Howdy, Stranger!

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

politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The prospect of Johnson as leader should make Theresa’s positi

1246

Comments

  • TOPPING said:

    Wasn't it the Osborne questions of are you voting Leave or do you want a career that got him?
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,487
    welshowl said:

    So British voters aren't allowed to vote for things they want or don't want?
    It's a paradox. How do you compel people to accept "freedoms" that they don't want, and/or don't consider to be freedoms?
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    Anazina said:

    Indeed. How many Jewish boys are circumcised because they want to be?

    For what it's worth, I loathe the burka just as I loathe the practice of circumcision (which I would ban for children except for proven medical reasons - once you are an adult you can make that informed choice). I'd also ban all faith schools and the teaching of any religion on schools beyond academic study of it (again let adults make choices about religion, don't force feed it to children). I realise I am in a tiny minority but those are nevertheless my views.

    Re: Boris. Topping is right, The guy is a bully, and a grasping self-serving one at that. He knew what he was doing and such bad manners has no place in British political discourse.
    You can't tell this now, because all the results are about Boris, but a Google of burka letterbox just after he said it made very clear indeed (from the sites it showed up on) that it is a racist trope beloved of the right. Odds of Boris not knowing that?

    You are not in a minority of 1.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,702
    @Hertsmere_Pubgoer

    Despite Dave's seeming cuddliness you were either with him or you weren't.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,379
    Scott_P said:

    https://twitter.com/JoeWatts_/status/1027536584529375237

    Cue our resident medical experts explaining why they know more than a drug company...

    Good to see the media reporting how a no-deal Brexit would affect people on both sides of the channel and not just the UK.

    Of course an EMA thats losing 30% of their staff won't help either
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,716
    edited August 2018
    welshowl said:

    So British voters aren't allowed to vote for things they want or don't want?
    Sure they're allowed to, they can vote for whatever they want. But if you value freedom, you will want your fellow voters to be at least somewhat constrained when they want to do things to you that are unwise and harmful to you.

    This is a great example: The British and Australian governments could negotiate free movement for British people wanting to go to Australia and Australian people wanting to go to Britain, and nothing bad would happen. This is a constraint on freedom created for no good purpose. It would be better if the power of the voters over you was constrained so that they couldn't do these bad things.

    Unfortunately it's not always easy to come up with a general principle that will prevent democracies from voting to do bad things to you while preserving their ability to do good things. There are some, like human rights laws, or, in most countries, constitutions that limit the powers of the government over you, but generally we're stuck with democracy as the least-bad available form of government. But when an international organization stops the voters making their government do stupid shit, that's obviously a good thing.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,349

    Sure they're allowed to, they can vote for whatever they want. But if you value freedom, you will want your fellow voters to be at least somewhat constrained when they want to do things to you that are unwise and harmful to you.

    This is a great example: The British and Australian governments could negotiate free movement for British people wanting to go to Australia and Australian people wanting to go to Britain, and nothing bad would happen. This is a constraint on freedom created for no good purpose. It would be better if the power of the voters over you was constrained so that they couldn't do these bad things.

    Unfortunately it's not always easy to come up with a general principle that will prevent democracies from voting to do bad things to you while preserving their ability to do good things. There are some, like human rights laws, or, in most countries, constitutions that limit the powers of the government over you, but generally we're stuck with democracy as the least-bad available form of government. But when an international organization stops the voters making their government do stupid shit, that's obviously a good thing.
    Surely that all depends on who defines stupid.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395

    That's a great question.

    The British haven't offered a reciprocal free movement deal with Australia because British voters hate freedom. (I have no idea whether Australia would accept if offered.)

    While in the EU British people had freedoms that their fellow British voters wouldn't otherwise have let them have because it wasn't up to their fellow British voters.

    I think it should be obvious from the Australia case that it's better if you can avoid giving the voters the ability to make judgements like this about your life, which they will use to take away your freedom. But if the WTO or the Commonwealth or some other international body also had requirements like this, and British voters grudgingly accepted it to be able to export their jam or whatever, that would be great. Sadly there isn't a bigger, more global version of the EU, although the EU was slowly growing to take in more countries.
    If we had a freedom of movement agreement between the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada it would be interesting to see what the overall population movements would be. Would the population density of the UK go up or down, for instance?
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,487

    Sure they're allowed to, they can vote for whatever they want. But if you value freedom, you will want your fellow voters to be at least somewhat constrained when they want to do things to you that are unwise and harmful to you.

    This is a great example: The British and Australian governments could negotiate free movement for British people wanting to go to Australia and Australian people wanting to go to Britain, and nothing bad would happen. This is a constraint on freedom created for no good purpose. It would be better if the power of the voters over you was constrained so that they couldn't do these bad things.

    Unfortunately it's not always easy to come up with a general principle that will prevent democracies from voting to do bad things to you while preserving their ability to do good things. There are some, like human rights laws, or, in most countries, constitutions that limit the powers of the government over you, but generally we're stuck with democracy as the least-bad available form of government. But when an international organization stops the voters making their government do stupid shit, that's obviously a good thing.
    But, other voters may take a different view to you about what constitutes good or bad. It's not a fact that free migration is a good thing, but an opinion.
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,716
    Sean_F said:


    It's a paradox. How do you compel people to accept "freedoms" that they don't want, and/or don't consider to be freedoms?

    It's not really a paradox. They have power over you. They don't value your freedom, and it's not relevant to them because they mostly don't want to go to Australia. Working out ways to prevent people with power over you from abusing it, and to draw lines around what power they can have, is basically the point of the entire history democracy and all the other of systems of government that have been attempted from time to time.
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,716
    RobD said:

    Surely that all depends on who defines stupid.

    Well sure, otherwise you'd just make a constitution that says "the government may not do any stupid shit". But there's objectively definitely *such a thing* as stupid shit that governments sometimes do.

    PS. Does anyone want to actually *defend* mutual restrictions on Australians coming to Britain and British people going to Australia?
  • rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787
    edited August 2018
    Toms said:

    All very funny chaps, but have a close look next time you spot somebody wearing a burqa, and ask yourself how safe she would be driving a car (or motorbike) on the Queen's highway. And it does happen when, as a cyclist and pedestrian, I have found it scary.
    Dangerous driving is already an offence. If wearing a burqa makes the wearer drive dangerously then the police already have powers to address such offences.

    I’d still be interested to know how you’d write legislation that would ban “wearing face masks [...] while driving” without making full face crash helmets illegal.
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464
    Sean_F said:

    It's a paradox. How do you compel people to accept "freedoms" that they don't want, and/or don't consider to be freedoms?
    You can't ultimately, in a democracy. That's the point. One person's freedom to have a house in Tuscany and drink Chianti whilst writing anguished columns for the Gruaniad (say), is an imposition on a sparky on a building site in Stoke who now has to compete with Casimir from Wroclaw who's prepared to live ten to a house and do the fuse box wiring for minimum wage.

    It' s conundrum that we try to sort out peacefully through the ballot box. The issue really really kicks off if you say "that's sacrosanct and can't be altered, ever" because one section of society says so. That way lies the "approved list democracy" of the Soviet block.

    This is at the heart of the EU's dilemma with Brexit. Economically they know perfectly well that letting things be very free and easy on "trade", whilst letting the UK genuinely remove itself from FOM would (they fear) lead to a queue of others saying "we want that too". But they can't allow people to have what they want because they then won't vote for ever closer union - and that's sacrosanct.

    And it's the road to their perdition in the end.

  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,487

    It's not really a paradox. They have power over you. They don't value your freedom, and it's not relevant to them because they mostly don't want to go to Australia. Working out ways to prevent people with power over you from abusing it, and to draw lines around what power they can have, is basically the point of the entire history democracy and all the other of systems of government that have been attempted from time to time.
    Any society will place restraints on freedom, for what it considers to be the greater good.

    For example, I can't spend my income as I choose, but rather, have to pay a large portion of it over to HMRC.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,349
    rpjs said:

    Dangerous driving is already an offence. If wearing a burqa makes the wearer drive dangerously then the police already have powers to address such offences.

    I’d still be interested to know how you’d write legislation that would ban “wearing face masks [...] while driving” without making full face crash helmets illegal.
    “...of a thickness not greater than x inches...”
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464

    Sure they're allowed to, they can vote for whatever they want. But if you value freedom, you will want your fellow voters to be at least somewhat constrained when they want to do things to you that are unwise and harmful to you.

    This is a great example: The British and Australian governments could negotiate free movement for British people wanting to go to Australia and Australian people wanting to go to Britain, and nothing bad would happen. This is a constraint on freedom created for no good purpose. It would be better if the power of the voters over you was constrained so that they couldn't do these bad things.

    Unfortunately it's not always easy to come up with a general principle that will prevent democracies from voting to do bad things to you while preserving their ability to do good things. There are some, like human rights laws, or, in most countries, constitutions that limit the powers of the government over you, but generally we're stuck with democracy as the least-bad available form of government. But when an international organization stops the voters making their government do stupid shit, that's obviously a good thing.
    Who defines "stupid". That's the nub.

  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Good to see the media reporting how a no-deal Brexit would affect people on both sides of the channel and not just the UK.

    Of course an EMA thats losing 30% of their staff won't help either
    Finally. On a similar note an aviation forum I frequent suggests that as many as 50% of the staff at EASA are British, which could be the cause of a few problems too. I think everyone ca agree that whatever we end up with, deal or no deal, there will be agreements on aviation and medicines even if it’s a bit of can kicking.
  • ralphmalphralphmalph Posts: 2,201
    rpjs said:

    Dangerous driving is already an offence. If wearing a burqa makes the wearer drive dangerously then the police already have powers to address such offences.

    I’d still be interested to know how you’d write legislation that would ban “wearing face masks [...] while driving” without making full face crash helmets illegal.
    There is already a field of vision test for driving. If the headgear restricts this field of vision to fail the test then it would be illegal to wear whilst driving.
  • AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487
    Ishmael_Z said:

    You can't tell this now, because all the results are about Boris, but a Google of burka letterbox just after he said it made very clear indeed (from the sites it showed up on) that it is a racist trope beloved of the right. Odds of Boris not knowing that?

    You are not in a minority of 1.
    I must admit I didn't know that it was a racist trope. Thanks.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited August 2018
    rpjs said:

    Dangerous driving is already an offence. If wearing a burqa makes the wearer drive dangerously then the police already have powers to address such offences.

    I’d still be interested to know how you’d write legislation that would ban “wearing face masks [...] while driving” without making full face crash helmets illegal.
    That’s easy, as crash helmets have a type approval sticker on the side, make it illegal to wear anything on the head that’s not type approved. Copy the legislation that currently covers motorbikes to any road vehicle.

    Edit: but check the exemption for Sikhs wearing turbans that I think forms part of the current legislation, that it doesn’t cover any other ‘religious dress’.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Sean_F said:

    Any society will place restraints on freedom, for what it considers to be the greater good.

    For example, I can't spend my income as I choose, but rather, have to pay a large portion of it over to HMRC.
    They should remove lane discipline on roads to demonstrate how far freedom gets you. Avoid roundabouts.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,194
    rpjs said:

    Dangerous driving is already an offence. If wearing a burqa makes the wearer drive dangerously then the police already have powers to address such offences.

    I’d still be interested to know how you’d write legislation that would ban “wearing face masks [...] while driving” without making full face crash helmets illegal.
    I suspect that such a change in the law would require some evidence. Is there any to suggest Niqab wearers have more accidents? It is not particularly unusual for me to see Niqab wearing drivers in Leicester, but no worse at driving than anyone else on Humberstone rd!
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,431
    edited August 2018
    https://twitter.com/privateeyenews

    Private Eye Cover........

    "Corbyn......"
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,194
  • grabcocquegrabcocque Posts: 4,234
    welshowl said:


    Who defines "stupid". That's the nub.

    I do, stupid.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,801
    welshowl said:

    You can't ultimately, in a democracy. That's the point. One person's freedom to have a house in Tuscany and drink Chianti whilst writing anguished columns for the Gruaniad (say), is an imposition on a sparky on a building site in Stoke who now has to compete with Casimir from Wroclaw who's prepared to live ten to a house and do the fuse box wiring for minimum wage.

    It' s conundrum that we try to sort out peacefully through the ballot box. The issue really really kicks off if you say "that's sacrosanct and can't be altered, ever" because one section of society says so. That way lies the "approved list democracy" of the Soviet block.

    This is at the heart of the EU's dilemma with Brexit. Economically they know perfectly well that letting things be very free and easy on "trade", whilst letting the UK genuinely remove itself from FOM would (they fear) lead to a queue of others saying "we want that too". But they can't allow people to have what they want because they then won't vote for ever closer union - and that's sacrosanct.

    And it's the road to their perdition in the end.

    It's much more fundamental than that. What attracts a citizen to the EU is the feeling that being part of the EU gives them equal status with other Europeans, whether you're from the most powerful country or the least powerful. If you break that dynamic, then the EU itself loses legitimacy.
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464

    I do, stupid.
    No I do. (!)
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,801
    welshowl said:

    Who defines "stupid". That's the nub.

    What we need is a written constitution.
  • Off topic but when did the football transfer window start shutting at 5pm. Thought it was normally ~11pm?
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464




    @William Glenn

    You might. I don't. I don't feel unequal to the Swiss or equal to the Dutch because we've been in the EU with one but not the other.

    The EU lacks express consent, certainly in the UK, for how far and how deep it has gone.

    It desperately needs to address this and stop being de haut en bas "it's good for you now quit moaning". Otherwise it will go the way of Austria Hungary which it eerily echoes in my view.
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464

    Off topic but when did the football transfer window start shutting at 5pm. Thought it was normally ~11pm?

    It's the cuts and austerity.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,801
    welshowl said:

    You might. I don't. I don't feel unequal to the Swiss or equal to the Dutch because we've been in the EU with one but not the other.

    The point is that it allows equality of esteem between citizens of nations of varying power. Sort of like the way the UK allows Welsh people to feel part of a large nation instead of a small one.
    welshowl said:

    It desperately needs to address this and stop being de haut en bas "it's good for you now quit moaning". Otherwise it will go the way of Austria Hungary which it eerily echoes in my view.

    Your view is wrong. What Brexit negotiations are showing is that the myriad ways in which integration is supported by the legal and political architecture of the EU are resilient and can't be unpicked without massive state intervention and economic pain. There is no mechanism for the EU to collapse short of a complete societal breakdown.
  • philiphphiliph Posts: 4,705
    edited August 2018

    It's much more fundamental than that. What attracts a citizen to the EU is the feeling that being part of the EU gives them equal status with other Europeans, whether you're from the most powerful country or the least powerful. If you break that dynamic, then the EU itself loses legitimacy.
    I suspect most EU citizens have better and more pressing matters to consider.
    Where national stereotypes allow this thought you imagine could well be the preserve of some with nothing better to do .
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,431
    edited August 2018
    Roger said:

    https://twitter.com/privateeyenews

    Private Eye Cover........

    "Corbyn......"



    Scroll down "Corbyn Tries to End Anti Semitism Row"

    https://twitter.com/privateeyenews
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,349
    edited August 2018
    philiph said:

    I suspect most EU citizens have better and more pressing matters to consider.
    Where national stereotypes allow this thought you imagine could well be the preserve of some with nothing better to do .
    What, you don't think people in Malta sit around all day thinking "ah, now I know for sure I'm just as good/important as a German"?
  • welshowl said:

    It's the cuts and austerity.
    LOL!

    I also don't remember it closing normally before the season begins.

    But that's fine because outside of Merseyside none of the top clubs seem to have really even noticed it opening either.

    Normally World Cup years are quite busy on the transfer market after players make a name for themselves on the biggest stage. Not really that much noticeable activity this year.
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    edited August 2018



    It's much more fundamental than that. What attracts a citizen to the EU is the feeling that being part of the EU gives them equal status with other Europeans,

    All bees can have access to the honey - regardless of whether it is their hive or not ?


  • ralphmalphralphmalph Posts: 2,201

    LOL!

    I also don't remember it closing normally before the season begins.

    But that's fine because outside of Merseyside none of the top clubs seem to have really even noticed it opening either.

    Normally World Cup years are quite busy on the transfer market after players make a name for themselves on the biggest stage. Not really that much noticeable activity this year.
    They changed it to stop before the season begins to stop disruption and unsettling players whilst the season is in progress.
  • philiphphiliph Posts: 4,705
    RobD said:

    What, you don't think people in Malta sit around all day thinking "ah, now I know for sure I'm just as good/important as a German"?
    While the French earnestly dissect the reasons and beauty for the equality between themselves and the Cypriots.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,500
    Anazina said:

    I must admit I didn't know that it was a racist trope. Thanks.
    Me neither.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,349
    philiph said:

    While the French earnestly dissect the reasons and beauty for the equality between themselves and the Cypriots.
    They can rest easy - they are still better than Northern Cypriots.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,877
    welshowl said:

    You can't ultimately, in a democracy. That's the point. One person's freedom to have a house in Tuscany and drink Chianti whilst writing anguished columns for the Gruaniad (say), is an imposition on a sparky on a building site in Stoke who now has to compete with Casimir from Wroclaw who's prepared to live ten to a house and do the fuse box wiring for minimum wage.

    It' s conundrum that we try to sort out peacefully through the ballot box. The issue really really kicks off if you say "that's sacrosanct and can't be altered, ever" because one section of society says so. That way lies the "approved list democracy" of the Soviet block.

    This is at the heart of the EU's dilemma with Brexit. Economically they know perfectly well that letting things be very free and easy on "trade", whilst letting the UK genuinely remove itself from FOM would (they fear) lead to a queue of others saying "we want that too". But they can't allow people to have what they want because they then won't vote for ever closer union - and that's sacrosanct.

    And it's the road to their perdition in the end.

    Any membership organisation depends on the benefits of membership outweighing the costs and obligations. I might think Sky media packages aren't worth it; millions disagree. Sky however will never give me a package for free, even if that grant doesn't cost them anything. That really would be "perdition" for them. It is totally unrealistic to expect the EU to give an ex member the benefits of membership. We might not think the benefits amount to much but whatever they are, we will lose them. It's perverse to complain about the EU not giving us the benefits in that case.
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    RobD said:

    What, you don't think people in Malta sit around all day thinking "ah, now I know for sure I'm just as good/important as a German"?
    Lets face it - who hasn't considered how wonderful it is that we could move to Romania and claim child benefits for our children who stay back in Blighty - it's so wonderfully equal.

  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    They’ve called it a day at Lord’s, draw now backed into 2.58 after a total loss of the first three sessions.
  • John_MJohn_M Posts: 7,503
    RobD said:

    What, you don't think people in Malta sit around all day thinking "ah, now I know for sure I'm just as good/important as a German"?
    Given the ratio of net contributors to net recipients, most probably go no further than 'Free money! Yay!".
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,500
    A completely different view on burqa to May and Davidson:

    "The burqa (niqab in Arabic) is a symbol. When you see it in a community, it indicates that an ideology and a radical form of Islam are spreading. In my field research on women and sharia law in Britain, South Africa and Middle Eastern countries, I heard this sentence a lot: "Ten years ago, we only had few women with the burqa. Today there are plenty."

    "So when you see women in burqa, think of the ideology that is mainstreaming it. We should confront it – Muslims and non-Muslims alike."

    Dr Elham Manea is an Islamic scholar in the department of political science at the University of Zurich, Switzerland. (my bold)

    https://www.smh.com.au/opinion/looking-beyond-the-burqa-stunt-20170825-gy4jd6.html
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    Sandpit said:

    They’ve called it a day at Lord’s, draw now backed into 2.58 after a total loss of the first three sessions.

    At least we might get play on the 5th day for a change.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,648
    Danny565 said:

    Do you not think asking a potential parliamentary candidate extensive questions about the British Raj, the National Black Policeman's Association, and referring to her and fellow Muslims as "you people" is inappropriate and probably Islamophobic?....
    Racist, rather than Islamophobic, in that instance. The selection panel described in the clip probably had no idea where the lady came from, let alone her religion.

    I think Islamophobia has come to the fore as it's a subset of racism made acceptable to many by the events of the last couple of decades.
    (And is in that respect indeed comparable to the anti-Semitism justified by a hatred of Israel.)
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    edited August 2018
    Foxy said:

    I suspect that such a change in the law would require some evidence. Is there any to suggest Niqab wearers have more accidents? It is not particularly unusual for me to see Niqab wearing drivers in Leicester, but no worse at driving than anyone else on Humberstone rd!
    In my youth one often seemed to see mini clubman estates tooling down the motorway with 4 fully togged up nuns on board. Weirdly unsettling.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,648
    edited August 2018
    Ishmael_Z said:

    You can't tell this now, because all the results are about Boris, but a Google of burka letterbox just after he said it made very clear indeed (from the sites it showed up on) that it is a racist trope beloved of the right. Odds of Boris not knowing that?
    After meeting with Bannon ?
    Slim.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,495
    edited August 2018

    A completely different view on burqa to May and Davidson:

    "The burqa (niqab in Arabic) is a symbol. When you see it in a community, it indicates that an ideology and a radical form of Islam are spreading. In my field research on women and sharia law in Britain, South Africa and Middle Eastern countries, I heard this sentence a lot: "Ten years ago, we only had few women with the burqa. Today there are plenty."

    "So when you see women in burqa, think of the ideology that is mainstreaming it. We should confront it – Muslims and non-Muslims alike."

    Dr Elham Manea is an Islamic scholar in the department of political science at the University of Zurich, Switzerland. (my bold)

    https://www.smh.com.au/opinion/looking-beyond-the-burqa-stunt-20170825-gy4jd6.html

    It's not encouraging for the quality of the rest of the article that he poses as an Islamic scholar and yet does not know the difference between the burqa and the niqab.
  • Ishmael_Z said:

    In my youth one often seemed to see mini clubman estates tooling down the motorway with 4 fully togged up nuns on board. Weirdly unsettling.
    You should try driving in India. Predestination - if you are meant to get there..... Never mind Niqabs, most drivers might as well be wearing blindfolds.
  • MyBurningEarsMyBurningEars Posts: 3,651
    FF43 said:


    Any membership organisation depends on the benefits of membership outweighing the costs and obligations. I might think Sky media packages aren't worth it; millions disagree. Sky however will never give me a package for free, even if that grant doesn't cost them anything. That really would be "perdition" for them. It is totally unrealistic to expect the EU to give an ex member the benefits of membership. We might not think the benefits amount to much but whatever they are, we will lose them. It's perverse to complain about the EU not giving us the benefits in that case.

    On the one hand your analysis is true - work out the pros, the cons, subtract them, do we like the balance? But you are persisting in evaluating EU membership as nothing more than a Deal. But it isn't just a Deal, it's a Project. Sky membership packages are not, essentially, teleological. I am not expected to agree or align myself with the core aims and principles of the Sky corporation or its owners. It doesn't change my identity to "one of the Sky people", and I don't have to check to see whether I fit in with the other Sky folk. I certainly don't have to open up my spare bedroom for them. If Sky starts changing the nature of the contract on me, I can easily opt out - if I leave my membership running for 20 years without paying too much attention to it, I might be hit badly in the pocket but I'm not going to discover I've accidentally signed up to the legal responsibility of appointing Beloved Rupert as my personal lord and deity.

    For memberships of organisations that are expected to evolve, you need to bear in mind the dynamics, and whether you agree with other members about the likely direction you want this to go in. For organisations that have a strong set of culture, values or identity, you want to decide whether you "fit". I doubt most Leave voters saw the Referendum as purely a business transaction to assess the Net Present Value of.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,801
    ydoethur said:

    It's not encouraging for the quality of the rest of the article that he poses as an Islamic scholar and yet does not know the difference between the burqa and the niqab.
    Not much of a paranja panjandrum.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    RobD said:

    What, you don't think people in Malta sit around all day thinking "ah, now I know for sure I'm just as good/important as a German"?
    A citizen of Malta GC is worth a battalion of Huns.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,500
    ydoethur said:

    It's not encouraging for the quality of the rest of the article that he poses as an Islamic scholar and yet does not know the difference between the burqa and the niqab.
    She is Fulbright scholar.

    https://www.ipz.uzh.ch/en/institut/mitarbeitende/staff/manea.html
  • ralphmalphralphmalph Posts: 2,201
    ydoethur said:

    It's not encouraging for the quality of the rest of the article that he poses as an Islamic scholar and yet does not know the difference between the burqa and the niqab.
    Are you referring to the garment worn in the photo?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,559

    You should try driving in India. Predestination - if you are meant to get there..... Never mind Niqabs, most drivers might as well be wearing blindfolds.
    It’s not too bad if you keep out of the way of the cows.
  • DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300

    LOL!

    I also don't remember it closing normally before the season begins.

    But that's fine because outside of Merseyside none of the top clubs seem to have really even noticed it opening either.

    Normally World Cup years are quite busy on the transfer market after players make a name for themselves on the biggest stage. Not really that much noticeable activity this year.
    I suspect these days that thanks to Opta and other data-gathering firms, as well as Sky and the other broadcasters, there is not much that is unknown about any footballer, so the World Cup offers little new information. Perhaps we will look back on a couple of anomalous decades when there were countries, especially in Africa and the Far East, whose footballers would be seen just once every four years, and there were the money and mechanisms to transfer them to European clubs. Didn't Harry Redknapp have a story about a fan sending him a postcard urging him to buy a fantastic young Czech player he'd seen while on holiday, Karel Poborsky?

    Now all clubs have the same data and probably analyse it in similar ways.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,263
    Anazina said:

    As early as 1545hrs you have just won the Pathetic Reply of the Day award.
    Not really. Lady Warsi performed poorly and was sacked accordingly.

    Her comments claiming prejudice in the Conservative Party then spiked thereafter.
  • philiphphiliph Posts: 4,705

    It’s not too bad if you keep out of the way of the cows.
    What! They let cows drive?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,495
    edited August 2018

    She is Fulbright scholar.

    https://www.ipz.uzh.ch/en/institut/mitarbeitende/staff/manea.html
    I make no comment on the quality of Fulbright scholars...or on the wisdom of checking the gender of authors!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,495
    philiph said:

    What! They let cows drive?
    Don't be silly. Cows are moved in udder ways.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,877

    On the one hand your analysis is true - work out the pros, the cons, subtract them, do we like the balance? But you are persisting in evaluating EU membership as nothing more than a Deal. But it isn't just a Deal, it's a Project. Sky membership packages are not, essentially, teleological. I am not expected to agree or align myself with the core aims and principles of the Sky corporation or its owners. It doesn't change my identity to "one of the Sky people", and I don't have to check to see whether I fit in with the other Sky folk. I certainly don't have to open up my spare bedroom for them. If Sky starts changing the nature of the contract on me, I can easily opt out - if I leave my membership running for 20 years without paying too much attention to it, I might be hit badly in the pocket but I'm not going to discover I've accidentally signed up to the legal responsibility of appointing Beloved Rupert as my personal lord and deity.

    For memberships of organisations that are expected to evolve, you need to bear in mind the dynamics, and whether you agree with other members about the likely direction you want this to go in. For organisations that have a strong set of culture, values or identity, you want to decide whether you "fit". I doubt most Leave voters saw the Referendum as purely a business transaction to assess the Net Present Value of.
    I get that, but mine is a narrower point. It is illogical to expect the EU to treat an ex member the same, or as well from its view, as its members. Whatever we lose out has to be a price worth paying for the freedom of constraint that comes from leaving the EU.

    Leavers have never accepted or justified any price as worth paying.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,801
    German Green MP says Article 50 period should be extended to give the UK more time.

    https://www.zeit.de/politik/ausland/2018-08/brexit-eu-verhandlungen-verlaengerung-grossbritannien/komplettansicht
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,648

    Not really. Lady Warsi performed poorly and was sacked accordingly.

    Her comments claiming prejudice in the Conservative Party then spiked thereafter.
    She might have had a better point about prejudice in the Tory party if, following her sacking, she had not allied herself with some of the most extreme elements within the Muslim community. There is nothing wrong with being extremely sceptical about the agendas of such groups who, almost invariably, complain of "islamophobia" the moment someone points out that they, for instance, describe a vicious killer as a "beautiful boy" etc. There are plenty of moderate reforming people within Islam, some of them women, but Lady Warsi chose to ignore them. She has devalued the value of her criticisms.

    I do though think that there are some within the Tories who do have a prejudiced attitude to Muslims and we should as attentive to stopping such prejudice spread and calling it out as with equivalent prejudice against Jews within Labour.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,648

    German Green MP says Article 50 period should be extended to give the UK more time.

    https://www.zeit.de/politik/ausland/2018-08/brexit-eu-verhandlungen-verlaengerung-grossbritannien/komplettansicht

    We'll need about a decade, given the way we're going.......
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,304

    Not really. Lady Warsi performed poorly and was sacked accordingly.

    Her comments claiming prejudice in the Conservative Party then spiked thereafter.
    I thought she resigned.
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621

    German Green MP says Article 50 period should be extended to give the UK more time.

    https://www.zeit.de/politik/ausland/2018-08/brexit-eu-verhandlungen-verlaengerung-grossbritannien/komplettansicht

    One German greenie?

    Not that they carry enough weight to move the EU27 and the Commission!
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,648
    ydoethur said:

    Don't be silly. Cows are moved in udder ways.
    You really know how to milk a pun.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,495

    German Green MP says Article 50 period should be extended to give the UK more time.

    https://www.zeit.de/politik/ausland/2018-08/brexit-eu-verhandlungen-verlaengerung-grossbritannien/komplettansicht

    Interesting metaphor that she uses (for those who can't read German, the scene from Rebel without a Cause she refers to is below).

    I won't both to wonder however who is cast for the role of gang leader committing an epic act of unnecessary self-destruction made worse by stupid bungling, because it could apply to either side and the usual suspects will give the usual answers.
    https://youtu.be/u7hZ9jKrwvo
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    "Man charged with walking pig in Norwich without a lead"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-norfolk-45130907
  • I suspect these days that thanks to Opta and other data-gathering firms, as well as Sky and the other broadcasters, there is not much that is unknown about any footballer, so the World Cup offers little new information. Perhaps we will look back on a couple of anomalous decades when there were countries, especially in Africa and the Far East, whose footballers would be seen just once every four years, and there were the money and mechanisms to transfer them to European clubs. Didn't Harry Redknapp have a story about a fan sending him a postcard urging him to buy a fantastic young Czech player he'd seen while on holiday, Karel Poborsky?

    Now all clubs have the same data and probably analyse it in similar ways.
    There's a story that AC Milan mistook Luther Blisset for John Barnes and wound up signing the wrong player from Watford.

    Couldn't happen these days, could it?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,495
    Nigelb said:

    You really know how to milk a pun.
    It makes up in skill what it lacts in subtlety.
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    edited August 2018
    Days without another Labour figure being outed as an antisemite: One Zero
    https://www.theredroar.com/2018/08/another-momentum-candidate-shared-antisemitic-conspiracy-theories/
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,648
    The judge in the Manafort case is an interesting character...
    https://www.politico.com/story/2018/08/09/paul-manafort-trial-day-8-judge-ellis-769889
  • Cyclefree said:

    We'll need about a decade, given the way we're going.......
    How about never? Never would be a good time.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,648
    ydoethur said:

    It makes up in skill what it lacts in subtlety.
    Get it wrong, and you risk making a complete teat of yourself.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,495
    Anorak said:
    At what point should we at least start campaigning for an arms embargo to Saudi Arabia? I know it won't happen because the Americans wouldn't allow it, but this is just grotesque. If it was the Syrian government doing it Trump would already have blitzed their airfields to hell and back again.
  • John_MJohn_M Posts: 7,503

    How about never? Never would be a good time.
    Oh, where's the fun in that? We should aim for Beautiful Brexit (tm).
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,495
    Nigelb said:

    Get it wrong, and you risk making a complete teat of yourself.
    I did think of saying that after a hard day's work I deserved a teat, but I realised in time that had a very unfortunate double meaning so I didn't.

    Howheifer, I was quite pleased with the one I came up with.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,194
    ydoethur said:

    At what point should we at least start campaigning for an arms embargo to Saudi Arabia? I know it won't happen because the Americans wouldn't allow it, but this is just grotesque. If it was the Syrian government doing it Trump would already have blitzed their airfields to hell and back again.
    Our government still considers Yemen a sales opportunity rather than a war crime.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,648
    ydoethur said:

    I did think of saying that after a hard day's work I deserved a teat, but I realised in time that had a very unfortunate double meaning so I didn't.

    Howheifer, I was quite pleased with the one I came up with.
    Always good to come across a pun you haven't herd before.
  • John_M said:

    Oh, where's the fun in that? We should aim for Beautiful Brexit (tm).
    Can't wait - all those happy smiling faces. Leavers will be delirious with joy at having brought us to the Promised Land, and basking in the warm glow of appreciation from Remoaners who finally see all the benefits of leaving the EU.

    It will be a wondrous time.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited August 2018
    Anorak said:
    There’s a pretty horrible civil war going on there, thousands of casualties on both sides and civilians usually caught in the middle of the warring factions. This story is sadly becoming almost typical.
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464
    AndyJS said:

    "Man charged with walking pig in Norwich without a lead"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-norfolk-45130907

    Clearly though, the police were at the end of their tether.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,495
    edited August 2018
    Nigelb said:

    Always good to come across a pun you haven't herd before.
    These puns are rapidly becoming a load of bullocks. Shall we leave them there? I'm not cow-ering but I think other people may be.

    Edit - especially if there going to be pig puns as well.
  • Surely Johnson's supporters are the same people who would vote May out of the leadership position? There is no conflict of interest.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Scott_P said:

    https://twitter.com/JoeWatts_/status/1027536584529375237

    Cue our resident medical experts explaining why they know more than a drug company...

    No one has said that.

    These issues are easily resolvable by allowing the U.K. to remain a member of the EMA. (It’s a bit more complicated than that but that’s a good example).

    It’s a blindingly obvious sensible solution which would be acceptable to the U.K. The only negotiation would need to be over the membership fee. But for some reason the EU Commission wants to make life harder for ordinary people
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,495
    edited August 2018
    Sandpit said:

    There’s a pretty horrible civil war going on there, thousands of casualties on both sides and civilians usually caught in the middle of the warring factions. This story is sadly becoming almost typical.
    If the Saudi Air Force can't tell the difference between a school bus and a bunch of jihadis, then they should not be dropping bombs.

    They should also take advantage of a free eye test at Specsavers.

    Alternatively we must assume - and I am afraid it seems all too likely - that it was deliberate and a naked act of terrorism.

    One thing I will say for Corbyn is he has consistently called for sanctions on SA over this, but unfortunately being Corbyn he can't divorce it from a dig at the government and the US as well, giving May an alibi for doing nothing.
  • MyBurningEarsMyBurningEars Posts: 3,651
    FF43 said:


    I get that, but mine is a narrower point. It is illogical to expect the EU to treat an ex member the same, or as well from its view, as its members. Whatever we lose out has to be a price worth paying for the freedom of constraint that comes from leaving the EU.

    In terms of what the EU can offer, I fully accept the point. Their situation is quite tricky because for various sensible reasons they can't be seen to grant the UK favourable access post-Brexit.

    As for the trade-off from the Leave perspective, I suspect this is where the heterogeneity of the Leave coalition breaks off into different answers. For many the ultimate prize was simply Out itself - and Out sooner better than Out later. After all, if you think Brexit now looks tough, imagine trying to disentangle ourselves in a further 10 or 20 years. But when you get into specific trade-offs, you find that e.g. to some people giving up free movement would mean giving up one of the prizes of EU membership, while to others it was one of the objectives of leaving in the first place. And there was significant desire for Leavers of all flavours to partake in cake. One of the problems with the referendum is that it wasn't won by a Leave programme, as such. This should have been one of the advantages of having that early General Election - that people were standing for office on the basis of pushing through a particular approach or vision of Brexit. Sadly the prerequisite "sitting round a table and sorting an approach out" doesn't seem to have happened pre-campaign.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    ydoethur said:



    I did think of saying that after a hard day's work I deserved a teat, but I realised in time that had a very unfortunate double meaning so I didn't.

    Howheifer, I was quite pleased with the one I came up with.

    I love the joke about the inner city child who tells the teacher how he went on a farm visit and saw some pigs, some sheep and some fuckers. "Farmer called them F-ers, but I knew what 'e meant. "
  • RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223
    Foxy said:

    Our government still considers Yemen a sales opportunity rather than a war crime.
    Why don’t the Saudis have moral agency?
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    You do realise that the article is that EU countries would not get the drugs made in the UK?
    i.e your TB epidemic would be on continental Europe.
    rapamycin is made in Germany
  • Were Saudi Arabia justified banning women from driving given they wear burqas which restrict vision?

    Will Saudi now require women to not wear burqas whilst driving now?
  • What does George (belted) Galloway say about burqa wearing?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited August 2018
    ydoethur said:

    If the Saudi Air Force can't tell the difference between a school bus and a bunch of jihadis, then they should not be dropping bombs.

    They should also take advantage of a free eye test at Specsavers.

    Alternatively we must assume - and I am afraid it seems all too likely - that it was deliberate and a naked act of terrorism.

    One thing I will say for Corbyn is he has consistently called for sanctions on SA over this, but unfortunately being Corbyn he can't divorce it from a dig at the government and the US as well, giving May an alibi for doing nothing.
    To be fair the Saudis are there at the request of the Yemeni government, are having missiles fired across the border into their own country by the rebels, and are taking a lot of casualties themselves.

    That doesn’t of course mean they shouldn’t be better at targeting airborne bombs, but it’s not as if Western forces haven’t had many problems themselves over the years with dropping bombs in the wrong place.

    I’m not sure what calling out Saudi would achieve, unless we also call out Qatar who are funding the other side of Iranian rebels who invaded Yemen to start the conflict.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    Were Saudi Arabia justified banning women from driving given they wear burqas which restrict vision?

    Will Saudi now require women to not wear burqas whilst driving now?

    Or flying ground attack aircraft.
This discussion has been closed.