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My email from Boris suggests the Tory database is not as sophisticated as you might expect – politic

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Comments

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,586
    RIP. A sad day.
  • Julie Hartley Brewer already complaining about how many people might go to his funeral.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,710
    MattW said:

    Sad news, though 99 is a cracking age.

    A good day/weekend/week to bury bad news. Don't expect we'll hear much about N. Ireland, exchanges between Sunak and Cameron, or any vaccine blips for some time. But at least we'll still get updates on county cricket scores on here.

    Sitting on a Cloud.

    "Bugger - two months too short."
    Yeah, sad that he missed out on his Telegram. I suspect that would have tickled the old dinosaur.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Leon said:

    This is a "brave" take from journalist Jill Starley Grainger


    Jill StarleyGrainger
    @WordsByJill
    Among the many reasons I don't give a toss is this repulsive #Philip quote on a visit to China in 1986 - 1 of many offensive 'jokes' the recipient was expected to laugh at: “If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes." What a cad. To quote Bey, I ain't sorry

    https://twitter.com/WordsByJill/status/1380488301287763968?s=20


    How long til she deletes it?

    If that's what she thinks she should be free to say it.

    Makes her look insensitive but so be it, that's her choice.

    Free speech applies to people being insensitive and insulting as much as anyone else - and why bother deleting it now, it'll be screenshotted already.
  • If I make it to 99 I'll be bloody happy.

    3 responses likely on Twitter:
    Heck of an innings
    He was the only Royal I liked
    He was a Racist, lets cancel him and be ANGRY at everything

    And they're off:
    https://twitter.com/BookOfGates/status/1380489049820037124
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 41,995
    To get back to low politics, probably.

    https://twitter.com/tejmuk/status/1380478677251657728?s=20

  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,710

    Julie Hartley Brewer already complaining about how many people might go to his funeral.

    I suspect that they will follow the rules and have a legal funeral, with a memorial service a bit later. HRH does like to set an example.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,989
    edited April 2021
    If you go on iPlayer and scroll back to 12.09 there is When Paramedics Attack, or something, on. It is very powerful the way they then interrupt this to go to the announcement. Newscaster there, in black. She looked quite moved. Then the National Anthem.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,421

    If I make it to 99 I'll be bloody happy.

    3 responses likely on Twitter:
    Heck of an innings
    He was the only Royal I liked
    He was a Racist, lets cancel him and be ANGRY at everything

    And they're off:
    https://twitter.com/BookOfGates/status/1380489049820037124
    If I say she’s the Canary in a coal mine, is that racist?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,421
    edited April 2021
    Foxy said:

    Julie Hartley Brewer already complaining about how many people might go to his funeral.

    I suspect that they will follow the rules and have a legal funeral, with a memorial service a bit later. HRH does like to set an example.
    Also solves awkward problems around Andrew appearing in public.

    Edit - I wonder where they will bury him, though? Westminster Abbey is presumably where Her Majesty will be laid to rest when the time comes and I’m assuming they’ll want to be buried together. So Westminster not Windsor for the funeral, on that basis.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 55,429

    Leon said:

    This is a "brave" take from journalist Jill Starley Grainger


    Jill StarleyGrainger
    @WordsByJill
    Among the many reasons I don't give a toss is this repulsive #Philip quote on a visit to China in 1986 - 1 of many offensive 'jokes' the recipient was expected to laugh at: “If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes." What a cad. To quote Bey, I ain't sorry

    https://twitter.com/WordsByJill/status/1380488301287763968?s=20


    How long til she deletes it?

    If that's what she thinks she should be free to say it.

    Makes her look insensitive but so be it, that's her choice.

    Free speech applies to people being insensitive and insulting as much as anyone else - and why bother deleting it now, it'll be screenshotted already.
    Did I ever say she should not be allowed to make these remarks? You do plunge your angry bayonet into the Straw Man quite a lot. It is wearying.

    I'm just amazed that a clever journalist thinks this is a clever thing to say. You generally should not use the word "repulsive" when you are tweeting about a person who has, literally, just died.

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 50,355
    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    This is a "brave" take from journalist Jill Starley Grainger


    Jill StarleyGrainger
    @WordsByJill
    Among the many reasons I don't give a toss is this repulsive #Philip quote on a visit to China in 1986 - 1 of many offensive 'jokes' the recipient was expected to laugh at: “If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes." What a cad. To quote Bey, I ain't sorry

    https://twitter.com/WordsByJill/status/1380488301287763968?s=20


    How long til she deletes it?

    If that's what she thinks she should be free to say it.

    Makes her look insensitive but so be it, that's her choice.

    Free speech applies to people being insensitive and insulting as much as anyone else - and why bother deleting it now, it'll be screenshotted already.
    Did I ever say she should not be allowed to make these remarks? You do plunge your angry bayonet into the Straw Man quite a lot. It is wearying.

    I'm just amazed that a clever journalist thinks this is a clever thing to say. You generally should not use the word "repulsive" when you are tweeting about a person who has, literally, just died.

    She is undoubtedly trying for the "all publicity is good publicity" thing by trying to start a Twatter Storm.

    The winning move is not to play.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 32,548

    Sad news, though 99 is a cracking age.

    A good day/weekend/week to bury bad news. Don't expect we'll hear much about N. Ireland, exchanges between Sunak and Cameron, or any vaccine blips for some time. But at least we'll still get updates on county cricket scores on here.

    In memory of Prince Philip, should we find random foreign looking people, engage with them then say something that others will find rude on their behalf?
    Isn't that something we do anyway, just for the laughs? :)
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,868
    https://unherd.com/2021/04/the-tragedy-of-ulsters-lost-boys/?tl_inbound=1&tl_groups[0]=18743&tl_period_type=3&mc_cid=b70caa1d54&mc_eid=836634e34b

    The majority of Unionists — including many people in working-class communities — will regard the rioting with deep disapproval, and want it stopped. But that will not eradicate their abiding dislike of the Protocol, and the effect it is having on businesses, trade and their sense of Britishness. They have been cut adrift by Boris Johnson’s vision of Brexit, in a way that even those Unionists who backed Brexit did not foresee, and which Johnson himself had explicitly promised would not happen. Perhaps they should have predicted what Johnson would actually do, and not listened to what he said, but then it has been a recurrent tendency of Unionists to place excessive faith in the word of a British prime minister.

    Johnson’s Government showed a blithe disregard for the danger, although Theresa May had previously taken steps to avoid it. But by showing that Unionist concerns will be downgraded rather than run any risk of republican violence, the British Government and the EU have now created an awful incentive for loyalist paramilitaries to demonstrate an equivalent level of threat.

    The loyalist paramilitaries — whether by instinct or conscious design — will now make it their business to create “serious societal difficulties” that are “liable to persist”. It’s a terrible script. And unless Britain and the EU can somehow rewrite it, fast, it’s going to make for a very long, hot summer.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,421
    edited April 2021
    kinabalu said:

    Stocky said:

    kinabalu said:

    Leon said:

    Dura_Ace said:

    Johnson pretending to give a fuck - LOL. NO FLEGS! Possible treason.

    You may want to controversial but there are times to show respect

    This is just such a moment
    He is disrespecting Shagger, not the late Lord Prince.
    You are as bad

    This is not the time
    RIP Prince Philip. Top bloke, spoke his word, hard working and brave, perhaps liked the ladies a little bit too much but at least he had character. Excellent innings, Sir

    Thoughts and condolences for the Queen. After this terrible year, this terrible blow. She's tough, but this is also tough. Concerning

    However let's not overdo the maudlin sycophancy, he was 99, and he had a rich, incredible life of privilege (as well as service).

    Jokes are allowed, I reckon. If only to lighten the mood
    Ah good.

    So will she take a lover now, do we think?
    I would - for the kudos
    You're married, Stocky. The country wouldn't accept it.
    What about @SeanT? Or indeed, @Sean_F whom Justin memorably accused of being a philanderer in an epic case of mistaken identity?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    TOPPING said:

    If you go on iPlayer and scroll back to 12.09 there is When Paramedics Attack, or something, on. It is very powerful the way they then interrupt this to go to the announcement. Newscaster there, in black. She looked quite moved. Then the National Anthem.

    That's really tastefully done.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 23,227
    edited April 2021
    Squirrel:

    French to give Pfizer as Second Dose after AZ for under-55s.

    https://twitter.com/DarrenGBNews/status/1380465036179693568
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,210
    .

    RIP Prince Philip.

    He made a huge contribution to modernising British public life, and his DofE awards expanded the horizons of opportunity for hundreds of thousands of children from urban backgrounds.

    Most importantly, he provided strong and stalwart support to probably our most brilliant monarch in centuries behind the scenes - sacrificing himself and his career in ways I suspect none of us will ever really know - and for that he should have the respect of the whole nation.

    I'm not a monarchist, but I agree with that.
  • It's absolutely impossible to see how events like this play out politically. Who would have thought that a terrorist event in the middle of the 2017 GE would end up helping the guy who had quite a love of giving terrorists a hug?
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 41,995
    A sensible and humane Republican view (though insofar as I would ever have had the opportunity, I'd probably have knocked back the OBE tbh)

    https://twitter.com/Hepworthclare/status/1380483310250565633?s=20
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,031
    They should get the Shinners to organise the funeral. They seem to know how to get round the limit on numbers.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,692
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,200
    edited April 2021
    Personal note -

    My father-in-law (rip) was a prominent Malaysian politician in the 60s and 70s and he met Philip a few times, hosted him once on his home patch. Philip was a relaxed sort of chap, he told me. My wife has some good black and white photos of them hanging out.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,082
    edited April 2021
    MattW said:
    Haven't they said that all those that suffered blood clots did so after the first dose?
  • TOPPING said:

    If you go on iPlayer and scroll back to 12.09 there is When Paramedics Attack, or something, on. It is very powerful the way they then interrupt this to go to the announcement. Newscaster there, in black. She looked quite moved. Then the National Anthem.

    Just watched it - she actually sounded like she'd been crying. As a lapsed journalist (a crap one) I find this stuff fascinating. When I worked in commercial radio there was a folder of what to do should a senior royal throw a 7 - IIRC we were to drop whatever we were doing, fade in Independent Radio News and then wait further instructions.

    It could be worse. I was in LA when Princess Diana died. TV news there was covering the accident. Prototype American news anchors - female presenter who looked like Barbie, striking black male co-presenter with a Deep Voice. They broke into their coverage with "Oh. I'm receiving word that Princess Diana has died. [pause for effect]. We'll be back after these messages".

    At which point it cut away to a photo of a smiling Diana. In a pink heart. With dates caption. I confess that I howled with laughter at how tone deaf it was.

  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 13,677
    IanB2 said:

    https://unherd.com/2021/04/the-tragedy-of-ulsters-lost-boys/?tl_inbound=1&tl_groups[0]=18743&tl_period_type=3&mc_cid=b70caa1d54&mc_eid=836634e34b

    The majority of Unionists — including many people in working-class communities — will regard the rioting with deep disapproval, and want it stopped. But that will not eradicate their abiding dislike of the Protocol, and the effect it is having on businesses, trade and their sense of Britishness. They have been cut adrift by Boris Johnson’s vision of Brexit, in a way that even those Unionists who backed Brexit did not foresee, and which Johnson himself had explicitly promised would not happen. Perhaps they should have predicted what Johnson would actually do, and not listened to what he said, but then it has been a recurrent tendency of Unionists to place excessive faith in the word of a British prime minister.

    Johnson’s Government showed a blithe disregard for the danger, although Theresa May had previously taken steps to avoid it. But by showing that Unionist concerns will be downgraded rather than run any risk of republican violence, the British Government and the EU have now created an awful incentive for loyalist paramilitaries to demonstrate an equivalent level of threat.

    The loyalist paramilitaries — whether by instinct or conscious design — will now make it their business to create “serious societal difficulties” that are “liable to persist”. It’s a terrible script. And unless Britain and the EU can somehow rewrite it, fast, it’s going to make for a very long, hot summer.

    Can we not link to far right sites please. Especially not today.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,725
    Will Harry be coming home .. with or without Meghan..
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,210
    edited April 2021
    On the subject of chip fabs, an excellent piece of historical trivia...
    https://twitter.com/curiouswavefn/status/1364445490541039624
  • SandraMcSandraMc Posts: 694
    edited April 2021
    I met Prince Philip once and found him charming but I was young and pretty then.
    (It was a long time ago.)
  • Dura_Ace said:

    IanB2 said:

    https://unherd.com/2021/04/the-tragedy-of-ulsters-lost-boys/?tl_inbound=1&tl_groups[0]=18743&tl_period_type=3&mc_cid=b70caa1d54&mc_eid=836634e34b

    The majority of Unionists — including many people in working-class communities — will regard the rioting with deep disapproval, and want it stopped. But that will not eradicate their abiding dislike of the Protocol, and the effect it is having on businesses, trade and their sense of Britishness. They have been cut adrift by Boris Johnson’s vision of Brexit, in a way that even those Unionists who backed Brexit did not foresee, and which Johnson himself had explicitly promised would not happen. Perhaps they should have predicted what Johnson would actually do, and not listened to what he said, but then it has been a recurrent tendency of Unionists to place excessive faith in the word of a British prime minister.

    Johnson’s Government showed a blithe disregard for the danger, although Theresa May had previously taken steps to avoid it. But by showing that Unionist concerns will be downgraded rather than run any risk of republican violence, the British Government and the EU have now created an awful incentive for loyalist paramilitaries to demonstrate an equivalent level of threat.

    The loyalist paramilitaries — whether by instinct or conscious design — will now make it their business to create “serious societal difficulties” that are “liable to persist”. It’s a terrible script. And unless Britain and the EU can somehow rewrite it, fast, it’s going to make for a very long, hot summer.

    Can we not link to far right sites please. Especially not today.
    unherd.com far right??? Think you maybe just be trying a bit too hard?
  • pingping Posts: 3,805
    I doubt it’ll have much impact on VI

    There ain’t a political betting angle to this, IMO
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,989

    TOPPING said:

    If you go on iPlayer and scroll back to 12.09 there is When Paramedics Attack, or something, on. It is very powerful the way they then interrupt this to go to the announcement. Newscaster there, in black. She looked quite moved. Then the National Anthem.

    Just watched it - she actually sounded like she'd been crying. As a lapsed journalist (a crap one) I find this stuff fascinating. When I worked in commercial radio there was a folder of what to do should a senior royal throw a 7 - IIRC we were to drop whatever we were doing, fade in Independent Radio News and then wait further instructions.

    It could be worse. I was in LA when Princess Diana died. TV news there was covering the accident. Prototype American news anchors - female presenter who looked like Barbie, striking black male co-presenter with a Deep Voice. They broke into their coverage with "Oh. I'm receiving word that Princess Diana has died. [pause for effect]. We'll be back after these messages".

    At which point it cut away to a photo of a smiling Diana. In a pink heart. With dates caption. I confess that I howled with laughter at how tone deaf it was.

    I remember when Diana died - I was abroad and news came through that her condition was "grave". Oh that's ok we said, she's well enough to have a condition, and a doctor with us said no - grave means they are about to or have died.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 4,939
    MattW said:

    Who can attend a funeral?
    Funeral ceremonies must have no more than 30 people attending, whether indoors or outdoors. This number does not include anyone working at the event.

    The actual number of people able to attend will depend on how many people can be accommodated safely within the premises with social distancing, and where the organiser has carried out a risk assessment and taken all reasonable measures to limit the risk of transmission of COVID-19. In some cases, this may be fewer than 30 people. Keeping overall numbers as low as possible will reduce the risk of spreading COVID-19.

    Limits for funeral ceremonies held as part of communal worship that follows COVID-19 secure guidelines will be defined by the capacity of the place of worship. Guidance on places of worship is available.

    Private Funeral for family only at Windsor sounds quite likely then.

    Either 30 from April 12th, or unlimited from 21 June.

    No special changes to the rules will be made or accepted I think.
    A small private family funeral followed by a national memorial service when we are allowed to socialise without restrictions would be appropriate in the current circumstances.
  • Just had an email from the Scottish LibDems suspending the election campaign.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 55,429
    Sudden rush of sadness

    Odd
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,725

    Just had an email from the Scottish LibDems suspending the election campaign.

    I think you mean their campaign. Not THE campaign.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,989
    Just as long as there's no fucking clapping.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,858

    Just had an email from the Scottish LibDems suspending the election campaign.

    They've been campaigning? What for?
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 32,548
    Leon said:

    This is a "brave" take from journalist Jill Starley Grainger


    Jill StarleyGrainger
    @WordsByJill
    Among the many reasons I don't give a toss is this repulsive #Philip quote on a visit to China in 1986 - 1 of many offensive 'jokes' the recipient was expected to laugh at: “If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes." What a cad. To quote Bey, I ain't sorry

    https://twitter.com/WordsByJill/status/1380488301287763968?s=20


    How long til she deletes it?

    Hopefully it will dog her for the rest of her days.

    It is a sign of how immature and shallow so many people can be.

    There have been plenty of people who have died over the years who I have been deeply opposed to in almost everything they stood for. Ted Heath was, for me, the classic of that ilk. And yet when he died I was saddened.

    A unique individual who was clearly of great intelligence and who had done something of note with his life had passed away and taken with him a lifetime of knowledge, observations and understanding. A singular perspective on existence (for everyone's perspective is singular) had ended. That is a thing to be mourned no matter who the person is - though I would of course make an exception for those who have set out to do harm to others. But they are few and far between thankfully.

    I am not a religious person so I believe that when someone passes all those thoughts and memories, the loves, the hopes and the dreams, are lost. They are irreplaceable and that is something truly to be mourned.

    Rutger Hauer got it perfectly

    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
  • BromBrom Posts: 3,760

    Will Harry be coming home .. with or without Meghan..

    10 days quarantine at a travelodge, they can turn it into a documentary.
  • DavidL said:

    Just had an email from the Scottish LibDems suspending the election campaign.

    They've been campaigning? What for?
    Attention.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 55,429

    TOPPING said:

    If you go on iPlayer and scroll back to 12.09 there is When Paramedics Attack, or something, on. It is very powerful the way they then interrupt this to go to the announcement. Newscaster there, in black. She looked quite moved. Then the National Anthem.

    That's really tastefully done.
    I can't find the programme on iPlayer. Could you link? I'd like to see

    Ta
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 50,355

    Dura_Ace said:

    IanB2 said:

    https://unherd.com/2021/04/the-tragedy-of-ulsters-lost-boys/?tl_inbound=1&tl_groups[0]=18743&tl_period_type=3&mc_cid=b70caa1d54&mc_eid=836634e34b

    The majority of Unionists — including many people in working-class communities — will regard the rioting with deep disapproval, and want it stopped. But that will not eradicate their abiding dislike of the Protocol, and the effect it is having on businesses, trade and their sense of Britishness. They have been cut adrift by Boris Johnson’s vision of Brexit, in a way that even those Unionists who backed Brexit did not foresee, and which Johnson himself had explicitly promised would not happen. Perhaps they should have predicted what Johnson would actually do, and not listened to what he said, but then it has been a recurrent tendency of Unionists to place excessive faith in the word of a British prime minister.

    Johnson’s Government showed a blithe disregard for the danger, although Theresa May had previously taken steps to avoid it. But by showing that Unionist concerns will be downgraded rather than run any risk of republican violence, the British Government and the EU have now created an awful incentive for loyalist paramilitaries to demonstrate an equivalent level of threat.

    The loyalist paramilitaries — whether by instinct or conscious design — will now make it their business to create “serious societal difficulties” that are “liable to persist”. It’s a terrible script. And unless Britain and the EU can somehow rewrite it, fast, it’s going to make for a very long, hot summer.

    Can we not link to far right sites please. Especially not today.
    unherd.com far right??? Think you maybe just be trying a bit too hard?
    It's also a rather good article

    "parity of menace” - yes, that is a good summation of what the Loyalist Paramilitaries want.
  • pingping Posts: 3,805

    Will Harry be coming home .. with or without Meghan..

    Harry 1/3
    Meghan 6/4
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,930
    RIP Prince Philip.

    At least it is at the tail end of the pandemic, so hopefully a fitting memorial service can be held.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,468
    According to Wikipedia, Charles is now the Duke of Edinburgh and when it reverts back to the Crown when he becomes King, it will be created again for Edward.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,219
    TOPPING said:

    Just as long as there's no fucking clapping.

    Maybe Meghan will clap if she shows up?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,200
    Nigelb said:

    .

    RIP Prince Philip.

    He made a huge contribution to modernising British public life, and his DofE awards expanded the horizons of opportunity for hundreds of thousands of children from urban backgrounds.

    Most importantly, he provided strong and stalwart support to probably our most brilliant monarch in centuries behind the scenes - sacrificing himself and his career in ways I suspect none of us will ever really know - and for that he should have the respect of the whole nation.

    I'm not a monarchist, but I agree with that.
    Does 'not a monarchist' mean republican?

    Or does it mean 'not into them one iota but wouldn't abolish'?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,598
    RIP Prince Philip from Dartmouth, where he and Her Majesty met for the first time at the Royal Naval College.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,868
    edited April 2021
    Having the same programme on every BBC TV channel and every radio channel is surely unnecessary.
  • rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787
    i wonder how the Prince Philip Movement in Vanuatu will take it? Will they adopt Charles as their spiritual leader as Philip's heir?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,200
    edited April 2021
    ydoethur said:

    kinabalu said:

    Stocky said:

    kinabalu said:

    Leon said:

    Dura_Ace said:

    Johnson pretending to give a fuck - LOL. NO FLEGS! Possible treason.

    You may want to controversial but there are times to show respect

    This is just such a moment
    He is disrespecting Shagger, not the late Lord Prince.
    You are as bad

    This is not the time
    RIP Prince Philip. Top bloke, spoke his word, hard working and brave, perhaps liked the ladies a little bit too much but at least he had character. Excellent innings, Sir

    Thoughts and condolences for the Queen. After this terrible year, this terrible blow. She's tough, but this is also tough. Concerning

    However let's not overdo the maudlin sycophancy, he was 99, and he had a rich, incredible life of privilege (as well as service).

    Jokes are allowed, I reckon. If only to lighten the mood
    Ah good.

    So will she take a lover now, do we think?
    I would - for the kudos
    You're married, Stocky. The country wouldn't accept it.
    What about @SeanT? Or indeed, @Sean_F whom Justin memorably accused of being a philanderer in an epic case of mistaken identity?
    Her Majesty has standards.

    PS: Great id mix up there. Chalk and cheese, those Seans, except for both being "creatures of the ni ... right".
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,725
    Brom said:

    Will Harry be coming home .. with or without Meghan..

    10 days quarantine at a travelodge, they can turn it into a documentary.
    Hilarious. I think he will come but she will not.... excusing it by her pregnancy. Good thing too.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 18,421
    Is anyone doing a bad news watch?

    Good to keep an eye out for people trying to bury something embarrassing.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468

    Leon said:

    This is a "brave" take from journalist Jill Starley Grainger


    Jill StarleyGrainger
    @WordsByJill
    Among the many reasons I don't give a toss is this repulsive #Philip quote on a visit to China in 1986 - 1 of many offensive 'jokes' the recipient was expected to laugh at: “If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes." What a cad. To quote Bey, I ain't sorry

    https://twitter.com/WordsByJill/status/1380488301287763968?s=20


    How long til she deletes it?

    Hopefully it will dog her for the rest of her days.

    It is a sign of how immature and shallow so many people can be.

    There have been plenty of people who have died over the years who I have been deeply opposed to in almost everything they stood for. Ted Heath was, for me, the classic of that ilk. And yet when he died I was saddened.

    A unique individual who was clearly of great intelligence and who had done something of note with his life had passed away and taken with him a lifetime of knowledge, observations and understanding. A singular perspective on existence (for everyone's perspective is singular) had ended. That is a thing to be mourned no matter who the person is - though I would of course make an exception for those who have set out to do harm to others. But they are few and far between thankfully.

    I am not a religious person so I believe that when someone passes all those thoughts and memories, the loves, the hopes and the dreams, are lost. They are irreplaceable and that is something truly to be mourned.

    Rutger Hauer got it perfectly

    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    I feel immense sadness for the Queen. She has lost her soulmate.
  • JohnLilburneJohnLilburne Posts: 6,258
    ydoethur said:

    Foxy said:

    Julie Hartley Brewer already complaining about how many people might go to his funeral.

    I suspect that they will follow the rules and have a legal funeral, with a memorial service a bit later. HRH does like to set an example.
    Also solves awkward problems around Andrew appearing in public.

    Edit - I wonder where they will bury him, though? Westminster Abbey is presumably where Her Majesty will be laid to rest when the time comes and I’m assuming they’ll want to be buried together. So Westminster not Windsor for the funeral, on that basis.
    Her immediate predecessors were all buried at Windsor so I suspect he will be.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,599
    IanB2 said:

    Having the same programme on every BBC TV channel and every radio channel is surely unnecessary.

    Sounds like they’re doing a dress rehearsal for the big one. That will clear schedules for days.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,219

    Brom said:

    Will Harry be coming home .. with or without Meghan..

    10 days quarantine at a travelodge, they can turn it into a documentary.
    Hilarious. I think he will come but she will not.... excusing it by her pregnancy. Good thing too.
    She won't let him
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,989
    edited April 2021
    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    If you go on iPlayer and scroll back to 12.09 there is When Paramedics Attack, or something, on. It is very powerful the way they then interrupt this to go to the announcement. Newscaster there, in black. She looked quite moved. Then the National Anthem.

    That's really tastefully done.
    I can't find the programme on iPlayer. Could you link? I'd like to see

    Ta
    Go to today's schedule and play from start the 11.45 news bulletin then scroll to 12.08.

    Edit: BBC1
  • rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787
    Just seeing Boris's announcement on the BBC. I know the permanently dishevelled look is part of his persona, but given the circumstances, couldn't he have at least run a hairbrush through his barnet?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 55,429
    edited April 2021
    TimT said:

    Leon said:

    This is a "brave" take from journalist Jill Starley Grainger


    Jill StarleyGrainger
    @WordsByJill
    Among the many reasons I don't give a toss is this repulsive #Philip quote on a visit to China in 1986 - 1 of many offensive 'jokes' the recipient was expected to laugh at: “If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes." What a cad. To quote Bey, I ain't sorry

    https://twitter.com/WordsByJill/status/1380488301287763968?s=20


    How long til she deletes it?

    Hopefully it will dog her for the rest of her days.

    It is a sign of how immature and shallow so many people can be.

    There have been plenty of people who have died over the years who I have been deeply opposed to in almost everything they stood for. Ted Heath was, for me, the classic of that ilk. And yet when he died I was saddened.

    A unique individual who was clearly of great intelligence and who had done something of note with his life had passed away and taken with him a lifetime of knowledge, observations and understanding. A singular perspective on existence (for everyone's perspective is singular) had ended. That is a thing to be mourned no matter who the person is - though I would of course make an exception for those who have set out to do harm to others. But they are few and far between thankfully.

    I am not a religious person so I believe that when someone passes all those thoughts and memories, the loves, the hopes and the dreams, are lost. They are irreplaceable and that is something truly to be mourned.

    Rutger Hauer got it perfectly

    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    I feel immense sadness for the Queen. She has lost her soulmate.
    Yes, after initially viewing this quite cheerily - a characterful old man has died at 99, a grand display of batting, no need for tears - I now feel genuinely sad. The Queen must be broken hearted, even if this is not unexpected.

    When a long marriage - when any long and deep relationship - ends with death, it is like a language going extinct. Something brilliantly unique and precious is lost, all those jokes and memes and memories, shared with that one other person: gone.
  • DeClareDeClare Posts: 483
    edited April 2021

    ydoethur said:

    Foxy said:

    Julie Hartley Brewer already complaining about how many people might go to his funeral.

    I suspect that they will follow the rules and have a legal funeral, with a memorial service a bit later. HRH does like to set an example.
    Also solves awkward problems around Andrew appearing in public.

    Edit - I wonder where they will bury him, though? Westminster Abbey is presumably where Her Majesty will be laid to rest when the time comes and I’m assuming they’ll want to be buried together. So Westminster not Windsor for the funeral, on that basis.
    Her immediate predecessors were all buried at Windsor so I suspect he will be.
    The royal mausoleum and burial grounds at Frogmore, Windsor Great Park.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,410
    Jockey Club discussing postponing Grand National.
    Here we go...
  • LeonLeon Posts: 55,429
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    If you go on iPlayer and scroll back to 12.09 there is When Paramedics Attack, or something, on. It is very powerful the way they then interrupt this to go to the announcement. Newscaster there, in black. She looked quite moved. Then the National Anthem.

    That's really tastefully done.
    I can't find the programme on iPlayer. Could you link? I'd like to see

    Ta
    Go to today's schedule and play from start the 11.45 news bulletin then scroll to 12.08.

    Edit: BBC1
    Found it. Thanks

    Yes it is moving, even startling. The abrupt switch to mourning black and grey....
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,421

    According to Wikipedia, Charles is now the Duke of Edinburgh and when it reverts back to the Crown when he becomes King, it will be created again for Edward.

    I note it’s uncited. I’m inclined to suspend judgement on that for the moment. It may of course have been put up by somebody at Buckingham Palace, then again it may not have been.

    Please remember that technically any noble title has to be confirmed by the Crown before somebody succeeds to it - e.g. contrary to what Wikipedia says, Edward IV was never Duke of York. He went straight from being Earl of March to being King. And therefore, the Crown can vary the succession if they wish.

    That doesn’t apply to the Crown itself, although again, technically an heir should be named in advance (albeit I think the last time it wasn’t an obvious choice was 1714, when it went to a cadet branch under the Act of Settlement.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 27,921
    edited April 2021
    Deleted as borderline bad taste.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,450
    rpjs said:

    Just seeing Boris's announcement on the BBC. I know the permanently dishevelled look is part of his persona, but given the circumstances, couldn't he have at least run a hairbrush through his barnet?

    Agree, and most of the speech was good, but banging on about long marriages.......

    When the old King died BBC shut down all it's programmes for several days. One was forced to find a crackly Radio Luxembourg.

    My other memory of the king's death is of the whole school being called into the Hall by the Head. "Boys" he said (it was an all boys school) 'I have to tell you that the King has died" He paused.'As it is a sad occasion there will not he a half-holiday. Go back to your classrooms."
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126

    Leon said:

    This is a "brave" take from journalist Jill Starley Grainger


    Jill StarleyGrainger
    @WordsByJill
    Among the many reasons I don't give a toss is this repulsive #Philip quote on a visit to China in 1986 - 1 of many offensive 'jokes' the recipient was expected to laugh at: “If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes." What a cad. To quote Bey, I ain't sorry

    https://twitter.com/WordsByJill/status/1380488301287763968?s=20


    How long til she deletes it?

    If that's what she thinks she should be free to say it.

    Makes her look insensitive but so be it, that's her choice.

    Free speech applies to people being insensitive and insulting as much as anyone else - and why bother deleting it now, it'll be screenshotted already.
    That's true, though I think a lot of people will be surprised that people think they are being cocks if they choose to make such comments, and the best criticism they can come up with is he maed jokes in bad taste.

    One thing we will get in such times is people complainaing about the level of coverage, and it will be intense and may well be excessive, but I do very much hope people do not pretend that they are not allowed to care. Being criticised for being offensive about it is not the same thing, though they will pretend it is.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 23,227

    ydoethur said:

    Foxy said:

    Julie Hartley Brewer already complaining about how many people might go to his funeral.

    I suspect that they will follow the rules and have a legal funeral, with a memorial service a bit later. HRH does like to set an example.
    Also solves awkward problems around Andrew appearing in public.

    Edit - I wonder where they will bury him, though? Westminster Abbey is presumably where Her Majesty will be laid to rest when the time comes and I’m assuming they’ll want to be buried together. So Westminster not Windsor for the funeral, on that basis.
    Her immediate predecessors were all buried at Windsor so I suspect he will be.
    It will probably St George's Chapel.

    Definitely not in a car park in Leicester.
  • rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787
    ydoethur said:

    According to Wikipedia, Charles is now the Duke of Edinburgh and when it reverts back to the Crown when he becomes King, it will be created again for Edward.

    I note it’s uncited. I’m inclined to suspend judgement on that for the moment. It may of course have been put up by somebody at Buckingham Palace, then again it may not have been.

    Please remember that technically any noble title has to be confirmed by the Crown before somebody succeeds to it - e.g. contrary to what Wikipedia says, Edward IV was never Duke of York. He went straight from being Earl of March to being King. And therefore, the Crown can vary the succession if they wish.

    That doesn’t apply to the Crown itself, although again, technically an heir should be named in advance (albeit I think the last time it wasn’t an obvious choice was 1714, when it went to a cadet branch under the Act of Settlement.
    The order of succession for the current creation would have been defined in the Letters Patent creating it. I think the Wikipedia assessment is most likely broadly correct, although the Crown would have the power to extinguish the current creation and make a new one, and I'm sure Charles would be happy to allow it, I doubt they will do so.
  • DeClareDeClare Posts: 483

    Deleted as borderline bad taste.

    They've moved the Aintree meeting coverage this afternoon from ITV1 to ITV4.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126

    My advice to my fellow Republicans, keep it classy, and if you've not got anything nice to say, then say nothing at all.

    Very sensible advice, especially as we know you like a good royalist trolling in all good fun. No one has to become a monarchist just because a royal dies, and no one needs to care, but being performatively crass about it will only rebound.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,676
    Why has the BBC got all its channels showing the same thing?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Why has the BBC got all its channels showing the same thing?

    All of them? Even CBBC?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,410
    DeClare said:

    Deleted as borderline bad taste.

    They've moved the Aintree meeting coverage this afternoon from ITV1 to ITV4.
    If the National goes then pressure will be on football. Then all else. Domino effect...
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126

    The Queen will take this badly I fear.

    It's very selfish, but it does inevitably make us all reflect that, well, she is already a very old lady herself, albeit seemingly in good health.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,486

    Why has the BBC got all its channels showing the same thing?

    Absolutely no idea. I tried all of them, before retreating to Channel 4 for some daytime DIY trash.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126

    Scott_xP said:

    BREAKING: Prince Philip has died

    5...4...3...2...1....somebody sends an offensive tweet about it.
    It's what he would have wanted.
    You're probably right, though his kind of humour is not really in vogue now of course.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,165
    edited April 2021
    IanB2 said:

    Having the same programme on every BBC TV channel and every radio channel is surely unnecessary.

    Yes, the simulcast on Radio 3 and Radio 4 felt a bit unnecessary, and even a teensy bit North Korean.

    Historically quite interesting, was old Phil. Appearing to be a paragon of the Old Establishment, but in fact he was much more complex than that. He was very fond of his mother, and quite a lot of his mixture of warmly affable, and at other times and for others, off-puttingly direct bluntness actually came from her German-Greek milieu. She was trying to get him back to Greece in the '30s, and still hadn't quite given up on that psychologically in her last years at Buckingham Palace as an Orthodox nun. An interesting story.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,468
    dixiedean said:

    DeClare said:

    Deleted as borderline bad taste.

    They've moved the Aintree meeting coverage this afternoon from ITV1 to ITV4.
    If the National goes then pressure will be on football. Then all else. Domino effect...
    That just wont do. It's very important that Fulham lose to Wolves tonight.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,200
    edited April 2021

    Leon said:

    This is a "brave" take from journalist Jill Starley Grainger


    Jill StarleyGrainger
    @WordsByJill
    Among the many reasons I don't give a toss is this repulsive #Philip quote on a visit to China in 1986 - 1 of many offensive 'jokes' the recipient was expected to laugh at: “If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes." What a cad. To quote Bey, I ain't sorry

    https://twitter.com/WordsByJill/status/1380488301287763968?s=20


    How long til she deletes it?

    Hopefully it will dog her for the rest of her days.

    It is a sign of how immature and shallow so many people can be.

    There have been plenty of people who have died over the years who I have been deeply opposed to in almost everything they stood for. Ted Heath was, for me, the classic of that ilk. And yet when he died I was saddened.

    A unique individual who was clearly of great intelligence and who had done something of note with his life had passed away and taken with him a lifetime of knowledge, observations and understanding. A singular perspective on existence (for everyone's perspective is singular) had ended. That is a thing to be mourned no matter who the person is - though I would of course make an exception for those who have set out to do harm to others. But they are few and far between thankfully.

    I am not a religious person so I believe that when someone passes all those thoughts and memories, the loves, the hopes and the dreams, are lost. They are irreplaceable and that is something truly to be mourned.

    Rutger Hauer got it perfectly

    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    I don't hope a crass tweet will dog her for the rest of her days.

    That is a mean and brutish sentiment, Richard, which you then follow straight up with a borderline lovely little exposition on human value.

    Illustrating exactly the point - people are a unique blend of this & that, and their lives should not be dissed.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,210

    Leon said:

    This is a "brave" take from journalist Jill Starley Grainger


    Jill StarleyGrainger
    @WordsByJill
    Among the many reasons I don't give a toss is this repulsive #Philip quote on a visit to China in 1986 - 1 of many offensive 'jokes' the recipient was expected to laugh at: “If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes." What a cad. To quote Bey, I ain't sorry

    https://twitter.com/WordsByJill/status/1380488301287763968?s=20


    How long til she deletes it?

    Hopefully it will dog her for the rest of her days.

    It is a sign of how immature and shallow so many people can be.

    There have been plenty of people who have died over the years who I have been deeply opposed to in almost everything they stood for. Ted Heath was, for me, the classic of that ilk. And yet when he died I was saddened.

    A unique individual who was clearly of great intelligence and who had done something of note with his life had passed away and taken with him a lifetime of knowledge, observations and understanding. A singular perspective on existence (for everyone's perspective is singular) had ended. That is a thing to be mourned no matter who the person is - though I would of course make an exception for those who have set out to do harm to others. But they are few and far between thankfully.

    I am not a religious person so I believe that when someone passes all those thoughts and memories, the loves, the hopes and the dreams, are lost. They are irreplaceable and that is something truly to be mourned.

    Rutger Hauer got it perfectly

    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    The BBC actually has a pretty good piece on his life:
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-50589065

    He reminds me of an old uncle who died a few years back (pretty well a contemporary, also fought in the war). I liked him a great deal.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 55,429
    kle4 said:

    Leon said:

    This is a "brave" take from journalist Jill Starley Grainger


    Jill StarleyGrainger
    @WordsByJill
    Among the many reasons I don't give a toss is this repulsive #Philip quote on a visit to China in 1986 - 1 of many offensive 'jokes' the recipient was expected to laugh at: “If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes." What a cad. To quote Bey, I ain't sorry

    https://twitter.com/WordsByJill/status/1380488301287763968?s=20


    How long til she deletes it?

    If that's what she thinks she should be free to say it.

    Makes her look insensitive but so be it, that's her choice.

    Free speech applies to people being insensitive and insulting as much as anyone else - and why bother deleting it now, it'll be screenshotted already.
    That's true, though I think a lot of people will be surprised that people think they are being cocks if they choose to make such comments, and the best criticism they can come up with is he maed jokes in bad taste.

    One thing we will get in such times is people complainaing about the level of coverage, and it will be intense and may well be excessive, but I do very much hope people do not pretend that they are not allowed to care. Being criticised for being offensive about it is not the same thing, though they will pretend it is.
    The tweet is still up, she may get away with it as she is not well known and the news is quite distracting


    But the more I think about it the most tastelessly ugly it is. If nothing else, a very old lady - dutiful and hard working - is in terrible grief, following the death of her husband of 70 years. On a human scale, that is deeply sad

    Ten minutes after he dies is not the time to say you think he was "repulsive" and you "don't give a toss" that he's dead

    Twitter at its worst. The urge to display your opinions, even when they are asinine or malformed....
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,164
    I rarely like too much of what TSE says these days but he was surely on the money when he said earlier that if you have nothing nice to say, say nothing. I feel sad for the Queen today - she has had an annus horribilis for sure again. And RIP for the Duke!
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    IanB2 said:

    https://unherd.com/2021/04/the-tragedy-of-ulsters-lost-boys/?tl_inbound=1&tl_groups[0]=18743&tl_period_type=3&mc_cid=b70caa1d54&mc_eid=836634e34b

    The majority of Unionists — including many people in working-class communities — will regard the rioting with deep disapproval, and want it stopped. But that will not eradicate their abiding dislike of the Protocol, and the effect it is having on businesses, trade and their sense of Britishness. They have been cut adrift by Boris Johnson’s vision of Brexit, in a way that even those Unionists who backed Brexit did not foresee, and which Johnson himself had explicitly promised would not happen. Perhaps they should have predicted what Johnson would actually do, and not listened to what he said, but then it has been a recurrent tendency of Unionists to place excessive faith in the word of a British prime minister.

    Johnson’s Government showed a blithe disregard for the danger, although Theresa May had previously taken steps to avoid it. But by showing that Unionist concerns will be downgraded rather than run any risk of republican violence, the British Government and the EU have now created an awful incentive for loyalist paramilitaries to demonstrate an equivalent level of threat.

    The loyalist paramilitaries — whether by instinct or conscious design — will now make it their business to create “serious societal difficulties” that are “liable to persist”. It’s a terrible script. And unless Britain and the EU can somehow rewrite it, fast, it’s going to make for a very long, hot summer.

    From the article:

    Both loyalists and the wider Unionist population feel strongly that the Protocol fundamentally undermines Northern Ireland’s position in the UK, an analysis which most outside observers would surely find hard to counter.

    This is a misunderstanding. Brexit itself, and certainly Johnson's implementation of it, undermines Northern Ireland’s position in the UK. The Protocol is a way of trying to live with it. If they can't make Brexit work, there will be no Northern Ireland.

    The utter inability of Northern Ireland's unionists to realise the status quo is their friend is that community's great tragedy
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126

    Note Jezza has taken the time to tweet about Bolivia but not about Phil yet.

    Oh please let's not pillory people for not responding quickly enough on Twitter in expressing condolence.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 41,995

    Why has the BBC got all its channels showing the same thing?

    Jesus, just checked and even BBC Alba!
    A touch North Korean..
  • eekeek Posts: 28,397
    To lighten the mood slightly I will post this (without regret)

    https://twitter.com/shckldg/status/1380279802746306562
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,486
    kle4 said:

    Leon said:

    This is a "brave" take from journalist Jill Starley Grainger


    Jill StarleyGrainger
    @WordsByJill
    Among the many reasons I don't give a toss is this repulsive #Philip quote on a visit to China in 1986 - 1 of many offensive 'jokes' the recipient was expected to laugh at: “If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes." What a cad. To quote Bey, I ain't sorry

    https://twitter.com/WordsByJill/status/1380488301287763968?s=20


    How long til she deletes it?

    If that's what she thinks she should be free to say it.

    Makes her look insensitive but so be it, that's her choice.

    Free speech applies to people being insensitive and insulting as much as anyone else - and why bother deleting it now, it'll be screenshotted already.
    That's true, though I think a lot of people will be surprised that people think they are being cocks if they choose to make such comments, and the best criticism they can come up with is he maed jokes in bad taste.

    One thing we will get in such times is people complainaing about the level of coverage, and it will be intense and may well be excessive, but I do very much hope people do not pretend that they are not allowed to care. Being criticised for being offensive about it is not the same thing, though they will pretend it is.
    I'm quite happy for the Beeb to devote Beeb 1 to it, then people who want to watch it have somewhere obvious to find it, but devoting all its channels to the same stream is both excessive and pointless.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,675
    Much of what we're experiencing today feels like the end of an era. The long post-war period ran until around 2020. Brexit, Covid and now a significant death feels like the move into a new, arguably scary, era.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,421
    dixiedean said:

    DeClare said:

    Deleted as borderline bad taste.

    They've moved the Aintree meeting coverage this afternoon from ITV1 to ITV4.
    If the National goes then pressure will be on football. Then all else. Domino effect...
    A minute’s silence at all county games, I understand, then they continue. Can’t see why football can’t manage the same.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,486

    dixiedean said:

    DeClare said:

    Deleted as borderline bad taste.

    They've moved the Aintree meeting coverage this afternoon from ITV1 to ITV4.
    If the National goes then pressure will be on football. Then all else. Domino effect...
    That just wont do. It's very important that Fulham lose to Wolves tonight.

    Surely it won't lead to a cancellation of the sporting calendar? That is excessive.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,486
    ydoethur said:

    dixiedean said:

    DeClare said:

    Deleted as borderline bad taste.

    They've moved the Aintree meeting coverage this afternoon from ITV1 to ITV4.
    If the National goes then pressure will be on football. Then all else. Domino effect...
    A minute’s silence at all county games, I understand, then they continue. Can’t see why football can’t manage the same.
    Indeed, that sounds like the right response.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126

    Why has the BBC got all its channels showing the same thing?

    Jesus, just checked and even BBC Alba!
    A touch North Korean..
    Hmm, I was guessing it would be dura ace that make that comparison first.

    Big stuff like this demands a lot of focus, though also always goes over the top with it. When Her Majesty dies, gods forbid, if we get less than 2 weeks wall to wall coverage I will be very surprised, so people may want to line up a 'royal dealth' playlist on netflix.
This discussion has been closed.