I don't get it, how is that a blow to May? She's trying, and failing, to avoid the no deal which scares so many. Cannot do anything about one's already left of course. Because ruling out a March no deal but not actually doing anything just pushes the chaos back, it doesn't prevent it.
It was certainly a lot more concise. Might as well save everyone some effort and just have everyone, everywhere, talk about anything but Brexit but just append their comments with
Brexit + Brexit - Brexit ~
To indicate their thoughts on the matter. Save some time.
I don't think Sanders is going anywhere even if he runs, last time he had only terrible opposition and now even Dems who supported him last time don't want to relive 2016.
If Biden runs I think he wins. There are like 45 liberal women in the race splitting their support, and if he looks like he can put up a spirited effort against Trump's malarky then nothing else matters, not even the creepy pictures. But I don't think he'll run.
Fair Cloacina, goddess of this place Accustomed seat of every child of grace On this, thy fair throne, let our libations flow Not rudely swift, or obstinately slow
(My grandfather graffitied that in the gents at Christchurch - he liked to rework Byron - and came back the next day to find someone had added Latin and Greek translations)
I truly am surprised by Black Panther. It's not even the best of the Marvel movies, it's well acted but the plot is very 'meh'. Not sure what so many people see it in to be honest, there was a lot of talk of how it wasn't just another Marvel movie, but it really was.
Probably the first time I've ever seen around half of the Oscar nominated films though. Blackkklansman was pretty decent, I had plenty of fun with Bohemian Rhapsody and A Star is Born, and take out the awful, awful soundtrack and The Favourite was great in parts. First Man was, absent a few scenes, surprisingly bland, and I almost fell asleep during Mary Poppins, but in fairness I think I was a bit under the weather that day.
I don't get it, how is that a blow to May? She's trying, and failing, to avoid the no deal which scares so many. Cannot do anything about one's already left of course. Because ruling out a March no deal but not actually doing anything just pushes the chaos back, it doesn't prevent it.
Hadn't the Tories lost middle class owners with stacks of books on their shelves a long time ago. Like during Thatch?
Certainly had with anyone I have known over the years.
O/T I don't have an Instagram account, but all week I have been getting emails from them about me having changed my user name and not being able to login. The user name bears no resemblance to my name or email address, but it quotes my email address as the one linked to the account. Should I be worried about this? There appears to be no way to contact Instagram that involves actual human interaction, so how can I get my address off this account?
Charles is wrong. A second referendum is a more democratic option than a parliamentary hack. This chaos was unforeseen. Remain is a viable route out, as such we shouldn’t rule it out.
Charles famously thought the European Medicines Agency was nothing to do with the EU and that it would be unaffected by Brexit, so I think it's right for him to be given another vote.
No. That’s not accurate but I will put it down to false recall on your part not a deliberate lie.
I said that the sensible outcome would be for the U.K. to remain part of the EMA. (And I still believe that is the sensible outcome).
However - which I didn’t realise - was that you have to be a member of the EU to be a member of the EMA. I think that’s a stupid rule, but if that’s a rule that’s important to them we’ll just have to beef up the MHRA instead.
It's pretty accurate, but I will put your denial down to repressed memory syndrome.
With apologies for raising a trivial distraction right now, but there are local elections in May for seats last fought in 2015.
I don't think it takes too much of a leap of the imagination to predict that the Conservatives are indeed going to get absolutely mullered in Remain areas. Nor to predict a modest-to-good Lib Dem revival compared to their 2015 nadir. And a locally mullered party with dispirited activists is not one which will be in good shape to fight any General Election.
The leafletting has started locally, and although the Conservatives are putting up an excellent candidate in our ward (which they once held), I'd give them no more than a 5% chance of capturing it from the Lib Dems. We're the sort of town that has lots of books on shelves.
I can't find any markets up as yet for the May locals.
Some of us now have a hall and spare room full of stuff.
So have I, but that is more to do with Mrs urquhart getting carried away in Costco. I don’t know how long it will take to get through 100+ tubes of toothpaste, but even brexit will be decided by then.
I truly am surprised by Black Panther. It's not even the best of the Marvel movies, it's well acted but the plot is very 'meh'. Not sure what so many people see it in to be honest, there was a lot of talk of how it wasn't just another Marvel movie, but it really was.
Probably the first time I've ever seen around half of the Oscar nominated films though. Blackkklansman was pretty decent, I had plenty of fun with Bohemian Rhapsody and A Star is Born, and take out the awful, awful soundtrack and The Favourite was great in parts. First Man was, absent a few scenes, surprisingly bland, and I almost fell asleep during Mary Poppins, but in fairness I think I was a bit under the weather that day.
I can see Roma doing well, as a liberal two fingers to Trump.
Charles is wrong. A second referendum is a more democratic option than a parliamentary hack. This chaos was unforeseen. Remain is a viable route out, as such we shouldn’t rule it out.
Charles famously thought the European Medicines Agency was nothing to do with the EU and that it would be unaffected by Brexit, so I think it's right for him to be given another vote.
No. That’s not accurate but I will put it down to false recall on your part not a deliberate lie.
I said that the sensible outcome would be for the U.K. to remain part of the EMA. (And I still believe that is the sensible outcome).
However - which I didn’t realise - was that you have to be a member of the EU to be a member of the EMA. I think that’s a stupid rule, but if that’s a rule that’s important to them we’ll just have to beef up the MHRA instead.
It's pretty accurate, but I will put your denial down to repressed memory syndrome.
I don't think Sanders is going anywhere even if he runs, last time he had only terrible opposition and now even Dems who supported him last time don't want to relive 2016.
If Biden runs I think he wins. There are like 45 liberal women in the race splitting their support, and if he looks like he can put up a spirited effort against Trump's malarky then nothing else matters, not even the creepy pictures. But I don't think he'll run.
Biden was an insipid and uninspiring performer last time he ran back in '08. He's now twelve years older, and let's be honest, he wouldn't be in the top 100 candidates if he hadn't been Obama's VP.
With apologies for raising a trivial distraction right now, but there are local elections in May for seats last fought in 2015.
I don't think it takes too much of a leap of the imagination to predict that the Conservatives are indeed going to get absolutely mullered in Remain areas. Nor to predict a modest-to-good Lib Dem revival compared to their 2015 nadir.
The leafletting has started locally, and although the Conservatives are putting up an excellent candidate in our ward (which they once held), I'd give them no more than a 5% chance of capturing it from the Lib Dems. We're the sort of town that has lots of books on shelves.
I can't find any markets up as yet for the May locals.
Liberals meanwhile have collapsed in my 50/50 town...
It has always seemed pretty likely to me that delivering a contentious, massively difficult policy with a party with very strong factions split in different directions on that policy, would always mean the Tories would struggle to win an election, and that their best hope would be to get a deal, ride out a period of extreme unpopularity as remain/brexit ultras flounce out, and then try to rebuild under a new leader over the next 2-3 years. That'd be 11-12 years into office, with economic turbulence to contend with too probably, so it would still not be easy.
Instead Tories seem determined to completely bungle any kind of Brexit, see themselves torn apart and have parliament via the opposition dictate to them, then stumble into a General Election and presume that Corbyn will have a harder time holding on to his support than they will.
With apologies for raising a trivial distraction right now, but there are local elections in May for seats last fought in 2015.
I don't think it takes too much of a leap of the imagination to predict that the Conservatives are indeed going to get absolutely mullered in Remain areas. Nor to predict a modest-to-good Lib Dem revival compared to their 2015 nadir.
The leafletting has started locally, and although the Conservatives are putting up an excellent candidate in our ward (which they once held), I'd give them no more than a 5% chance of capturing it from the Lib Dems. We're the sort of town that has lots of books on shelves.
I can't find any markets up as yet for the May locals.
Liberals meanwhile have collapsed in my 50/50 town...
Interesting. Brexit reasons or other, do you think?
I don't think Sanders is going anywhere even if he runs, last time he had only terrible opposition and now even Dems who supported him last time don't want to relive 2016.
If Biden runs I think he wins. There are like 45 liberal women in the race splitting their support, and if he looks like he can put up a spirited effort against Trump's malarky then nothing else matters, not even the creepy pictures. But I don't think he'll run.
Biden was an insipid and uninspiring performer last time he ran back in '08. He's now twelve years older, and let's be honest, he wouldn't be in the top 100 candidates if he hadn't been Obama's VP.
Hmm. And yet, he is one spirited, no-holds-barred, anti-Trump, 'it's a load of malarky' speech in which he moves from tears for his working class roots to anger at the country's direction, away from the nomination imho.
Charles is wrong. A second referendum is a more democratic option than a parliamentary hack. This chaos was unforeseen. Remain is a viable route out, as such we shouldn’t rule it out.
Charles famously thought the European Medicines Agency was nothing to do with the EU and that it would be unaffected by Brexit, so I think it's right for him to be given another vote.
No. That’s not accurate but I will put it down to false recall on your part not a deliberate lie.
I said that the sensible outcome would be for the U.K. to remain part of the EMA. (And I still believe that is the sensible outcome).
However - which I didn’t realise - was that you have to be a member of the EU to be a member of the EMA. I think that’s a stupid rule, but if that’s a rule that’s important to them we’ll just have to beef up the MHRA instead.
It's pretty accurate, but I will put your denial down to repressed memory syndrome.
If I have understood today correctly, Vardkar has gone from 'we wont ever put up a border' to 'we can't trust anything so we will need a backstop' within about five hours?
It has always seemed pretty likely to me that delivering a contentious, massively difficult policy with a party with very strong factions split in different directions on that policy, would always mean the Tories would struggle to win an election, and that their best hope would be to get a deal, ride out a period of extreme unpopularity as remain/brexit ultras flounce out, and then try to rebuild under a new leader over the next 2-3 years. That'd be 11-12 years into office, with economic turbulence to contend with too probably, so it would still not be easy.
Instead Tories seem determined to completely bungle any kind of Brexit, see themselves torn apart and have parliament via the opposition dictate to them, then stumble into a General Election and presume that Corbyn will have a harder time holding on to his support than they will.
If there is one sensible reason for the Conservatives to call a GE it might be that Corbyn won't last forever, and they have a chance against him whereas against any of the likely replacements, they would get mullered.
If I have understood today correctly, Vardkar has gone from 'we wont ever put up a border' to 'we can't trust anything so we will need a backstop' within about five hours?
I thought he was saying 'We cannot be sure we won't need a backstop, so I'm going to insist on conditions which mean we have no choice but to have a backstop and no chance of avoiding it'
Charles is wrong. A second referendum is a more democratic option than a parliamentary hack. This chaos was unforeseen. Remain is a viable route out, as such we shouldn’t rule it out.
Charles famously thought the European Medicines Agency was nothing to do with the EU and that it would be unaffected by Brexit, so I think it's right for him to be given another vote.
No. That’s not accurate but I will put it down to false recall on your part not a deliberate lie.
I said that the sensible outcome would be for the U.K. to remain part of the EMA. (And I still believe that is the sensible outcome).
However - which I didn’t realise - was that you have to be a member of the EU to be a member of the EMA. I think that’s a stupid rule, but if that’s a rule that’s important to them we’ll just have to beef up the MHRA instead.
It's pretty accurate, but I will put your denial down to repressed memory syndrome.
It has always seemed pretty likely to me that delivering a contentious, massively difficult policy with a party with very strong factions split in different directions on that policy, would always mean the Tories would struggle to win an election, and that their best hope would be to get a deal, ride out a period of extreme unpopularity as remain/brexit ultras flounce out, and then try to rebuild under a new leader over the next 2-3 years. That'd be 11-12 years into office, with economic turbulence to contend with too probably, so it would still not be easy.
Instead Tories seem determined to completely bungle any kind of Brexit, see themselves torn apart and have parliament via the opposition dictate to them, then stumble into a General Election and presume that Corbyn will have a harder time holding on to his support than they will.
If there is one sensible reason for the Conservatives to call a GE it might be that Corbyn won't last forever, and they have a chance against him whereas against any of the likely replacements, they would get mullered.
Hard to think of a second reason.
The other one is to pass the poisoned chalice of Brexit to Jezza...
On the subject of books, and before I get back to work, can I highly recommend Six of Crows, it's a young adult book that could best be described as fantasy Oceans 11.
I truly am surprised by Black Panther. It's not even the best of the Marvel movies, it's well acted but the plot is very 'meh'. Not sure what so many people see it in to be honest, there was a lot of talk of how it wasn't just another Marvel movie, but it really was.
.
Completely disagree. Really enjoyed black panther and thought it was far more interesting than other marvel movies. Showed a complexity of morality that superhero tales don't normally have.
On the subject of books, and before I get back to work, can I highly recommend Six of Crows, it's a young adult book that could best be described as fantasy Oceans 11.
Green Book is another of those "Civil Rights as entertainment" movies, along the lines of the enjoyable Hidden Figures. Enjoyable enough, when you get ove the casting of Strider as some Noo Yoik heavy (in all senses).
BlackkKlansman I really enjoyed, as it is such a bizarre true story, despite some very obvious "This is a right-on Spike Lee movie" moments. It really packs its punch though in the last few minutes.
Buster Scruggs is a series of half a dozen episodes, the first one of which is fabulous Cohn Bros. at their best. After that - not so much.
Vice - people here will love it more than the general population, but much of the material has been done to death by Michael Moore. Combine with a very similar visual style to The Big Short (although, some much darker fast edit moments than in that movie) and it just doesn't seem as fresh. Some great performances though - loved Steve Carell as Rumsfeld and Sam Rockwell's Dubya is brilliant, but acting honours go to Christian Bale for ageing fifty years. Make-up and Hair Oscar nailed on.
How do they come up with these lists? I watched Roma with five people. Only two of us made it to the end, and we both said we regretted bothering.
I've not seen it yet, but is it deeply 'meaningful'? If it is excellent in a technical sense and pushes the right buttons for an artsy crowd I'd assume it would clear up at awards ceremonies.
I find the Actor wins can seem pretty arbitrary though.
McD sounding very positive about Yvette's amendment.
Is that the 'kick the can' amendment? The one that's probably a fig leaf for remain, but they want a few more months of the sides not coming to agreement before they admit that?
I don't think Sanders is going anywhere even if he runs, last time he had only terrible opposition and now even Dems who supported him last time don't want to relive 2016.
If Biden runs I think he wins. There are like 45 liberal women in the race splitting their support, and if he looks like he can put up a spirited effort against Trump's malarky then nothing else matters, not even the creepy pictures. But I don't think he'll run.
Biden was an insipid and uninspiring performer last time he ran back in '08. He's now twelve years older, and let's be honest, he wouldn't be in the top 100 candidates if he hadn't been Obama's VP.
This is all true, but he *was* Obama's VP, and now he's known, trusted and loved.
He permanently has the demeanour of a tradesman who's about to tell you that what you thought was a small job actually means rebuilding most of the house.
With apologies for raising a trivial distraction right now, but there are local elections in May for seats last fought in 2015.
I don't think it takes too much of a leap of the imagination to predict that the Conservatives are indeed going to get absolutely mullered in Remain areas. Nor to predict a modest-to-good Lib Dem revival compared to their 2015 nadir.
The leafletting has started locally, and although the Conservatives are putting up an excellent candidate in our ward (which they once held), I'd give them no more than a 5% chance of capturing it from the Lib Dems. We're the sort of town that has lots of books on shelves.
I can't find any markets up as yet for the May locals.
Liberals meanwhile have collapsed in my 50/50 town...
Interesting. Brexit reasons or other, do you think?
Being anti Brexit combined with rise of Labour combined have hurt Liberals in Dorset. Our demographic is older than many areas and the triple lock has also been very effective here.
I don't get it, how is that a blow to May? She's trying, and failing, to avoid the no deal which scares so many. Cannot do anything about one's already left of course. Because ruling out a March no deal but not actually doing anything just pushes the chaos back, it doesn't prevent it.
Sigh
Today we had record employment Record proportion of the population in work Record vacancies Good figures on wage growth
But why let the facts get in the way of some hysteria?
What a tremendous waste of time. Can any of these idiots say with a straight face that if they have not agreed up until now they will be able to come to an agreement on something in 3 months, 6 months or 9 months? It's such a 'clever' little idea to disguise its intent.
Charles is wrong. A second referendum is a more democratic option than a parliamentary hack. This chaos was unforeseen. Remain is a viable route out, as such we shouldn’t rule it out.
Charles famously thought the European Medicines Agency was nothing to do with the EU and that it would be unaffected by Brexit, so I think it's right for him to be given another vote.
No. That’s not accurate but I will put it down to false recall on your part not a deliberate lie.
I said that the sensible outcome would be for the U.K. to remain part of the EMA. (And I still believe that is the sensible outcome).
However - which I didn’t realise - was that you have to be a member of the EU to be a member of the EMA. I think that’s a stupid rule, but if that’s a rule that’s important to them we’ll just have to beef up the MHRA instead.
It's pretty accurate, but I will put your denial down to repressed memory syndrome.
Green Book is another of those "Civil Rights as entertainment" movies, along the lines of the enjoyable Hidden Figures. Enjoyable enough, when you get ove the casting of Strider as some Noo Yoik heavy (in all senses).
BlackkKlansman I really enjoyed, as it is such a bizarre true story, despite some very obvious "This is a right-on Spike Lee movie" moments. It really packs its punch though in the last few minutes.
Buster Scruggs is a series of half a dozen episodes, the first one of which is fabulous Cohn Bros. at their best. After that - not so much.
Vice - people here will love it more than the general population, but much of the material has been done to death by Michael Moore. Combine with a very similar visual style to The Big Short (although, some much darker fast edit moments than in that movie) and it just doesn't seem as fresh. Some great performances though - loved Steve Carell as Rumsfeld and Sam Rockwell's Dubya is brilliant, but acting honours go to Christian Bale for ageing fifty years. Make-up and Hair Oscar nailed on.
I loved every single bit of Buster Scruggs. The Tom Waits segment was a perfect gem of a story.
I don't get it, how is that a blow to May? She's trying, and failing, to avoid the no deal which scares so many. Cannot do anything about one's already left of course. Because ruling out a March no deal but not actually doing anything just pushes the chaos back, it doesn't prevent it.
Sigh
Today we had record employment Record proportion of the population in work Record vacancies Good figures on wage growth
But why let the facts get in the way of some hysteria?
Why indeed. But even accepting the premise of the story I don't know why it was a specific blow to May.
What a tremendous waste of time. Can any of these idiots say with a straight face that if they have not agreed up until now they will be able to come to an agreement on something in 3 months, 6 months or 9 months?
Green Book is another of those "Civil Rights as entertainment" movies, along the lines of the enjoyable Hidden Figures. Enjoyable enough, when you get ove the casting of Strider as some Noo Yoik heavy (in all senses).
BlackkKlansman I really enjoyed, as it is such a bizarre true story, despite some very obvious "This is a right-on Spike Lee movie" moments. It really packs its punch though in the last few minutes.
Buster Scruggs is a series of half a dozen episodes, the first one of which is fabulous Cohn Bros. at their best. After that - not so much.
Vice - people here will love it more than the general population, but much of the material has been done to death by Michael Moore. Combine with a very similar visual style to The Big Short (although, some much darker fast edit moments than in that movie) and it just doesn't seem as fresh. Some great performances though - loved Steve Carell as Rumsfeld and Sam Rockwell's Dubya is brilliant, but acting honours go to Christian Bale for ageing fifty years. Make-up and Hair Oscar nailed on.
I loved every single bit of Buster Scruggs. The Tom Waits segment was a perfect gem of a story.
That's the only one on that list I have not even heard of. When did it come out?
I truly am surprised by Black Panther. It's not even the best of the Marvel movies, it's well acted but the plot is very 'meh'. Not sure what so many people see it in to be honest, there was a lot of talk of how it wasn't just another Marvel movie, but it really was.
.
Completely disagree. Really enjoyed black panther and thought it was far more interesting than other marvel movies. Showed a complexity of morality that superhero tales don't normally have.
You would have to threaten me with a Hawaiian Pizza before I went to see The Favourite.
He permanently has the demeanour of a tradesman who's about to tell you that what you thought was a small job actually means rebuilding most of the house.
That's a very good way of describing it - made me chuckle!
I don't get it, how is that a blow to May? She's trying, and failing, to avoid the no deal which scares so many. Cannot do anything about one's already left of course. Because ruling out a March no deal but not actually doing anything just pushes the chaos back, it doesn't prevent it.
Sigh
Today we had record employment Record proportion of the population in work Record vacancies Good figures on wage growth
But why let the facts get in the way of some hysteria?
Why indeed. But even accepting the premise of the story I don't know why it was a specific blow to May.
You’re expecting the G to be rational now? Blimey.
With apologies for raising a trivial distraction right now, but there are local elections in May for seats last fought in 2015.
I don't think it takes too much of a leap of the imagination to predict that the Conservatives are indeed going to get absolutely mullered in Remain areas. Nor to predict a modest-to-good Lib Dem revival compared to their 2015 nadir.
The leafletting has started locally, and although the Conservatives are putting up an excellent candidate in our ward (which they once held), I'd give them no more than a 5% chance of capturing it from the Lib Dems. We're the sort of town that has lots of books on shelves.
I can't find any markets up as yet for the May locals.
Liberals meanwhile have collapsed in my 50/50 town...
Interesting. Brexit reasons or other, do you think?
Being anti Brexit combined with rise of Labour combined have hurt Liberals in Dorset. Our demographic is older than many areas and the triple lock has also been very effective here.
Gotcha. It would be interesting to do some modelling on the demographic for those wards being fought in May, but I suspect very few people will notice there are any locals until about five days beforehand...
What a tremendous waste of time. Can any of these idiots say with a straight face that if they have not agreed up until now they will be able to come to an agreement on something in 3 months, 6 months or 9 months? It's such a 'clever' little idea to disguise its intent.
I don't care, the way I feel at the moment, at least I will get my wife's meds in April.
What a tremendous waste of time. Can any of these idiots say with a straight face that if they have not agreed up until now they will be able to come to an agreement on something in 3 months, 6 months or 9 months?
European elections will be a hoot
Unless there is a realistic chance of anything changing the EU will say no
He permanently has the demeanour of a tradesman who's about to tell you that what you thought was a small job actually means rebuilding most of the house.
I truly am surprised by Black Panther. It's not even the best of the Marvel movies, it's well acted but the plot is very 'meh'. Not sure what so many people see it in to be honest, there was a lot of talk of how it wasn't just another Marvel movie, but it really was.
.
Completely disagree. Really enjoyed black panther and thought it was far more interesting than other marvel movies. Showed a complexity of morality that superhero tales don't normally have.
You would have to threaten me with a Hawaiian Pizza before I went to see The Favourite.
It'd be worth it so long as you watched it silently, with subtitles.
What a tremendous waste of time. Can any of these idiots say with a straight face that if they have not agreed up until now they will be able to come to an agreement on something in 3 months, 6 months or 9 months? It's such a 'clever' little idea to disguise its intent.
I don't care, the way I feel at the moment, at least I will get my wife's meds in April.
I doubt the EU would agree and there may even be legal challenges
*Just realised that was thoughtless of me and of course your good lady's medicines top everything. I am sorry
What a tremendous waste of time. Can any of these idiots say with a straight face that if they have not agreed up until now they will be able to come to an agreement on something in 3 months, 6 months or 9 months? It's such a 'clever' little idea to disguise its intent.
I don't care, the way I feel at the moment, at least I will get my wife's meds in April.
And obviously we all want that. A better way to get that is to have MPs make a decision now, then ask for an extension to ensure we can make all necessary preparations in time. Since they clearly have no intention of allowing no deal that should be easy, whether it is deal, new deal, referendum or whatever.
Delaying no deal does not prevent it, preventing no deal prevents it. They do not need another 9 months to ensure your wife continues to get her meds, they can decide that right now, whether they are a dealer or for remain.
Comments
Brexit +
Brexit -
Brexit ~
To indicate their thoughts on the matter. Save some time.
I can burn them when Brexit hits...
https://twitter.com/ThePopcornDiet/status/1087710869625028608?s=19
Voted Leave, but only farted
Can I pick up the loo laureate now?
If Biden runs I think he wins. There are like 45 liberal women in the race splitting their support, and if he looks like he can put up a spirited effort against Trump's malarky then nothing else matters, not even the creepy pictures. But I don't think he'll run.
Accustomed seat of every child of grace
On this, thy fair throne, let our libations flow
Not rudely swift, or obstinately slow
(My grandfather graffitied that in the gents at Christchurch - he liked to rework Byron - and came back the next day to find someone had added Latin and Greek translations)
Probably the first time I've ever seen around half of the Oscar nominated films though. Blackkklansman was pretty decent, I had plenty of fun with Bohemian Rhapsody and A Star is Born, and take out the awful, awful soundtrack and The Favourite was great in parts. First Man was, absent a few scenes, surprisingly bland, and I almost fell asleep during Mary Poppins, but in fairness I think I was a bit under the weather that day.
Certainly had with anyone I have known over the years.
I don't have an Instagram account, but all week I have been getting emails from them about me having changed my user name and not being able to login. The user name bears no resemblance to my name or email address, but it quotes my email address as the one linked to the account.
Should I be worried about this?
There appears to be no way to contact Instagram that involves actual human interaction, so how can I get my address off this account?
Late to the party.
Some of us now have a hall and spare room full of stuff.
https://politicalbetting.vanillacommunity.com/discussion/comment/1383244/#Comment_1383244
I don't think it takes too much of a leap of the imagination to predict that the Conservatives are indeed going to get absolutely mullered in Remain areas. Nor to predict a modest-to-good Lib Dem revival compared to their 2015 nadir. And a locally mullered party with dispirited activists is not one which will be in good shape to fight any General Election.
The leafletting has started locally, and although the Conservatives are putting up an excellent candidate in our ward (which they once held), I'd give them no more than a 5% chance of capturing it from the Lib Dems. We're the sort of town that has lots of books on shelves.
I can't find any markets up as yet for the May locals.
https://twitter.com/GeneralBoles/status/1087775428159377409
Instead Tories seem determined to completely bungle any kind of Brexit, see themselves torn apart and have parliament via the opposition dictate to them, then stumble into a General Election and presume that Corbyn will have a harder time holding on to his support than they will.
So about normal then...how did they work out he was drunk?
You said "EUGMP = European GMP. Nothing to do with the EU" and "EUGMP is set by the EMA".
Hard to think of a second reason.
For the record I have something over 8,000 books in my house. I aim to read at least 150 a year.
iPads make lousy toilet paper. Wiping by swiping is not covered by Apple Care.
It was the “unaffected by Brexit” comment I was objecting to
In any event I made a mistake 2 years ago. SFW.
BlackkKlansman I really enjoyed, as it is such a bizarre true story, despite some very obvious "This is a right-on Spike Lee movie" moments. It really packs its punch though in the last few minutes.
Buster Scruggs is a series of half a dozen episodes, the first one of which is fabulous Cohn Bros. at their best. After that - not so much.
Vice - people here will love it more than the general population, but much of the material has been done to death by Michael Moore. Combine with a very similar visual style to The Big Short (although, some much darker fast edit moments than in that movie) and it just doesn't seem as fresh. Some great performances though - loved Steve Carell as Rumsfeld and Sam Rockwell's Dubya is brilliant, but acting honours go to Christian Bale for ageing fifty years. Make-up and Hair Oscar nailed on.
I find the Actor wins can seem pretty arbitrary though. Is that the 'kick the can' amendment? The one that's probably a fig leaf for remain, but they want a few more months of the sides not coming to agreement before they admit that?
Today we had record employment
Record proportion of the population in work
Record vacancies
Good figures on wage growth
But why let the facts get in the way of some hysteria?
It's not the parts guy, it's the Labour!
*Just realised that was thoughtless of me and of course your good lady's medicines top everything. I am sorry
Delaying no deal does not prevent it, preventing no deal prevents it. They do not need another 9 months to ensure your wife continues to get her meds, they can decide that right now, whether they are a dealer or for remain.