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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Trump card. Shuffling the deck on Brexit

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  • rcs1000 said:

    They diverted spending from the military to reviving the East. It was probably the right call.
    Certainly.

    But it looks like they've left their rearming for 5-10 years too long.
  • nielhnielh Posts: 1,307
    Sean_F said:

    There you go again "The people (the idiots)".

    If people like you had actually bothered to listen to the people's views, you wouldn't be in your current predicament.
    It's not my predicament. Its our collective predicament.
    People just laughed at Cameron when he said leaving the EU would increase the risk of war. People laughed at the 'experts' from the vast majority of world leaders through to military generals.
    Brexit was a peasants revolt led by know nothing idiots and the deluded. Of course there are many, valid criticisms of the EU. But a vote for Brexit was a vote for the break up of the UK and total chaos, which is now unfolding in a predictable way.
    I accepted on June 24th that I am now in a minority within this country. I accept we lost. I accept that the decision has to be implemented and I want it to be 'owned' by the people that led us to it.


  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,727
    rcs1000 said:

    I agree with all of that. Russia, ultimately, is a demographic disaster zone, dependent of the sale of oil and gas to the Europeans and Chinese. Unfortunately for them, new energy sources - whether LNG from Australia or the US, or solar and wind - are a long term drag on its primary industry.

    In China they have a word for Russia, they call it colloquially "the dying one". The danger is that, like a dying wasp, it stings before it expires.
    The fertility rate in Russia is significantly above Germany. The idea that Russia is dying does not stand up to scrutiny.
  • TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,454
    edited November 2016
    Pulpstar said:

    Betting related:

    Alain Juppe around evens on Betfair.

    It's less than a week to the primary.

    Juppé leads in the latest polling in the first round, by a 1-6 point margin depending on turnout (this is the first time the centre-right primary has been open). He would beat Sarkozy by 14-18 points in the second round.

    I am very long on Juppé but on current trends you could afford to wait will next week and still get him at 1.5 maybe which would be fantastic value and lower risk.

    http://www.europe1.fr/politique/primaire-a-droite-juppe-en-tete-dans-les-sondages-mais-en-baisse-sarkozy-et-fillon-en-hausse-2899526
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801

    Though it is probably time for the USAF to go home too.

    I don't want Trumpsbombers flying from British soil.
    The whole point is to ensure that eastern Europe doesn't fall into the Russian sphere of influence. That's why we invited them to NATO in the first place. After the migrant crisis the Eastern bloc is turning against the EU. Ensuring they stay in NATO and keeping the Americans interested is in our interests. A pacifist Lib Dem might not get it, but then again selling out your supporters is something you're used to I guess. Selling out Eastern Europe to fall into Putin's sphere probably doesn't mean much, as long as we unilaterally disarm. Fool.
  • Confirmation that Mrs May is a pound shop Gordon Brown

    https://twitter.com/JohnRentoul/status/798289546068824064
  • I do not think the Trumpster is going to be a sucker for Mrs May's feeble charms.
    Your feeble skills are no match for the power of the Daft Side!
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801

    Certainly.

    But it looks like they've left their rearming for 5-10 years too long.
    Reaping the rewards of the EMU crisis to rebuild their economy instead of spending on defence. Germany is now nothing more than a mercantile nation, they didn't want to hit Russia with sanctions initially because German exporters to Russia might lose out. Spineless.
  • FF43 said:

    It's an excellent question and one that exercises me as someone who thinks liberalism is a force for good.

    The problem is that the liberal consensus and ascendancy that held sway in the West since the Second World War in response to that catastrophe is widely seen to have failed and is breaking down. So we are returning to the 1930's - excepting genocide by mad dictators and global war, but the other aspects of that grim decade - which saw the death of liberalism just as we are seeing again now.

    Liberals need to make the case for the authority of international rules, respect for others and the state not interfering unduly in the way people live their lives - all liberal values - because these things are good.

    I just don't agree with the idea the primary epoch we are in "post war". There was a post-war consensus, destroyed by Thatcheritism, which was replaced by Blairism which we may or may not now be coming out of. Arguably on an international level you could merge free market economics under the second two, but the idea that prior to 1973 our attitude to free trade is the same as now is impossible for me to agree with.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,349
    FF43 said:

    Liberals need to make the case for the authority of international rules, respect for others and the state not interfering unduly in the way people live their lives - all liberal values - because these things are good.

    They are good, and I don't think people are rejecting those values, but they are fed up with "values" trumping basic economic competence. You can't eat values, values don't pay the mortgage; freedom without economic security isn't all that appetising.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,831

    Confirmation that Mrs May is a pound shop Gordon Brown

    https://twitter.com/JohnRentoul/status/798289546068824064

    Just looks like the civil service trying to undermine TM's wishes to leave the EU. Nothing new there...
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    https://twitter.com/suttonnick/status/798259158860513280

    This is not true. SeanT said he was in a pub in London and it was really busy.
  • Confirmation that Mrs May is a pound shop Gordon Brown

    https://twitter.com/JohnRentoul/status/798289546068824064

    TSE's public schoolboy misogyny rears its ugly head again!

    *runs and hides*
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,186
    edited November 2016

    Confirmation that Mrs May is a pound shop Gordon Brown

    https://twitter.com/JohnRentoul/status/798289546068824064

    Confirmation that there are too many critics....
  • Confirmation that Mrs May is a pound shop Gordon Brown

    https://twitter.com/JohnRentoul/status/798289546068824064

    Still praying for the rehabilitation of Osborne?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,087

    The SNP has been explicitly opposed to nuclear weapons since the 60s, so presumably they've been doing Krushchev's, Brezhnev's, Andropov's, Gorbachev's and Yeltsin's bidding also. Remarkable consistency.

    Edit: forgot about Chernenko.
    Given there is still debate over whether Chernenko was actually alive during any of his time in power.....
  • nielh said:

    It's not my predicament. Its our collective predicament.
    People just laughed at Cameron when he said leaving the EU would increase the risk of war. People laughed at the 'experts' from the vast majority of world leaders through to military generals.
    Brexit was a peasants revolt led by know nothing idiots and the deluded. Of course there are many, valid criticisms of the EU. But a vote for Brexit was a vote for the break up of the UK and total chaos, which is now unfolding in a predictable way.
    I accepted on June 24th that I am now in a minority within this country. I accept we lost. I accept that the decision has to be implemented and I want it to be 'owned' by the people that led us to it.


    LEAVE 52%
    HILLARY 48%

    :innocent:
  • Raheem Kassam is a right-wing internet media star.

    As is TSE.

    Now have you managed to see the difference between Caracas and Los Angeles yet ?

    I'd rather stick to my principles rather than go for glory.

    I joined the Tories in May 1997 after that shellacking is evidence of that.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204

    I'd rather stick to my principles rather than go for glory.

    I joined the Tories in May 1997 after that shellacking is evidence of that.
    Back of the queue :)
  • Still praying for the rehabilitation of Osborne?
    Never been praying for it, because I know it'll happen. It is already happening.
  • The fertility rate in Russia is significantly above Germany. The idea that Russia is dying does not stand up to scrutiny.
    Russia did have a dip in population, but it's on the up again:

    image
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,855

    I just don't agree with the idea the primary epoch we are in "post war". There was a post-war consensus, destroyed by Thatcheritism, which was replaced by Blairism which we may or may not now be coming out of. Arguably on an international level you could merge free market economics under the second two, but the idea that prior to 1973 our attitude to free trade is the same as now is impossible for me to agree with.
    I mean liberalism in a very broad international sense. Thatcherism, and more importantly the conservative majority achieved by Ronald Reagan, were in some ways a rejection of that liberalism but they still stayed within the system. What's happening now is quite different. Whether Thatcher or Reagan would approve is unanswerable because they are dead, but it goes beyond what they did.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,727

    I just don't agree with the idea the primary epoch we are in "post war". There was a post-war consensus, destroyed by Thatcheritism, which was replaced by Blairism which we may or may not now be coming out of. Arguably on an international level you could merge free market economics under the second two, but the idea that prior to 1973 our attitude to free trade is the same as now is impossible for me to agree with.
    On the economic point you're surely correct and it's why if you take the post war period as a whole you would have to be particularly blinkered to think that Britain without the EU is a beacon of free trading liberalism.

    That said, that's not primarily what defines the change of epoch we're experiencing at present. What's breaking down is the post Cold War consensus of a unipolar geopolitics led by the US through a variety of international organisations, the very ones we were assuming would be so stable that we could safely depart the EU and fall into their embrace. That is being shown to be an utterly misguided wish.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    MaxPB said:

    The whole point is to ensure that eastern Europe doesn't fall into the Russian sphere of influence. That's why we invited them to NATO in the first place. After the migrant crisis the Eastern bloc is turning against the EU. Ensuring they stay in NATO and keeping the Americans interested is in our interests. A pacifist Lib Dem might not get it, but then again selling out your supporters is something you're used to I guess. Selling out Eastern Europe to fall into Putin's sphere probably doesn't mean much, as long as we unilaterally disarm. Fool.
    We voted to turn our back on Eastern Erope in June. It is none of our business now.

    I think the breakup of NATO is a great opportunity to rethink our military.
  • Chris_AChris_A Posts: 1,237
    Meanwhile I see that I'm still getting hundreds of emails per hour. So much for private enterprise helping NHS efficiency as it'll take ages to sort out the important stuff tomorrow.
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    Bernie Sanders
    I come from the white working class, and I am deeply humiliated that the Democratic Party cannot talk to the people where I came from.
  • Mortimer said:

    Confirmation that there are too many critics....
    Consensus among civil servants is that while the memo might be true, it almost certainly is not an official memo.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,831

    Never been praying for it, because I know it'll happen. It is already happening.
    Er....
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Chris_A said:

    Meanwhile I see that I'm still getting hundreds of emails per hour. So much for private enterprise helping NHS efficiency as it'll take ages to sort out the important stuff tomorrow.

    Our firewall must be good. I have had no more emails at work than usual.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,777
    Scott_P said:

    https://twitter.com/suttonnick/status/798259158860513280

    This is not true. SeanT said he was in a pub in London and it was really busy.

    Sounds unlikely, though. My understanding was that tourism had done rather well out of Brexit due to the fall in the pound.
  • Never been praying for it, because I know it'll happen. It is already happening.
    A bit like David Miliband?
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450
    nielh said:

    It's not my predicament. Its our collective predicament.
    People just laughed at Cameron when he said leaving the EU would increase the risk of war. People laughed at the 'experts' from the vast majority of world leaders through to military generals.
    Brexit was a peasants revolt led by know nothing idiots and the deluded. Of course there are many, valid criticisms of the EU. But a vote for Brexit was a vote for the break up of the UK and total chaos, which is now unfolding in a predictable way.
    I accepted on June 24th that I am now in a minority within this country. I accept we lost. I accept that the decision has to be implemented and I want it to be 'owned' by the people that led us to it.


    The problem is that people like you thought that the answer to all criticisms of the EU was More Europe.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    Chris_A said:

    Meanwhile I see that I'm still getting hundreds of emails per hour. So much for private enterprise helping NHS efficiency as it'll take ages to sort out the important stuff tomorrow.

    Public or private, one misclick on a reply all and you are screwed ;)
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    edited November 2016
    It's the technology stupid.

    We've not figured out to run an economy with automation, nor an Internet media that can discriminate between any old gobshite and someone who knows what they are talking about.

    So we fall back to classic right wing demagogues, their easy solutions and scapegoats

    Much easier than dealing with the actual problem.
  • FF43 said:

    I mean liberalism in a very broad international sense. Thatcherism, and more importantly the conservative majority achieved by Ronald Reagan, were in some ways a rejection of that liberalism but they still stayed within the system. What's happening now is quite different. Whether Thatcher or Reagan would approve is unanswerable because they are dead, but it goes beyond what they did.
    I don't disagree if what you want to say is that we are entering a new era, I think we are. But I think it is the third, maybe the fourth, such era in the last hundred years.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    Why would London tourism drop due to a fall in the pound ?
  • A bit like David Miliband?
    Nah. George is still an MP...
  • Chris_AChris_A Posts: 1,237
    RobD said:

    Public or private, one misclick on a reply all and you are screwed ;)
    We're all screwed.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    Cookie said:

    Sounds unlikely, though. My understanding was that tourism had done rather well out of Brexit due to the fall in the pound.
    I sure hope they aren't comparing Autumn figures with Summer figures :p
  • Tim_BTim_B Posts: 7,669
    The NY Times 'rededicates' itself to honest reporting.

    You can't make this up.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/13/us/elections/to-our-readers-from-the-publisher-and-executive-editor.html?_r=1
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    We voted to turn our back on Eastern Erope in June. It is none of our business now.

    I think the breakup of NATO is a great opportunity to rethink our military.
    No we didn't, we voted to leave the EU.
  • GIN1138 said:

    Er....
    TSE means like a man who has broken up with his wife, has learnt to forget about her because he is too busy seeing other people/getting on with his life.

    That is Osborne's "rehabilitation".
  • Chris_AChris_A Posts: 1,237

    Our firewall must be good. I have had no more emails at work than usual.
    or you don't use nhs.net
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,855
    glw said:

    They are good, and I don't think people are rejecting those values, but they are fed up with "values" trumping basic economic competence. You can't eat values, values don't pay the mortgage; freedom without economic security isn't all that appetising.
    Undoubtedly. And let me be clear for my own benefit, liberalism HAS failed. It has benefitted the wealthy while disregarding those that struggle to get by. It's not a wrong perception held by those that don't know better; it's the reality. The problem is that in discounting those liberal values because "you can't eat them and they don't pay the mortgage" they are lost and the world turns that much nastier.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243

    The fertility rate in Russia is significantly above Germany. The idea that Russia is dying does not stand up to scrutiny.
    Russia had a terrible birth rate for a long time. Getting back to c. 1.7 does not make their pyramid look healthy.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801

    We voted to turn our back on Eastern Erope in June. It is none of our business now.

    I think the breakup of NATO is a great opportunity to rethink our military.

    We voted to leave NATO? Or did we vote to kick Eastern Europe out of NATO?

    The EU is dying on its feet right now, we voted leave a decrepit political sham, our military alliance is still supported by the majority of people and the government. You may not like it, but pacifism is dead in this country, your views are in the minority, as is your EUphilia.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,349
    PlatoSaid said:

    Bernie Sanders
    I come from the white working class, and I am deeply humiliated that the Democratic Party cannot talk to the people where I came from.

    The DNC should have spent at least as much time listening to Sanders as it did nobbling him.
  • nielhnielh Posts: 1,307
    MaxPB said:

    The whole point is to ensure that eastern Europe doesn't fall into the Russian sphere of influence. That's why we invited them to NATO in the first place. After the migrant crisis the Eastern bloc is turning against the EU. Ensuring they stay in NATO and keeping the Americans interested is in our interests. A pacifist Lib Dem might not get it, but then again selling out your supporters is something you're used to I guess. Selling out Eastern Europe to fall into Putin's sphere probably doesn't mean much, as long as we unilaterally disarm. Fool.
    Sadly people aren't bothered. They don't see whats in it for us.
  • Nah. George is still an MP...
    So more a Ted Heath then
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548


    Russia did have a dip in population, but it's on the up again:

    image
    Russia has had a lot of population peaks and troughs over the last century.

    The generation born between the wars is now dying off, but much or Russias population growth is from migration from former Soviet states, Ukraine in particular, but also the 'stans. Much is ethnically Russian, with the otber side of the coin being that these places are becoming less etbnically Russian.
  • MaxPB said:

    We voted to leave NATO? Or did we vote to kick Eastern Europe out of NATO?

    The EU is dying on its feet right now, we voted leave a decrepit political sham, our military alliance is still supported by the majority of people and the government. You may not like it, but pacifism is dead in this country, your views are in the minority, as is your EUphilia.
    The fact that the EU's answer to everything is more Europe is starting to be more of a problem...
  • Scott_P said:

    https://twitter.com/suttonnick/status/798259158860513280

    This is not true. SeanT said he was in a pub in London and it was really busy.

    And SeanT was right according to the ONS:

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/leisureandtourism/timeseries/gmaz/ott
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243


    Russia did have a dip in population, but it's on the up again:

    image
    The absorption of the Crimea?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801
    RobD said:

    No we didn't, we voted to leave the EU.

    These EUphiles can't separate Brussels from Warsaw, it seems.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450
    FF43 said:

    It's an excellent question and one that exercises me as someone who thinks liberalism is a force for good.

    The problem is that the liberal consensus and ascendancy that held sway in the West since the Second World War in response to that catastrophe is widely seen to have failed and is breaking down. So we are returning to the 1930's - excepting genocide by mad dictators and global war, but the other aspects of that grim decade - which saw the death of liberalism just as we are seeing again now.

    Liberals need to make the case for the authority of international rules, respect for others and the state not interfering unduly in the way people live their lives - all liberal values - because these things are good.

    i don't see any reason why liberalism needs to die. It's just become associated with very unpopular causes. Hostility towards nation states, mass migration, and putting the boot into people who speak out of turn.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    On BBC News right now, big reason for Trump winning - also the wall.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    rcs1000 said:

    The absorption of the Crimea?
    A couple of million, looks about right for Crimea.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,855
    Cookie said:

    Sounds unlikely, though. My understanding was that tourism had done rather well out of Brexit due to the fall in the pound.
    Hotels in London might be more driven by business traffic that leisure and as the amount of business transacted definitely has fallen post-Brexit that might explain the empty hotel rooms
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312
    MaxPB said:

    Reaping the rewards of the EMU crisis to rebuild their economy instead of spending on defence. Germany is now nothing more than a mercantile nation, they didn't want to hit Russia with sanctions initially because German exporters to Russia might lose out. Spineless.
    Twas ever thus. Back in the day the Germans baulked at financing its share of export sales of Eurofighter, leaving us and the French to pick up the tab, but they had no objection to providing the kit.

    The euro too is a zero sum game so the extent of Club Med suffering is balanced by German (and other Northern European) gain. The EU has been a busted flush for ages, now it's been called, and the US is staying in too.
  • I'd rather stick to my principles rather than go for glory.

    I joined the Tories in May 1997 after that shellacking is evidence of that.
    To have been real hardcore you should have joined in March 1997 :wink:
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,727
    MaxPB said:

    These EUphiles can't separate Brussels from Warsaw, it seems.
    No that would be the Leavers who voted for Brexit because too many people from the latter decided to take up our offer to move here.
  • nielhnielh Posts: 1,307
    Sean_F said:

    The problem is that people like you thought that the answer to all criticisms of the EU was More Europe.
    Actually I'm a Eurosceptic, I was just able to see the bigger picture.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801
    FF43 said:

    Hotels in London might be more driven by business traffic that leisure and as the amount of business transacted definitely has fallen post-Brexit that might explain the empty hotel rooms
    The rise of AirBnB, might have had an effect as well. A pretty big one.
  • To have been real hardcore you should have joined in March 1997 :wink:
    I wanted to join and campaign, but my mother put a block on it.

    I was about to do my A Levels in May/June 1997 and well she didn't want me distracted by other things.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    edited November 2016
    MaxPB said:

    We voted to leave NATO? Or did we vote to kick Eastern Europe out of NATO?

    The EU is dying on its feet right now, we voted leave a decrepit political sham, our military alliance is still supported by the majority of people and the government. You may not like it, but pacifism is dead in this country, your views are in the minority, as is your EUphilia.
    No, it is the Trumsters that have issued the call to pull America back from countries that do not pay their way. The EU. South Korea, Japan etc

    Trump is an old fashioned Isolationist, like prewar America, the collapse of NATO one of the benefits.

    Why should we go to the defence of Estonia or Greece?
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    No that would be the Leavers who voted for Brexit because too many people from the latter decided to take up our offer to move here.
    And what has that got to do with us turning our back on those countries?
  • Y0kelY0kel Posts: 2,307
    FF43 said:

    Undoubtedly. And let me be clear for my own benefit, liberalism HAS failed. It has benefitted the wealthy while disregarding those that struggle to get by. It's not a wrong perception held by those that don't know better; it's the reality. The problem is that in discounting those liberal values because "you can't eat them and they don't pay the mortgage" they are lost and the world turns that much nastier.
    Liberalism hasn't failed, its been bastardised by the politically correct left. Liberalism as it should be isn't at all what its seen as now.

    What we have today is a Tyranny of Liberalism.

    Liberalism should value freedom of thought and opinion, give the individual maximum reasonable freedom to live, work and grow without interference, for the people to be sovereign over their political destiny and most of all Liberalism should be robust in its defence and oppose those seek to subvert it, whether dictators or the thought police we have masquerading as liberals or 'progressives' today.
  • Chris_AChris_A Posts: 1,237

    And SeanT was right according to the ONS:

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/leisureandtourism/timeseries/gmaz/ott
    have you actually looked at that dataset?

    It goes up to 2016Q2, i.e. one week after Brexit.

    What it does show is that overseas visitors' earnings 2016Q2 down (0.9%) on 2015Q2, 2016Q1 earnings down (2.2%) on 2015Q1
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801

    No, it is the Trumsters that have issued the call to pull America back from countries that do not pay their way. The EU. South Korea, Japan etc

    Trump is an old fashioned Isolationist, like prewar America, the collapse of NATO one of the benefits.

    Why should we go to the defence of Estonia or Greece?
    Time for Europe to pay up in that case. €117bn from the freeloaders please.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    edited November 2016
    Chris_A said:

    have you actually looked at that dataset?

    It goes up to 2016Q2, i.e. one week after Brexit.

    What it does show is that overseas visitors' earnings 2016Q2 down (0.9%) on 2015Q2, 2016Q1 earnings down (2.2%) on 2015Q1
    It also has July and August 2016 in the tables, which were both up relative to 2015, but down relative to 2014.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801
    edited November 2016
    Chris_A said:

    have you actually looked at that dataset?

    It goes up to 2016Q2, i.e. one week after Brexit.

    What it does show is that overseas visitors' earnings 2016Q2 down (0.9%) on 2015Q2, 2016Q1 earnings down (2.2%) on 2015Q1
    The monthly data includes July and August, both of which are up YoY, 2.3% and 6.6% respectively.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    Don't some of them already have roles in his transition team?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,727
    RobD said:

    And what has that got to do with us turning our back on those countries?
    The Poles fought alongside us in WW2 after we went to war, ostensibly over their country. Poland was only freed from tyranny a full 50 years later. After they finally rejoined the European mainstream the UK then votes to Leave it because, having unilaterally opened the door to them, too many took up our offer to move here. To me that's a source of great shame.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,356
    edited November 2016
    And we wonder why people don't believe stuff even in the serious media...tip stop printing total bullshit that is easily verifiable like the times claiming May meeting Obama in the Whitehouse.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    edited November 2016
    MaxPB said:

    Time for Europe to pay up in that case. €117bn from the freeloaders please.
    Nah. Not going to happen, and no need. A bit of tinkering around the edges possibly, but better to wind down NATO and enjoy a new peace dividend. Yankee go home, and welcome to Ivan.

    A demilitarisation of Europe would be a good thing.
  • Y0kelY0kel Posts: 2,307

    The fertility rate in Russia is significantly above Germany. The idea that Russia is dying does not stand up to scrutiny.
    Actually it does, its a basket case in every conceivable manner, its showing all the signs of a state on its knees, gangsterism, elected dictatorship, political suppression, an economy that is lacking diversification and fake strongman stuff on the international stage to look glorious.

    You have to look at its leader, he can play poker but he is an ex KGB desk jockey who prances about on a horse trying to look macho. In reality he is as weak and vain as the country he governs. They are welcome to the regime they have but fuck I'd fight every single one of them if they came anywhere near the door.

    Its a shit-hole state.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    edited November 2016

    The Poles fought alongside us in WW2 after we went to war, ostensibly over their country. Poland was only freed from tyranny a full 50 years later. After they finally rejoined the European mainstream the UK then votes to Leave it because, having unilaterally opened the door to them, too many took up our offer to move here. To me that's a source of great shame.
    But we are both still in NATO, so I am not seeing your point. We've done very well out of cheap labour from Eastern Europe. They have suffered a massive brain drain thanks to us (well, maybe not brain drain in some cases, but a significant exodus of the young).
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    Nah. Not going to happen, and no need. A bit of tinkering around the edges possibly, but better to wind down NATO and enjoy a new peace dividend. Yankee go home, and welcome to Ivan.

    A demilitarisation of Europe would be a good thing.
    Putin would love that!
  • glwglw Posts: 10,349
    FF43 said:

    Undoubtedly. And let me be clear for my own benefit, liberalism HAS failed. It has benefitted the wealthy while disregarding those that struggle to get by. It's not a wrong perception held by those that don't know better; it's the reality. The problem is that in discounting those liberal values because "you can't eat them and they don't pay the mortgage" they are lost and the world turns that much nastier.

    I don't think that people generally are discounting those values, I do not even think that most Trump voters are rejecting such things.

    Trump is a tool for people who want greater economic security, they aren't endorsing the stupid stuff he says, they are using him as a means to say "we are mad as hell and not going to take it any more". It's a measure of their anger that they will vote for someone as bad as Trump. His election is the mother of all wakeup calls to the left that has lost its focus on economic security, and the right that seems to think that if aggregated data about the economy and trade looks good then peoples personal struggles will be magically taken care of by the invisible hand.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,727
    RobD said:

    But we are both still in NATO, so I am not seeing your point. We've done very well out of cheap labour from Eastern Europe. They have suffered a massive brain drain thanks to us.

    Do you think we would maintain our Article 5 commitment for one second longer than the US does?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801

    Nah. Not going to happen.

    A demilitarisation of Europe would be a good thing.
    In your pacifist Lib Dem eyes, maybe. To the rest of the world it will be a less safe place and to the US they will be completely unreliable allies. If Europe demilitarises then the idea that it could be a world power stand up against China or the US would be more of a joke than it is today. Only in your weird pacifist EUphile world does this make sense. I'd love for the EU to pursue the policy as all of Eastern Europe will decide to leave the EU, as would France if you try to take away their nukes. Germany, the cheapskates, would even have to increase spending if they were responsible for the safety of the remaining group.
  • Dear me, I see that Alastair has misquoted one of Lord Prescott's most memorable contributions to the political lexicon. It wasn't the tectonic plates which had moved, but the Teutonic plates.
  • Chris_A said:

    have you actually looked at that dataset?

    It goes up to 2016Q2, i.e. one week after Brexit.

    What it does show is that overseas visitors' earnings 2016Q2 down (0.9%) on 2015Q2, 2016Q1 earnings down (2.2%) on 2015Q1
    Switch to monthly format and you can add:

    July 2016 earnings up 2.3% on July 2015
    August 2016 earnings up 6.2% on August 2015

    So earnings having fallen in the first half of 2016 were replaced by earnings having risen during July and August.

    Too early to tell definitively yet but certainly a promising sign.
  • rcs1000 said:

    The absorption of the Crimea?
    Note that the rate of decrease flattens off a couple of years BEFORE Crimea.
  • Chris_A said:

    Meanwhile I see that I'm still getting hundreds of emails per hour. So much for private enterprise helping NHS efficiency as it'll take ages to sort out the important stuff tomorrow.

    I'm not sure that having hundreds of employees who are too dumb to not "reply all" to an email sent to over a million people is really the fault of "private enterprise"...
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801
    RobD said:

    Putin would love that!
    I know, that unlikely move into Poland suddenly might look a lot more tempting!
  • nunununu Posts: 6,024
    Trump appointing w.Bush former staffers makes me feel a bit better. Tho America is still in relative decline and I feel like the American people have accepted that to an extent by electing an isolationist.

    Question is now who should Britain suck up to now? There are only two countries that can take Americas place as THE superpower over the next couple decades. India or China. I prefer India because democracy. What do you guys think.
  • Hmm - Germany created a defence force. It spends comparatively nothing on defence. As Europe's richest, most populous country it should by rights have its biggest and most powerful military, as a permanent seat on the Security Council. A German military capability in line with its financial might and number of inhabitants would dwarf what we have. Are we really comfortable with that? What would Germany's neighbours think?

    Don't know about anyone else but I'm totally comfortable with that.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    edited November 2016
    Y0kel said:

    Actually it does, its a basket case in every conceivable manner, its showing all the signs of a state on its knees, gangsterism, elected dictatorship, political suppression, an economy that is lacking diversification and fake strongman stuff on the international stage to look glorious.

    You have to look at its leader, he can play poker but he is an ex KGB desk jockey who prances about on a horse trying to look macho. In reality he is as weak and vain as the country he governs. They are welcome to the regime they have but fuck I'd fight every single one of them if they came anywhere near the door.

    Its a shit-hole state.
    Putin has showed the way forward in terms of foreign influence, with his troll farms and Wikileaks. No need for tanks, when you can get the Americans to rise up and depose their own leaders and destabilise their own countries.

    The risk is that rather like the Germans putting Lenin on a sealed train with just the same objective, they may well get a similar blowback. One of several reasons that the German army collapsed in 1918 was that the hundreds of thousands of troops transferred from the East brought Bolshevism and defeatism with them. Russias trolls may well go freelance...
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243
    edited November 2016
    Y0kel said:

    Liberalism hasn't failed, its been bastardised by the politically correct left. Liberalism as it should be isn't at all what its seen as now.

    What we have today is a Tyranny of Liberalism.

    Liberalism should value freedom of thought and opinion, give the individual maximum reasonable freedom to live, work and grow without interference, for the people to be sovereign over their political destiny and most of all Liberalism should be robust in its defence and oppose those seek to subvert it, whether dictators or the thought police we have masquerading as liberals or 'progressives' today.
    +1
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450
    nunu said:

    Trump appointing w.Bush former staffers makes me feel a bit better. Tho America is still in relative decline and I feel like the American people have accepted that to an extent by electing an isolationist.

    Question is now who should Britain suck up to now? There are only two countries that can take Americas place as THE superpower over the next couple decades. India or China. I prefer India because democracy. What do you guys think.

    There is no country that has the economic and military clout to be the World's superpower. It's more like the situation in about 1900. Several major powers.

  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204

    Don't know about anyone else but I'm totally comfortable with that.
    Why wouldn't we be ?

    Germany not having to spend 2% of gdp on defence must give them a comparative advantage on other stuff.
  • FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486

    I'm not sure that having hundreds of employees who are too dumb to not "reply all" to an email sent to over a million people is really the fault of "private enterprise"...
    The email does not appear to have gone to a million people when you see it. Yes, you don't need to reply all, but the messages are filtering through VERY slowly from the initial boom this morning.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243

    Note that the rate of decrease flattens off a couple of years BEFORE Crimea.
    Agreed. Three things helped: Putin's campaign against alcoholism mean Russians are living longer, pro-natal policies boosted the birth rate, and immigration of ethnic Russians was encouraged.

    None of those things takes away from the fact there is a diminishing cohort of women of childbearing age having substantially less than the replacement number of children. Russia needs to have a TFR close to 2.5-2.7 to stabalise their population pyramid.
  • rcs1000 said:

    +1
    Comrades, we have fallen from the path to glory, we must denounce that act in our name as traitors, and push them aside.

    Or, just putting it out there, we could come up with a new doctrine, with a new name, and stand it in place of liberalism.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801
    Pulpstar said:

    Why wouldn't we be ?

    Germany not having to spend 2% of gdp on defence must give them a comparative advantage on other stuff.
    And now cumulate that 1% of GDP underspend for 20 years. A nice little bonus.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    MaxPB said:

    In your pacifist Lib Dem eyes, maybe. To the rest of the world it will be a less safe place and to the US they will be completely unreliable allies. If Europe demilitarises then the idea that it could be a world power stand up against China or the US would be more of a joke than it is today. Only in your weird pacifist EUphile world does this make sense. I'd love for the EU to pursue the policy as all of Eastern Europe will decide to leave the EU, as would France if you try to take away their nukes. Germany, the cheapskates, would even have to increase spending if they were responsible for the safety of the remaining group.
    Why would Europe want to "stand up to" China or the USA militarily?

    They are no threat to us, and neither is Russia. Islamists are, but fighting them is not a battle to be fought by tanks or missiles. Intelligence, light special forces and drones are what is needed, and the backbone to use them.
  • Y0kel said:

    Liberalism hasn't failed, its been bastardised by the politically correct left. Liberalism as it should be isn't at all what its seen as now.

    What we have today is a Tyranny of 'liberalism'.

    Liberalism should value freedom of thought and opinion, give the individual maximum reasonable freedom to live, work and grow without interference, for the people to be sovereign over their political destiny and most of all Liberalism should be robust in its defence and oppose those seek to subvert it, whether dictators or the thought police we have masquerading as liberals or 'progressives' today.
    I've made a slight change.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801

    Comrades, we have fallen from the path to glory, we must denounce that act in our name as traitors, and push them aside.

    Or, just putting it out there, we could come up with a new doctrine, with a new name, and stand it in place of liberalism.
    No, kick out the regressives who have tried (and succeeded, unfortunately) to take over the liberal label. The Lib Dems are the worst of the lot. They are neither liberal nor democratic.
This discussion has been closed.