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  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    The Napoleonic Wars account for all the Scandinavian countries.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    PClipp said:

    Sorry, I missed the EU bit. But how about Greece?
    I'm not sure if this would count:

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_Civil_War
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095
    edited October 2019

    This could make for interesting electoral campaign dynamics:

    https://twitter.com/chrisgiles_/status/1181443140143779840?s=21

    Anything under Corbyn would be worse. Even if these "reports" were correct.. which I very much doubt.. You need to look at things over the longer term and NOONE knows how it will pan out.

    It reminds me of the 364 economists bullshit
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    edited October 2019

    This could make for interesting electoral campaign dynamics:

    https://twitter.com/chrisgiles_/status/1181443140143779840?s=21

    I agree with your conclusion. But when you have seen how these sorts of forecasts are created, it’s hilarious that anyone takes them seriously.

    The world of economic and financial modelling is a bunch of mainly 20-somethings staying up late creating vast spreadsheets.

    The innumerable input assumptions are at best open to challenge and at times outright flawed but barely interrogated at all due to time constraints or dogma.

    If that was the worst of it maybe it wouldn’t be so bad. But very often the models contain loads of circular references and macros that break down one time out of every three times run. So you can’t even trust the output regardless of the input!

    There’s a lot that Gove has to say with which I disagree profoundly. But his infamous comment about experts was perhaps the most wise statement by any politician in recent decades. And you don’t have to look very hard for the evidence. The modelling behind Greece’s Eurozone accession and subsequent austerity programme being good examples.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    The death cult should think long and hard about that IFS report. It’s going to be very hard to present Labour as the risky option in any election where the Conservatives are campaigning for a no-deal Brexit.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,580
    Weren't the economic 'facts' around Greece's Eurozone accession shown subsequently not to be so?
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095

    The death cult should think long and hard about that IFS report. It’s going to be very hard to present Labour as the risky option in any election where the Conservatives are campaigning for a no-deal Brexit.

    It maty be early in the morning, but who are the "death cult" ?
  • moonshine said:

    I agree with your conclusion. But when you have seen how these sorts of forecasts are created, it’s hilarious that anyone takes them seriously.

    The world of economic and financial modelling is a bunch of mainly 20-somethings staying up late creating vast spreadsheets.

    The innumerable input assumptions are at best open to challenge and at times outright flawed but barely interrogated at all due to time constraints or dogma.

    If that was the worst of it maybe it wouldn’t be so bad. But very often the models contain loads of circular references and macros that break down one time out of every three times run. So you can’t even trust the output regardless of the input!

    There’s a lot that Gove has to say with which I disagree profoundly. But his infamous comment about experts was perhaps the most wise statement by any politician in recent decades. And you don’t have to look very hard for the evidence. The modelling behind Greece’s Eurozone accession and subsequent austerity programme being good examples.
    As a research analyst in the City, I would agree with a lot of that. A model is only as good as the inputs that go into it - or "garbage in, garbage out" - which are inevitably influenced by the views of the person inputting the inputs.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814

    Weren't the economic 'facts' around Greece's Eurozone accession shown subsequently not to be so?

    Most modelling starts at the end and works backwards to get the input assumptions. It’s then stressed within artificial bands but rarely with the correct combination with sufficiently vigorous assumptions to break the starting hypothesis.

    The IFS no doubt started from the hypothesis that “No Deal” is the apocalypse and worked backwards. I can build a model that says this for you too if you pay me enough. Equally I can do one that does the opposite. It’s all a giant nonsense, the dirty secret of the economics and financial modelling sectors.
  • OT, but is anyone watching the rather interesting "What Britain Buys and Sells in a Day" (BBC2, Monday 9pm)? It was fruit & veg last week, fish this week, cars next week. The complexity of our trading webs with the rest of the world is quite astonishing. This week's fun fact: Most of the fish we catch is exported, while most of the fish we eat is imported.
  • TGOHF2TGOHF2 Posts: 584
    Morning - dress up in style today everyone

    https://twitter.com/daily_record/status/1181451063997665280?s=21
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177
    Investment banks for Corbyn lol. What has the Conservative Party become?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575

    Weren't the economic 'facts' around Greece's Eurozone accession shown subsequently not to be so?

    Was there any country other than Luxembourg that didn't resort to creative accountancy to get into the Euro?
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095
    TGOHF2 said:

    Morning - dress up in style today everyone

    https://twitter.com/daily_record/status/1181451063997665280?s=21

    How much did Bercow spend on his?
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177
    TGOHF2 said:

    Morning - dress up in style today everyone

    https://twitter.com/daily_record/status/1181451063997665280?s=21

    Fashion is art.
  • isam said:

    But people like Ed Miliband and Margaret Beckett put Corbyn on the ballot to virtue signal their fairness, because they thought he couldn’t win but they would get plaudits for being seen letting him try. That was the original sin
    You’re being far too charitable. Miliband and Beckett put them on the ballot to have a debate and thereby humiliate them.
    It didn’t work.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    It maty be early in the morning, but who are the "death cult" ?
    Those who fetishise leaving with no deal, no matter what the damage, disruption and risks to the public that may ensue.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575

    You’re being far too charitable. Miliband and Beckett put them on the ballot to have a debate and thereby humiliate them.
    It didn’t work.
    Miliband didn't nominate Corbyn, although his brother nominated Abbott in 2010.

    Some surprising names among the backers though - Field and Beckett I knew about, but I didn't realise Sadiq Khan was one as well.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news-14-5/who-are-the-morons-who-nominated-jeremy-corbyn-for-the-labour-leadership-contest-10406527.html
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    moonshine said:

    Most modelling starts at the end and works backwards to get the input assumptions. It’s then stressed within artificial bands but rarely with the correct combination with sufficiently vigorous assumptions to break the starting hypothesis.

    The IFS no doubt started from the hypothesis that “No Deal” is the apocalypse and worked backwards. I can build a model that says this for you too if you pay me enough. Equally I can do one that does the opposite. It’s all a giant nonsense, the dirty secret of the economics and financial modelling sectors.
    That's actually completely untrue, but just go ahead spouting rubbish, it seems to be in fashion.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    You’re being far too charitable. Miliband and Beckett put them on the ballot to have a debate and thereby humiliate them.
    It didn’t work.
    Before an urban myth takes hold, you should note that Ed Miliband did not nominate Jeremy Corbyn. He didn’t nominate anyone.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,580

    That's actually completely untrue, but just go ahead spouting rubbish, it seems to be in fashion.
    I must say, as someone with little understanding of economic theory, but some of business, that I found the concept of starting at the end and working backwards somewhat difficult to understand.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    DougSeal said:

    Northern Ireland is a gerrymandered entity. The island of Ireland is the proper historical unit.
    How much have you studied Carson’s “sentence of death”?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575

    I must say, as someone with little understanding of economic theory, but some of business, that I found the concept of starting at the end and working backwards somewhat difficult to understand.
    It is a think tank. So they have no understanding of economics or business.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    moonshine said:

    I agree with your conclusion. But when you have seen how these sorts of forecasts are created, it’s hilarious that anyone takes them seriously.

    The world of economic and financial modelling is a bunch of mainly 20-somethings staying up late creating vast spreadsheets.

    The innumerable input assumptions are at best open to challenge and at times outright flawed but barely interrogated at all due to time constraints or dogma.

    If that was the worst of it maybe it wouldn’t be so bad. But very often the models contain loads of circular references and macros that break down one time out of every three times run. So you can’t even trust the output regardless of the input!

    There’s a lot that Gove has to say with which I disagree profoundly. But his infamous comment about experts was perhaps the most wise statement by any politician in recent decades. And you don’t have to look very hard for the evidence. The modelling behind Greece’s Eurozone accession and subsequent austerity programme being good examples.
    I am not sure where you have seen people creating forecasts using spreadsheets containing circular references and broken macros, but as someone who is an economic forecaster for a living (I even worked for one of the organisations with an acronym for a name that the innumerate hack Gove got so worked up about) I think you're talking shite. Take a look at how the economy has performed relative to forecasts by the BOE or OBR and you will see that their forecasts have been pretty accurate. I know of no credible forecaster who doesn't think that Brexit has already harmed the UK economy and will do further damage once implemented, especially on a no deal basis.
  • FlannerFlanner Posts: 437

    It's going to be an absolute doddle to present Labour as the risky option in any election where Labour's led by its current lunatics.

    But it will also be just as easy to present any party led by Johnson or his puppet master as more or less equally risky. So after a campaign where sane politicians get unprecedented access to the media, there'll be a massive swing to the LDs, Greens, Celtic nationalists, sane former Tories, a sprinkling of Frank Field-style independent social democrats and the statutory one Farageiste able to withstand public scrutiny.

    Who, sans the Farageiste but together with the sane Labour survivors then able to chuck Corbyn, will form a Remain majority - while the party formerly known as the Conservatives will start its 20-year journey to rediscovering the virtues of responsible capitalism, fiscal prudence and one-nation managerial competence.

    And the pillock behind the collapse of the world's most successful political party ever will slink off to a life of performing the same Cardinal of Lima speech to ever-dwindling groups of drunken hedge fund dinner guests.

  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,860
    isam said:

    But people like Ed Miliband and Margaret Beckett put Corbyn on the ballot to virtue signal their fairness, because they thought he couldn’t win but they would get plaudits for being seen letting him try. That was the original sin

    Do you feel that David Cameron's "original sin" was virtue signalling his fairness by putting Brexit on a referendum ballot paper because he thought it couldn’t win but he would get plaudits for being seen to let Leavers try?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,291

    Those who fetishise leaving with no deal, no matter what the damage, disruption and risks to the public that may ensue.
    Greetings of the new day, Have we mobilized the Yeomanry to fight the pernicious frogs yet? That seems to the drift of the nocturnal thread!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    Foxy said:

    Greetings of the new day, Have we mobilized the Yeomanry to fight the pernicious frogs yet? That seems to the drift of the nocturnal thread!
    We tried, but they've all croaked.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    DougSeal said:

    We have had the same number of wars with Germany as we have with the US (two).
    The US has been around about 50% longer so the ratio of war per decade favours then
  • The Tory plan for the UK - make British citizens less secure, less free and poorer ...
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-49961301?ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_source=twitter&ns_mchannel=social&ns_campaign=bbcnews
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095
    Flanner said:

    I did not say any of that.....
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    HYUFD said:

    The Hundred Years War, the 7 years War, the Spanish Armada, the Napoleonic Wars, WW1 and WW2 were all fought against nations now in the EU.

    All of our wars in the last 100 years were fought alongside one of Australia, Canada, New Zealand or the USA, most of the time all 4
    So in fact we have never fought any war at all against the EU.

    Can I politely suggest that instead of posting bollocks on here you take some time to learn some basic facts about recent history.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,291
    ydoethur said:

    We tried, but they've all croaked.
    I suppose that will spawn more puns...
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    Foxy said:

    I suppose that will spawn more puns...
    And then you can say I toad you so.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,291
    Cyclefree said:

    So in fact we have never fought any war at all against the EU.
    Not yet, judging by the armchair soldiers overnight...
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,121
    Cyclefree said:

    So in fact we have never fought any war at all against the EU.

    Can I politely suggest that instead of posting bollocks on here you take some time to learn some basic facts about recent history.
    So in fact we have fought numerous wars against the EU nations and the rate things are going will soon be in semi state of war with the EU anyway
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,291
    ydoethur said:

    And then you can say I toad you so.
    It may pad out the thread.
  • viewcode said:

    ...but less Brits live in Australia than all the European nations combined

    https://fullfact.org/europe/how-many-uk-citizens-live-other-eu-countries/
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-36299682

    Thw two things I like best about Philip's post is that he forgets the UK is a European country and that you do not have to live in a country to be a victim of terrorism in it. Tourists and other visitors can be killed as well. He and Cummings might think British lives are worth sacrificing for a No Deal Brexit. I doubt any elected politician in this country does. Not even Boris Johnson.

  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,487
    Good morning, everyone.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,395

    OT, but is anyone watching the rather interesting "What Britain Buys and Sells in a Day" (BBC2, Monday 9pm)? It was fruit & veg last week, fish this week, cars next week. The complexity of our trading webs with the rest of the world is quite astonishing. This week's fun fact: Most of the fish we catch is exported, while most of the fish we eat is imported.

    Yes, it was fascinating.
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095

    The Tory plan for the UK - make British citizens less secure, less free and poorer ...
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-49961301?ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_source=twitter&ns_mchannel=social&ns_campaign=bbcnews

    as had been said on here already.. GARBAGE IN, GARBAGE OUT...
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,121

    South Down is 75% Nationalist (2017). West Belfast is 74% Nationalist (2017). The Antrim Glens (represented by the former Moyle District Council) were 60% Catholic in 2011.
    There are also Protestant and Unionist parts of Fermanagah that does not change the fact the county is majority Catholic as Antrim and Down are majority Protestant
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    It maty be early in the morning, but who are the "death cult" ?
    People who believe in democracy and disagree with @AlastairMeeks
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,121

    You could get rid of Scotland and London too if you want to ratchet up the Brexiteer majority.
    Brexit has already been voted for but I have said losing Scotland would increase the pro Brexit majority despite the fact I oppose it
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,121

    Have you been to NI yet or is that later in the month iirc?
    Later this week
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177
    edited October 2019
    HYUFD said:

    There are also Protestant and Unionist parts of Fermanagah that does not change the fact the county is majority Catholic as Antrim and Down are majority Protestant

    Free the occupied six counties!
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,395

    Anything under Corbyn would be worse. Even if these "reports" were correct.. which I very much doubt.. You need to look at things over the longer term and NOONE knows how it will pan out.

    It reminds me of the 364 economists bullshit
    Cancelling Brexit and pump priming the economy with oodles of borrowed cash would cause a short-lived Corbyn boom of about 12-18 months.

    If he tried to put exchange controls back in and introduce confiscatory policies on property that’d result in contraction in short order after as investment dried up, and money was taken out of the economy.

    And that’s before we get to his desire to dismantle our military and security apparatus.

    For the record, I’m not impressed by Javid’s fiscal incontinence in pumping borrowing up to £50bn deficit per calendar year again either.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,121

    This could make for interesting electoral campaign dynamics:

    https://twitter.com/chrisgiles_/status/1181443140143779840?s=21

    So the worst it can predict from No Deal is no growth rather than economic Armageddon
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    edited October 2019
    HYUFD said:

    So in fact we have fought numerous wars against the EU nations and the rate things are going will soon be in semi state of war with the EU anyway
    More bollocks I see.

    You made a statement which was comprehensively and laughably untrue. Don’t be a putz and double down on your mistake.

    No-one will think any the worse of you for admitting that you made an error. If anything the opposite. Whereas if you continue trying to justify your original nonsense, well, the words “spades” and “digging” come to mind.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    ydoethur said:

    It is a think tank. So they have no understanding of economics or business.
    There are different types of think tanks. Some of them - mostly clustered around Tufton Street - take millions of pounds of corporate money which they don't disclose and produce biased research that is little more than lobbying. The IFS by contrast is fiercely independent and staffed by some of the smartest and most rigorous economists you will ever meet. If you think they have no understanding of economics then you are revealing your own ignorance rather than exposing theirs.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,121
    Cyclefree said:

    More bollocks I see.

    You made a statement which was comprehensively and laughably untrue. Don’t be a putz and double down on your mistake.

    No-one will think any the worse of you for admitting that you made an error. If any the opposite. Whereas if you continue trying to justify your original nonsense, well, the words “spades” and “digging” come to mind.
    The EU is not yet a state (even if that is the aim) but made up of European nations most of whom we fought wars against, I refuse to back down as I have nothing to back down for
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,291

    Cancelling Brexit and pump priming the economy with oodles of borrowed cash would cause a short-lived Corbyn boom of about 12-18 months.

    If he tried to put exchange controls back in and introduce confiscatory policies on property that’d result in contraction in short order after as investment dried up, and money was taken out of the economy.

    And that’s before we get to his desire to dismantle our military and security apparatus.

    For the record, I’m not impressed by Javid’s fiscal incontinence in pumping borrowing up to £50bn deficit per calendar year again either.
    One of the advantages of cancelling Brexit is that the measures in your second paragraph would be impossible. They are only possible in a No Deal state, and indeed quite a likely outcome of such a way point.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,121
    edited October 2019

    Free the occupied six counties!
    They are not occupied, certainly no more than Israel and have been in existence with a Protestant and Unionist majority for longer than the USA.

    Those who would give them away without consent are traitors just as the traitors to democracy who refuse to respect the Leave vote

  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575

    There are different types of think tanks. Some of them - mostly clustered around Tufton Street - take millions of pounds of corporate money which they don't disclose and produce biased research that is little more than lobbying. The IFS by contrast is fiercely independent and staffed by some of the smartest and most rigorous economists you will ever meet. If you think they have no understanding of economics then you are revealing your own ignorance rather than exposing theirs.
    Is the claim they are staffed by smart economists an admission that I was right and they have no understanding of economics? :smile:

    Have a good morning.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177
    HYUFD said:

    They are not occupied, certainly no more than Israel and have been in existence with a Protestant and Unionist majority for longer than the USA.

    Sounds like something an occupier would say.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,291
    A tiny flaw in Cummings post lagershed rant.

    https://twitter.com/kevinhorourke/status/1181456335122157569?s=19
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,716
    These budget estimates show you the point of the LibDem Revoke pledge. Corbyn can't spend that money, because the voters might vote Leave again. The LibDem manifesto can turn all those billions directly into fabulous presents.
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095

    There are different types of think tanks. Some of them - mostly clustered around Tufton Street - take millions of pounds of corporate money which they don't disclose and produce biased research that is little more than lobbying. The IFS by contrast is fiercely independent and staffed by some of the smartest and most rigorous economists you will ever meet. If you think they have no understanding of economics then you are revealing your own ignorance rather than exposing theirs.
    are there 364 of them?
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177
    Foxy said:

    A tiny flaw in Cummings post lagershed rant.

    https://twitter.com/kevinhorourke/status/1181456335122157569?s=19

    They’re playing to the gallery and the frothers are lapping it up.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Charles said:

    People who believe in democracy and disagree with @AlastairMeeks
    Leaving aside the fact that no-deal Brexit was angrily disavowed by the Leave campaign during the referendum campaign, just how many deaths would you regard as an acceptable casualty count to secure a no-deal Brexit? I keep asking this question, but the death cultists are curiously evasive.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,487
    Dr. Foxy, well, quite.

    Boris Johnson talks loudly, and carries a small stick.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    edited October 2019

    as had been said on here already.. GARBAGE IN, GARBAGE OUT...
    The Tories certainly are garbage, and look intent on turning the country to garbage.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    HYUFD said:



    The EU is not yet a state (even if that is the aim) but made up of European nations most of whom we fought wars against, I refuse to back down as I have nothing to back down for

    Is it surprising that an organisation made up of all our nearest neighbours includes a number of countries that we have fought wars against, especially in the pre-20th century period when all countries' wars were fought against near neighbours? The EU also includes countries that we went to war to protect (Belgium, Poland), our oldest allies (Portugal), and countries that we helped liberate from occupation (France, the Netherlands). So the statement "we have fought many wars against the EU" seems not just literally untrue but also devoid of any deeper meaning.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,291

    These budget estimates show you the point of the LibDem Revoke pledge. Corbyn can't spend that money, because the voters might vote Leave again. The LibDem manifesto can turn all those billions directly into fabulous presents.

    All parties seem to have an orchard of magic money trees. The reality is that the world economy is slowing dangerously, and our debt levels remain high. A bit of judicious green infrastructure spending may be wise, ballooning the deficit rather less so.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    HYUFD said:

    The EU is not yet a state (even if that is the aim) but made up of European nations most of whom we fought wars against, I refuse to back down as I have nothing to back down for
    Oh dear. You made a statement that was wrong. Plain wrong. Instead of accepting this you keep on going trying to justify your original nonsense. I have interviewed lots of people who have taken the same approach. It does not end well.

    There is no shame in admitting that you meant to say “countries in Europe” instead of “the EU”. It would be to your credit. We all make mistakes, me included.

    But if you can’t see that and think that obstinacy is the way to go I can’t help you. I am though vastly amused. So thank you for that.

    Anyway I expect you need to get going. They will surely need your wise counsel at No 10 to prepare for our imminent semi-war against the EU or maybe Prussia and the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    ydoethur said:

    Is the claim they are staffed by smart economists an admission that I was right and they have no understanding of economics? :smile:

    Have a good morning.
    Happy trolling.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,395
    Foxy said:

    A tiny flaw in Cummings post lagershed rant.

    https://twitter.com/kevinhorourke/status/1181456335122157569?s=19

    That’s far too soberly written to be Cummings.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    are there 364 of them?
    Eh?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Good morning, everyone.

    Good morning Mr Dancer. Looking like a very wet and windy weekend in Japan, thanks to Typhoon Hagibis. Hopefully the F1 event will go off as scheduled, the latest rumour is that the Honda-powered cars will be allowed to run their engines in Q mode during the race - they don’t care if they have to replace them all next week, so long as they can get someone on the podium at the end of the race. Mercedes should be favourites here, but they will have their eyes on the championship so won’t be taking risks they don’t need to.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,395
    Foxy said:

    One of the advantages of cancelling Brexit is that the measures in your second paragraph would be impossible. They are only possible in a No Deal state, and indeed quite a likely outcome of such a way point.
    We could very well get both.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651

    Leaving aside the fact that no-deal Brexit was angrily disavowed by the Leave campaign during the referendum campaign, just how many deaths would you regard as an acceptable casualty count to secure a no-deal Brexit? I keep asking this question, but the death cultists are curiously evasive.
    Well, Mr Meeks, we know the answer to that now. We will shortly be going to war with the EU - or Part 24 of the Hundred Years’ War, as I believe it will soon be called.

    I shall ask my builder to start preparing the Anderson Shelter in Cumbria, though I dare say French arrows won’t reach that far, which will be a relief.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,487
    Mr. Sandpit, yeah, heard about the possible typhoon impact. I'll check the first practice market just in case and maybe spray 10p bets each way on the lower half of the field.

    Come race day, Toro Rosso were tasty in the wet before, Verstappen and Hulkenberg might be worth considering too.
  • Cyclefree said:

    Oh dear. You made a statement that was wrong. Plain wrong. Instead of accepting this you keep on going trying to justify your original nonsense. I have interviewed lots of people who have taken the same approach. It does not end well.

    There is no shame in admitting that you meant to say “countries in Europe” instead of “the EU”. It would be to your credit. We all make mistakes, me included.

    But if you can’t see that and think that obstinacy is the way to go I can’t help you. I am though vastly amused. So thank you for that.

    Anyway I expect you need to get going. They will surely need your wise counsel at No 10 to prepare for our imminent semi-war against the EU or maybe Prussia and the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

    I wonder how many EU member states actually existed as independent entities at the start of the 20th century. You can't fight a war against a country that does not exist.

  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Free the occupied six counties!
    For several generations there was building pressure in rural Ireland to overturn what they saw as fundamental inequities in the structure of society. Even despite Wolfe Tone it was an economically driven campaign (“Fair rents! Free sale! Fixity of tenure!)

    It was handled poorly by the British government, expertly exploited by Daniel O’Connell and had a bit of luck with Kitty Shaw

    Despite all this there was a very significant Irish Unionist Party which strongly campaigned against independence

    Ultimately the situation became untenable which led to the Buckingham Palace Agreement (which saw a time limited arrangement whereby Ulster would remain part of the U.K. for 6 years before joining an independent Ireland - Carson’s “sentence of death” with a “stay of execution”)

    The final compromise was the Fourth Home Rule Bill which created two autonomous Home Rule regions - the majority Unionist Northern Ireland and the 26 counties to be ruled by Dublin (with a Council of Ireland and a common Lord Lieutenant which were expected to evolve into an all Ireland government over time)

    It was never implemented in the south because of the War of Independence and the Civil War, but still forms the basis of Northern Ireland today.

    You can’t do justice to the complexities of Irish history in a short post but the North isn’t occupied: it is governed with the consent and support of its citizens. Should they withdraw their consent the things will change but, until and unless they do, the status quo remains the legitimate arrangement
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,678
    The trolling level is a bit heavy on this overnight thread.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    There are different types of think tanks. Some of them - mostly clustered around Tufton Street - take millions of pounds of corporate money which they don't disclose and produce biased research that is little more than lobbying. The IFS by contrast is fiercely independent and staffed by some of the smartest and most rigorous economists you will ever meet. If you think they have no understanding of economics then you are revealing your own ignorance rather than exposing theirs.
    Meh. The IFS suffers from the same group think as the Treasury and the BoE. They are worth listening to but not taking as gospel
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited October 2019

    Mr. Sandpit, yeah, heard about the possible typhoon impact. I'll check the first practice market just in case and maybe spray 10p bets each way on the lower half of the field.

    Come race day, Toro Rosso were tasty in the wet before, Verstappen and Hulkenberg might be worth considering too.

    Toro Rosso for points is definitely one bet I’m thinking about, in a very tight midfield pack one team turning up the engines should stand out. Albon for a podium possibly an outside chance too, especially so if LH plays the percentages game with the title in mind.

    I’ve never been a fan of practice session markets, as the teams themselves aren’t competing for anything - but if it is wet then your strategy might indeed be useful. I assume the market is void if no-one sets a time during the session?
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Foxy said:

    A tiny flaw in Cummings post lagershed rant.

    https://twitter.com/kevinhorourke/status/1181456335122157569?s=19

    Bloody Europeans!

    Don’t even know how to queue properly!!
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,291
    Cyclefree said:

    Well, Mr Meeks, we know the answer to that now. We will shortly be going to war with the EU - or Part 24 of the Hundred Years’ War, as I believe it will soon be called.

    I shall ask my builder to start preparing the Anderson Shelter in Cumbria, though I dare say French arrows won’t reach that far, which will be a relief.
    Are other countries in the world as obsessed with past wars and see relations with their neighbours exclusively through such a prism, or is it a peculiarity of these islands?
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    Charles said:

    For several generations there was building pressure in rural Ireland to overturn what they saw as fundamental inequities in the structure of society. Even despite Wolfe Tone it was an economically driven campaign (“Fair rents! Free sale! Fixity of tenure!)

    It was handled poorly by the British government, expertly exploited by Daniel O’Connell and had a bit of luck with Kitty Shaw

    Despite all this there was a very significant Irish Unionist Party which strongly campaigned against independence

    Ultimately the situation became untenable which led to the Buckingham Palace Agreement (which saw a time limited arrangement whereby Ulster would remain part of the U.K. for 6 years before joining an independent Ireland - Carson’s “sentence of death” with a “stay of execution”)

    The final compromise was the Fourth Home Rule Bill which created two autonomous Home Rule regions - the majority Unionist Northern Ireland and the 26 counties to be ruled by Dublin (with a Council of Ireland and a common Lord Lieutenant which were expected to evolve into an all Ireland government over time)

    It was never implemented in the south because of the War of Independence and the Civil War, but still forms the basis of Northern Ireland today.

    You can’t do justice to the complexities of Irish history in a short post but the North isn’t occupied: it is governed with the consent and support of its citizens. Should they withdraw their consent the things will change but, until and unless they do, the status quo remains the legitimate arrangement
    You’re right that a short post cannot do justice to the complexities of Irish history.

    The situation became untenable, as you put it, because a minority in Ireland refused to accept the democratically expressed wishes of the majority. It is one of the many historical ironies that the party which supported that minority is so loudly now proclaiming its adherence to the principle that a majority should get its way regardless of the wishes of the minority. Had this party held onto that principle then there might never have existed the artificially created border which is creating such grief today for that party.

  • Foxy said:

    Are other countries in the world as obsessed with past wars and see relations with their neighbours exclusively through such a prism, or is it a peculiarity of these islands?
    It's tiresome, isn't it? Every thread ends up in a remainer/traitor vs brexiteer loon nutjob slanging match. It's enough to make a sane man vote Lib Dem!
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,797

    OT, but is anyone watching the rather interesting "What Britain Buys and Sells in a Day" (BBC2, Monday 9pm)? It was fruit & veg last week, fish this week, cars next week. The complexity of our trading webs with the rest of the world is quite astonishing. This week's fun fact: Most of the fish we catch is exported, while most of the fish we eat is imported.

    Not if we No Deal Brexit...
    https://www.seafish.org/media/publications/Tariffs_on_imported_seafood_170330.pdf

    Mackerel should be OK.
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,716
    Foxy said:

    All parties seem to have an orchard of magic money trees. The reality is that the world economy is slowing dangerously, and our debt levels remain high. A bit of judicious green infrastructure spending may be wise, ballooning the deficit rather less so.
    Right, but the LibDems want the non-Trumpy bit of the Conservative vote, who care whether your sums add up. It's a fairly small niche in the grand scheme of things but they have the potential to take it permanently.
  • Nigelb said:

    Not if we No Deal Brexit...
    https://www.seafish.org/media/publications/Tariffs_on_imported_seafood_170330.pdf

    Mackerel should be OK.

    Not great in batter, though.

  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    Charles said:

    Meh. The IFS suffers from the same group think as the Treasury and the BoE. They are worth listening to but not taking as gospel
    I never said they were the revealed word of God! It's just interesting to me that the trashing of independent economic forecasters by PB Tories seems to coincide so neatly with the same PB Tories advocating a course of action that independent economic forecasters mostly see as reckless and costly. Another example of how Brexit is degrading our political life and institutions.
  • The Tories are promising voters a future in which they will be poorer, less free and less secure - and they will still beat a Labour party led by Jeremy Corbyn.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,121

    Sounds like something an occupier would say.
    Sound like something a traitor would say
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    It is striking that it has become a working assumption that the EU will grant an extension. They have previously said that they would only consider doing this if there was a clear reason for going so, e.g. a GE.

    Given that under the ridiculous FTPA Corbyn, in effect, chooses when the GE will be, how can the EU be assured that the extension will be followed in the short term (i.e. before the end of the next deadline) by a GE?
  • Foxy said:

    A tiny flaw in Cummings post lagershed rant.

    https://twitter.com/kevinhorourke/status/1181456335122157569?s=19

    Right. Because there's only 27 other countries on this planet of ours isn't there?

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,121

    Right, but the LibDems want the non-Trumpy bit of the Conservative vote, who care whether your sums add up. It's a fairly small niche in the grand scheme of things but they have the potential to take it permanently.
    The LDs want the non socialist, non anti Semite bit of Labour and the diehard Remainer bit of the Tories
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,121

    The Tories are promising voters a future in which they will be poorer, less free and less secure - and they will still beat a Labour party led by Jeremy Corbyn.

    The Tories are promising voters to deliver the Brexit they voted for and regain sovereignty and replace free movement with a points system and beat Jeremy Corbyn
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,333



    And that’s before we get to his desire to dismantle our military and security apparatus.

    Corbo's Government of All the Trots would be a net positive for actual military capability due to having zero inclination toward foreign adventurism and thereby easing the current retention and resourcing crisis. They would also probably be less likely to run defence policy as corporate welfare program for BAE and Babcock.

    Also, don't forget he is no leader of any type, as thick as fuck and ineffably lazy so he'll make modest, at best, progress toward any transformative goals he may harbour in his withered breast.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    Stocky said:

    It is striking that it has become a working assumption that the EU will grant an extension. They have previously said that they would only consider doing this if there was a clear reason for going so, e.g. a GE.

    Given that under the ridiculous FTPA Corbyn, in effect, chooses when the GE will be, how can the EU be assured that the extension will be followed in the short term (i.e. before the end of the next deadline) by a GE?

    A good point. I am not at all convinced they will grant an extension.

    Or they could grant a long one to cover the period during which there has to be one under the FTPA, regardless of what Corbyn does or does not do. It might even give the Tories time to polish up their backstop proposals into something workable.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,797
    Sandpit said:

    Good morning Mr Dancer. Looking like a very wet and windy weekend in Japan, thanks to Typhoon Hagibis. Hopefully the F1 event will go off as scheduled, the latest rumour is that the Honda-powered cars will be allowed to run their engines in Q mode during the race - they don’t care if they have to replace them all next week, so long as they can get someone on the podium at the end of the race. Mercedes should be favourites here, but they will have their eyes on the championship so won’t be taking risks they don’t need to.
    If it's wet, then Hamilton ought to be slight favourite - but it's quite possible Ferrari are going to be faster here, too. And Suzuka isn't the easiest track to overtake on.
  • The police should be sending sniffer dogs into Number 10, judging by that statement.

    Sniff out the sniffer.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651

    Right. Because there's only 27 other countries on this planet of ours isn't there?

    The article was specifically referring to EU countries.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,797
    edited October 2019

    Not great in batter, though.

    To continue sending into the EU, I meant. :smile:

    While some tariffs are relatively modest, their imposition would be likely to lead to huge disruption/re-organisation of trade flows.

    I suppose it would sort itself out in time.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,487
    Mr. Sandpit, it depends. If no-one goes out at all I'd guess it would be voided. Could get knotty if someone just has an out lap but doesn't set a time.
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,716
    HYUFD said:

    The LDs want the non socialist, non anti Semite bit of Labour and the diehard Remainer bit of the Tories
    They want those too but that's the easy part, the bit they need to optimize for is Labour voters who are somewhat socialist and/or only slightly anti-semitic, and Tories who are moderate Remain or even moderate Leave but have had enough of all the crazy shit.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,356
    edited October 2019
    HYUFD said:

    Sound like something a traitor would say
    As someone who has received a fair amount of abuse on here over the years and who thought that various temporary and oddly applied bans on certain terms (GNats, PB Tories) were silly, nevertheless could I ask that use of the word 'traitor' be banned, certainly when applied to the politics of the last 40 years? Being sent mad by Brexit (temporarily or not) is not an excuse.
This discussion has been closed.