a side note, I've got copies of 'Risk analysis in Building Fire Safety Engineering' and 'Structural Design for Fire Safety' on my bookshelf, and these are more about preventing structures from falling down than preventing a fire spreading. From the former: "Another potential path for vertical fire is through gaps at the junction of the floor and exterior wall, just inside the facade. This is particularly important for 'curtain wall' constructions where the exterior panels are not part of the structure."
It amounts to half a page in a 370-page book. I do wonder if the industry has rather neglected this sort of failure mode, despite warning incidents before ...
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/dec/01/jacob-rees-mogg-held-meeting-with-steve-bannon-in-london
For all the "This is not REAL Brexit" from some highly politically invested Leavers, the vast majority of people don't really have that much interest in trade deals, customs unions, single markets, etc.
If we're outside of the EU, and if immigration appears more controlled, that's it. Job done.
There will always be some, of course, but particularly under FPTP and the sure and certain knowledge that unless there's a huge jump to this new party, your vote will get wasted (the number of seats won by UKIP last time testify), coupled with partisan loyalty, and the tendency of many to have things other than Brexit on their minds while voting will mean any such new party will suffer the fate of new parties over the past several decades.
At some time in the not too distant future I wouldn't be surprised if none of these papers own up to ever having supported fascism oops sorry, Brexit.
Interesting to see what this would mean for the UK Kimmeridge Clay which is the main source rock for most of the Jurassic and post Jurassic plays in the North Sea.
Good to hear about money left over for cocktails !
a) How much did said colleague contribute to their own humiliation?
b) Are they even thinking of the long term, or are they just struggling through from crisis to crisis?
Is The Good Ship May still sailing on serenely? Or has she hit an iceberg?
Although there is the basic issue that Offshore operations are massively more expensive than onshore so I suspect there will be a lot more basins being developed with this technology before the N.Sea.
I think personally she May be making a fool of herself...
https://twitter.com/ExpressOGrady/status/1004779958282149888
https://twitter.com/steve_hawkes/status/1004765508116320256
"The Mail's ferocious conservatism has re-shaped modern Britain"
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-44392661
Am interested to know where are you going with these though, who are your intended audience and what level of knowledge are you assuming? The reason for asking is that it would be good to see some more in-depth videos on the subjects you’re covering (which might get your viewed hours up if YouTube monetisation is something that interests you) but can understand why not if you’re happy talking to the man in the street, or using the vids to drum up billable consultancy hours etc...
Fine by me.
Unfortunately that provision means absolutely nothing.
It's time limited but the time is not really fixed, is it?
Still maybe it's a fudge most protagonists can put up with.
Which based on current performance might never happen, ergo we're locked into the EU forever.
Yes, the first F1 triple-header, when the many logisticians (?) in the F1 circus will earn their money.
I'm enjoying learning new skills, and making bite sized videos on things I'm interested in.
Forever is a long time. World trade patterns will change. Europe as a whole is going to shrink relatively. Things will drift apart slowly.
"Why the polls were wrong in 2017"
http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/blog/archives/10002
https://twitter.com/EuropeElects/status/1004791984513601536
How many taxis do you need to house your entire Parly party?
As to whether it's intelligent? On other solar systems maybe......
NEW THREAD
The only way to "deliver on the commitments made in relation to NI" is for Britain to stay in the a customs union.
The thinking is that we, and our situation, is exceptional. Yet every time such barriers are probed, we find that we are not exceptional.
This makes me think that life is common, and intelligent life probable.
In which case the Fermi Paradox becomes a vital question.