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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Holyrood 2021: The election that could kill the Union stone de

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  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    Pulpstar said:

    Fantastic.
    Weekend effect of course in there - we will really know about Wednesday next week if we are moving to a lower level.

    On the "Stay alert message" - I have seen the following a fair bit. People maintain social distance in a queue. Until they get on their phones. Then they drift closer. When they get in a store, perhaps the majority lose any sense of social distancing.

  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    coach said:

    I'll make a prediction, before too long the Wetherspoons chap will announce that his chain is closing with the loss of thousands of jobs and large empty premises in every town. WH Smiths won't be long either.

    Then people will begin to realise what is happening.

    I'll bet you £20 at evens that doesn't happen if you want to back that up.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017

    A friend works in sales at a Tier 1 bank. The management said that they were fried without direct contact.

    They have made it work on the basis of we-are-f%^ked-if-we-don't

    Probably upset senior management... but hey....

    Absolutely. It can be made to work, but the results are not going to be as good. That was pretty much my point. Is that what the government is instructing?

  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,001
    The stay alert slogan has already succeeded in getting peoples' attention and talking about it. The more dissing it gets the more it cuts through. A bit like £350m per week on a bus. Simples really,
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    coach said:

    Mmmmmh, if you close a business you effectively take responsibility for it in the same way as opening a business. Therefore the obligation is upon you to pay all overheads.

    That is not happening and will force tens of thousands into insolvency. Expect massive social unrest
    Hmm. I think you're omitting an intermediate step - that the virus has made the businesses inoperable, not the government. Their owners plainly cannot be allowed to operate lest they become a public health hazard (and some wouldn't want to).

    Yet they are risk-taking profit-making businesses. Why should the public purse compensate them for this risk but not others? Why should the public compensate them if, say, their business burns to the ground? Or there is a slump and there are not enough customers?

    I do however wonder if the argument for compensation lies rather in the degree to which the virus's prevalence is itself a consequence of government policy.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,217

    May add a bit of competitive spice about who's the frontrunner.
    Yes! Lucky enough it was me yesterday as it was a slow time, and the other two think they've both had it (Felt ill & had the symptoms after returning from Skiing in Northern France in early March)
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,203

    A friend works in sales at a Tier 1 bank. The management said that they were fried without direct contact.

    They have made it work on the basis of we-are-f%^ked-if-we-don't

    Probably upset senior management... but hey....
    "fried without direct contact." que ?
  • coachcoach Posts: 250

    I'll bet you £20 at evens that doesn't happen if you want to back that up.
    OK what's the deadline?
  • isamisam Posts: 41,217

    If you're on Zoom you're not selling.

    Oh I thought it was like a facetime for your computer? Why cant you all be on that whilst working/on the phone?
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017

    Indeed. My better half works in finance rather than sales and they use Teams, but the principle is the same.

    Much office based working will never be coming back in any event. I would imagine that many, perhaps most, workers who are entirely office based will be WFH the whole time from now on, or getting together once a week, or a fortnight, or a month for team building days, brainstorming sessions and such like.

    People will adapt.

    Teams is excellent for internal company meetings. We are using it extensively. But you cannot manage a sales force as effectively with it as you can by having them in an office environment. If that is going to change, so be it. My point was that the government could be clearer about it.

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,138

    Get some sharp sticks.
    Sentry guns.

    All about the sentry guns.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,001

    NHS England, 7 day average trend line. Usual caveats about weekends and last few days of data

    image

    The bar chart is pretty smooth, so why do you display a lagging moving average weirdly floating above the daily figures?
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,203
    coach said:

    I'll make a prediction, before too long the Wetherspoons chap will announce that his chain is closing with the loss of thousands of jobs and large empty premises in every town. WH Smiths won't be long either.

    Then people will begin to realise what is happening.

    The Gov't has some rum choices about pubs in particular. Personally I thought a special form of bankruptcy for the business, perhaps a bit like US chapter 11 would be the only option here.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    isam said:

    Oh I thought it was like a facetime for your computer? Why cant you all be on that whilst working/on the phone?

    You can be, I guess, but it is not the same as being with your colleagues, hearing their calls in the background, having the manager walk the room and so on. It is all doable, and it is being done now, but it is likely to mean fewer sales. That will have consequences.

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    Pulpstar said:

    "fried without direct contact." que ?
    That without direct contact sales - selling with the client in the room, and the team having direct contact with each other - the management thought they couldn't sell anything.

    Turns out they were wrong.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,203

    I think conga on a rope summarises Stay Alert quite well and is classically British.

    If you really want to take zero risks don't take part.
    If you really want to live your life then a two metres apart conga is safer than a normal one.

    It's fudge and compromise and trusting people to use their own frigging common sense.

    All well and good till one of them coughs near the local grocery store worker that didn't take part.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    coach said:

    OK what's the deadline?
    You said before too long so how about by the end of November? £20 at evens that Witherspoon's doesn't announce permanent closure by the end of November?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,447

    This is not an entirely unfair point. There are no shortage of people too terrified to go back to work who also think they should be supported by the furlough scheme until this is all over.

    There are also no shortage of people who work in non-shuttered sectors - manufacturing, agriculture, grocery retail, the NHS - who are required to keep going out to work all through this.

    We must cough up our taxes to keep the rest of the country on life support. It is not unreasonable to ask us to do so, given the circumstances. It is, however, unreasonable to ask us to keep propping up millions of non-workers forever. An effective treatment or a vaccine could be a year away, a decade away, or it might never happen.

    The Government's unenviable job is to try to find a balance between the interest of the remaining taxpayers (and the wider economy) and those of the terrified. Inevitably this will involve progressively unshuttering sectors of the economy and reducing support to make it more painful for terrified workers to sit at home indefinitely. This raises all kinds of awkward questions (will the demand exist to prop the re-opened businesses, especially where they need to implement the 2m rule? What happens to employees who have been told to shield?) But what alternative is there?
    I think government needs to be a little more proactive than that (as it ought to have been in dealing with the pandemic outbreak). ‘Finding a balance’ is too passive an approach.

    There are whole sectors of the economy - retail; leisure; commercial real estate, for example - which will very likely not return in to their pre pandemic state for many years, if ever.

    Relying entirely on the market to sort out the post pandemic mess risks leaving commercial wastelands across large areas of the country. Government ought to be thinking about its potential role in jump-starting things.
    As a small example, we are going to have empty town centres, at the same time as having a nationwide housing shortage (an amped up version of what has been there to some extent for some time). That is an opportunity.
  • coachcoach Posts: 250
    Pulpstar said:

    The Gov't has some rum choices about pubs in particular. Personally I thought a special form of bankruptcy for the business, perhaps a bit like US chapter 11 would be the only option here.
    Correct. Brewery chains can survive in some form by selling to supermarkets etc but on a vastly decreased level. Pub cos with zero income are sitting ducks and will fold before the damage is too great.

    Anybody think Tim Martin will keep paying rent etc in the hope the pubs reopen next year?

    No chance
  • isamisam Posts: 41,217
    edited May 2020

    You can be, I guess, but it is not the same as being with your colleagues, hearing their calls in the background, having the manager walk the room and so on. It is all doable, and it is being done now, but it is likely to mean fewer sales. That will have consequences.

    You know what, I was having this conversation with a mate yesterday. I used to be an odds compiler for a spread betting company, and commuted from Essex to Southwark 4/5 days a week to sit in an office with 30 other blokes and price the weeks games up. I could "bounce ideas" off lots of clever gamblers etc... now I do the same from my home, and communicate with the people involved by phone or skype, and its no different. I cant believe I used to spend 6-7 hours a week commuting back and forth to do it, oir that a company rented an office for me to sit in. Seems like utter madness

    The big fucker is no going to the pub after, no office banter, no getting away from the wife and kids.. it is not as much fun, thats why some people dont want to move away from the old way of doing things, I reckon

    "it is not the same as being with your colleagues, hearing their calls in the background, having the manager walk the room and so on".. Yes, you're right, but I think the work can be done as effectively. It has in my case anyway, and lots of other people I know. Put the sales team on a cut of the bounty and they'll work hard
  • coachcoach Posts: 250

    You said before too long so how about by the end of November? £20 at evens that Witherspoon's doesn't announce permanent closure by the end of November?
    Yep, I'm in
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    isam said:

    You know what, I was having this conversation with a mate yesterday. I used to be an odds compiler for a spread betting company, and commuted from Essex to Southwark 4/5 days a week to sit in an office with 30 other blokes and price the weeks games up. I could "bounce ideas" off lots of clever gamblers etc... now I do the same from my home, and communicate with the people involved by phone or skype, and its no different. I cant believe I used to spend 6-7 hours a week commuting back and forth to do it, oir that a company rented an office for me to sit in. Seems like utter madness

    The big fucker is no going to the pub after, no office banter, no getting away from the wife and kids.. it is not as much fun, thats why some people dont want to move away from the old way of doing things, I reckon

    "it is not the same as being with your colleagues, hearing their calls in the background, having the manager walk the room and so on".. Yes, you're right, but I think the work can be done as effectively. It has in my case anyway, and lots of other people I know. Put the sales team on a cut of the bounty and they'll work hard
    I would say, that for many people in office jobs, WFH is *sustainable* for a very long period of time.

    The question is, what proportion of the workforce does that cover?

    It is for that reason that I think the last restriction to be relaxed will be *everyone* returning to the office - not travelling and meeting people ever day probably makes a big dent in the R number.
  • I work in Software Engineering and I suspect we'll be told to WFH for the rest of the year.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    edited May 2020
    geoffw said:

    The bar chart is pretty smooth, so why do you display a lagging moving average weirdly floating above the daily figures?
    That's the way that Excel kicks out a 7 day trendline.

    I am autogenerating a spreadsheet from the scraped data *and* autogenerating the chart using Apache POI.

    Was going to fiddle with another way of generating the charts, but got pulled into other things.

    On a descent like this, the averaging trendline is going to be "above" the numbers, anyway.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Pulpstar said:

    All well and good till one of them coughs near the local grocery store worker that didn't take part.
    Shit happens. If you see a conga on a rope you don't want to take part in then steer clear.

    If you want a vision of the future, imagine a conga on a rope down Britain's roads - forever.
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,953
    isam said:

    You know what, I was having this conversation with a mate yesterday. I used to be an odds compiler for a spread betting company, and commuted from Essex to Southwark 4/5 days a week to sit in an office with 30 other blokes and price the weeks games up. I could "bounce ideas" off lots of clever gamblers etc... now I do the same from my home, and communicate with the people involved by phone or skype, and its no different. I cant believe I used to spend 6-7 hours a week commuting back and forth to do it, oir that a company rented an office for me to sit in. Seems like utter madness

    The big fucker is no going to the pub after, no office banter, no getting away from the wife and kids.. it is not as much fun, thats why some people dont want to move away from the old way of doing things, I reckon

    "it is not the same as being with your colleagues, hearing their calls in the background, having the manager walk the room and so on".. Yes, you're right, but I think the work can be done as effectively. It has in my case anyway, and lots of other people I know. Put the sales team on a cut of the bounty and they'll work hard
    I had a drink-up with some work colleagues this week.

    I learned more in a single night about who's in and who's out, what's really going on within the company, who's doing what, than I have in six weeks of official videoconferences and unofficial zoom "drinks". Information that is absolutely vital to how I do my job. It's not just "banter" it's how stuff gets done.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,413
    edited May 2020
    Cyclefree said:

    Practical measures to deal with people in care homes and care home workers are, to my mind, more important than slogans.

    Yes they are, but your initial message suggested, without stating why, that they couldn't or were not doing both, and in a way that suggested by doing slogans they could not do the latter, which is not the case. Any failures on practical measures will not be because they were focusing on slogans, it will be because they did not do a good job on practicalities. That's why the comment was so silly and I stand by that. They could do a fantastic or terrible job on slogan messaging and it would not have an impact on the job they were doing on practicalities, which is why anger at a good or bad slogan, which is not without any importance, is seen in that context. Not the absurd idea that a few people sat in Westminster thinking up good or bad slogans affects care home practicalities.
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    malcolmg said:

    You talking about us giving all our money to London at gunpoint and getting a minimal share back and the rest squandered on their pet projects. Think you will find I know as much about fiscal transfer robbery as your goodself.
    I just know I'm going to regret saying this BUT... robbed "at gunpoint"? It makes it sound almost as if you and your fellow Scots have been kidnapped by force and taken hostage or something?

    In which case, what were the 55% thinking in 2014? Why didn't they run away screaming when given the chance? Was it a mass outbreak of Stockholm Syndrome?

    Seriously, whereas most tax does indeed end up being aggregated centrally, and thus Scotland ends up very largely dependent on a block grant (which I agree is wrong: the failure to devolve tax raising powers to the Scottish Parliament that are commensurate with its responsibilities is one of the two basic flaws in the devolution settlement,) Scotland gets back more from the UK Treasury than it pays in tax. This has been the case for most (though not all) of the period since devolution commenced, even allowing for a geographical share of North Sea revenues.

    Given that Scotland has more money spent on it than it raises, what it gets back is obviously not minimal; moreover, there must necessarily be a net flow of capital from cash "squandered on pet projects" (e.g. HS2, which I acknowledge looks increasingly useless given the way the world is now moving) to cash spent on nice things for Scotland, and not the other way around. Returning to 2014 for a moment, that's probably what saved the Union the last time around. It was perfectly obvious to most Scottish taxpayers that they were receiving meaningful support from South of the Border. If Scotland were a sustained net contributor to the UK Treasury, as Catalonia is to Spain, then the Yes campaign would probably have won.

    I will now retire to trench with helmet and await verbal hand grenades.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Shit happens. If you see a conga on a rope you don't want to take part in then steer clear.

    If you want a vision of the future, imagine a conga on a rope down Britain's roads - forever.
    Especially if the wind is blowing straight down the rope.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,276

    I just know I'm going to regret saying this BUT... robbed "at gunpoint"? It makes it sound almost as if you and your fellow Scots have been kidnapped by force and taken hostage or something?

    In which case, what were the 55% thinking in 2014? Why didn't they run away screaming when given the chance? Was it a mass outbreak of Stockholm Syndrome?

    Seriously, whereas most tax does indeed end up being aggregated centrally, and thus Scotland ends up very largely dependent on a block grant (which I agree is wrong: the failure to devolve tax raising powers to the Scottish Parliament that are commensurate with its responsibilities is one of the two basic flaws in the devolution settlement,) Scotland gets back more from the UK Treasury than it pays in tax. This has been the case for most (though not all) of the period since devolution commenced, even allowing for a geographical share of North Sea revenues.

    Given that Scotland has more money spent on it than it raises, what it gets back is obviously not minimal; moreover, there must necessarily be a net flow of capital from cash "squandered on pet projects" (e.g. HS2, which I acknowledge looks increasingly useless given the way the world is now moving) to cash spent on nice things for Scotland, and not the other way around. Returning to 2014 for a moment, that's probably what saved the Union the last time around. It was perfectly obvious to most Scottish taxpayers that they were receiving meaningful support from South of the Border. If Scotland were a sustained net contributor to the UK Treasury, as Catalonia is to Spain, then the Yes campaign would probably have won.

    I will now retire to trench with helmet and await verbal hand grenades.
    You`re going to regret saying that ...
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,560

    NEW THREAD

  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,447
    The Covid symptom study app is running out of cash:
    https://covid.joinzoe.com/post/donate
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,166
    geoffw said:

    The stay alert slogan has already succeeded in getting peoples' attention and talking about it. The more dissing it gets the more it cuts through. A bit like £350m per week on a bus. Simples really,

    With all due respect replacing 'stay at home' with 'stay alert' is not another example of Boris' genius, unless vague and open to interpretation in any way one wishes was the expectation.

    Our freedom from lockdown has not been earned by our compliance and changing advice from Sage, rather Boris' hands have been tied by Thursday's red tops. It's the Sun wot won it.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,632
    Nigelb said:

    Perhaps you could take over with a Lakeland moth report ?
    A Lakeland sheep report, more like. In the last few days I have had to rescue one lamb from being stuck in a cattle grid and another from the side of the road which then died in front of me of viral pneumonia and chase a couple of lost sheep back into their fields. Plus fend off a herd of over-friendly bullocks.

    I did see a kestrel in the sky the other day.

    Pictures of the surrounding hills are probably my best offering.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,447
    Cyclefree said:

    A Lakeland sheep report, more like. In the last few days I have had to rescue one lamb from being stuck in a cattle grid and another from the side of the road which then died in front of me of viral pneumonia and chase a couple of lost sheep back into their fields. Plus fend off a herd of over-friendly bullocks.

    I did see a kestrel in the sky the other day.

    Pictures of the surrounding hills are probably my best offering.
    Herdwicks ?
  • isamisam Posts: 41,217
    kyf_100 said:

    I had a drink-up with some work colleagues this week.

    I learned more in a single night about who's in and who's out, what's really going on within the company, who's doing what, than I have in six weeks of official videoconferences and unofficial zoom "drinks". Information that is absolutely vital to how I do my job. It's not just "banter" it's how stuff gets done.
    I guess meet once a week for a drink could be the answer
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    isam said:

    You know what, I was having this conversation with a mate yesterday. I used to be an odds compiler for a spread betting company, and commuted from Essex to Southwark 4/5 days a week to sit in an office with 30 other blokes and price the weeks games up. I could "bounce ideas" off lots of clever gamblers etc... now I do the same from my home, and communicate with the people involved by phone or skype, and its no different. I cant believe I used to spend 6-7 hours a week commuting back and forth to do it, oir that a company rented an office for me to sit in. Seems like utter madness

    The big fucker is no going to the pub after, no office banter, no getting away from the wife and kids.. it is not as much fun, thats why some people dont want to move away from the old way of doing things, I reckon

    "it is not the same as being with your colleagues, hearing their calls in the background, having the manager walk the room and so on".. Yes, you're right, but I think the work can be done as effectively. It has in my case anyway, and lots of other people I know. Put the sales team on a cut of the bounty and they'll work hard

    Sales teams are all on commission anyway. I am glad it's all worked out for you, but our sales people are pretty desperate to get back to the office and that's where our FD wants them, too. It's not clear whether it's allowed.

  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,001

    That's the way that Excel kicks out a 7 day trendline.

    I am autogenerating a spreadsheet from the scraped data *and* autogenerating the chart using Apache POI.

    Was going to fiddle with another way of generating the charts, but got pulled into other things.
    The trendline is a moving average of the previous week, so what is it doing? It is hardly worth smoothing data that are already quite smooth in their raw state, and the weird floating above the bars just reflects the fact that when there is a downward trend the lagged average will be bigger than the most recent values. Sorry to be negative, but I think the raw data speak for themselves.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,632
    Carnyx said:

    But it's the business itself that would kill people if it were allowed to function, given the existence of the virus. It's all part of profit and risk. You profit some of the time, you lose some of the time. Why should we bail these businesses out just because they [edited] would otherwise operate in an unsafe manner?

    I know there are othjer reasons - but the government's closing down a business doesn't count as one, any more than closing down a E. coliu 0157 infected takeaway would justify paying compensation to the takeaway owner.
    A nonsense comparison. A takeaway which is infected is at fault. It is only temporarily shut down and can remedy the situation. A restaurant which cannot operate because of this virus is not at fault. It is closed because of a government decision. It should either be supported until it can. Or compensated so that those running and working in it can use the compensation to do something else that is legal and viable.

    If you close whole sectors of the economy without some form of compensation, expect a major depression, social unrest and never again to win an election in your newly won seats.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,632
    Carnyx said:

    Hmm. I think you're omitting an intermediate step - that the virus has made the businesses inoperable, not the government. Their owners plainly cannot be allowed to operate lest they become a public health hazard (and some wouldn't want to).

    Yet they are risk-taking profit-making businesses. Why should the public purse compensate them for this risk but not others? Why should the public compensate them if, say, their business burns to the ground? Or there is a slump and there are not enough customers?

    I do however wonder if the argument for compensation lies rather in the degree to which the virus's prevalence is itself a consequence of government policy.
    The reason why this risk should be paid for by the government - and not others - is because other risks, such as the risk of fire, can be insured against. This one can’t.
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905

    Teams is excellent for internal company meetings. We are using it extensively. But you cannot manage a sales force as effectively with it as you can by having them in an office environment. If that is going to change, so be it. My point was that the government could be clearer about it.

    Sorry, I didn't read back through the entire thread so was talking a little at cross-purposes. I was thinking about both how we cope as best we can for the time being, and how businesses are likely to want to work in the future (which, when this is all over, will be more a commercial matter for them than it will be an issue for Government.)

    Even in those cases where there is thought to be some commercial value to gathering employees together in an office the whole time, this may very well be outweighed by the disadvantages. Offices cost a fortune to lease and to maintain, and it commonly costs a fortune (and a whole load of time and stress) for employees to commute to them as well. Which means that businesses that insist on full-time office-based working may find that they have to pay a premium over and above the rest of the market to attract the staff that they want. After all, if you're an experienced salesperson in a specialist sector, looking at two potential employers who are both offering to pay you £45,000pa, then which job are you going to go for - the WFH position, or the one that requires you to haul out of bed at the crack of dawn and spend a fifth of your waking hours going back and forth on shitty trains, and cough up £5,000 for a season ticket for the privilege?

    When my husband stopped working in London and started working a five-minute walk away it had a transformative effect upon his health and our household finances, even though the new job paid a bit less than the previous one. Millions of other commuters will have been discovering similar benefits for themselves since March.

    At the end of all this, I see no reason why any business should want to make people who can work from home come into an office full-time unless it is absolutely essential that they should do so. Commuting is basically a dirty, unhealthy, bad habit like smoking - and the lockdown has been the equivalent of chaining all the smokers to their radiators for months on end so that they're forced to go cold turkey. Bad habits can be very hard to shift, but once they're broken people don't typically want to take them up again.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    geoffw said:

    The trendline is a moving average of the previous week, so what is it doing? It is hardly worth smoothing data that are already quite smooth in their raw state, and the weird floating above the bars just reflects the fact that when there is a downward trend the lagged average will be bigger than the most recent values. Sorry to be negative, but I think the raw data speak for themselves.
    No, the trend line consistently floating above the data tells us something useful.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025

    It's reflexive, not personal.

    I just ignore him.
    Casino , very glad you see it is not a personal attack, rather a criticism of your view, I accept that as well and do not take anything as a personal attack or think that everyone will agree with my viewpoint but I will of course give my opinion vociferously.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,863
    edited May 2020
    isam said:

    When has the nerdier option won in recent British elections?

    1997 Blair vs Major - Nerd lost
    2001 Blair vs Hague - Nerd lost
    2005 Blair vs Howard - Nerd lost
    2010 Brown vs Cameron - Nerd lost
    2015 Cameron vs Miliband - Nerd lost
    2016 EU Ref Cameron & Osborne vs Boris & Farage - Nerds lost
    2017 May vs Corbyn - Nerd won narrowly after polls gave unassailable lead
    2019 Boris vs Corbyn - Nerd lost
    2024 Boris vs Starmer...

    I guess Labour need it to be AN Other vs Starmer. Rishi has had a lot more tv exposure than Sir Keir though.

    Charisma is wot wins it

    Major v Kinnock 1992, Major was the last nerd to win a majority, Kinnock had more charisma.

    Heath was also more of a nerd than Wilson and won in 1970.

    In the US Bush Snr in 1988 and Nixon in 1968 and 1972 were also nerds who won, Obama was also more of a nerd than McCain in 2008
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025
    edited May 2020

    I just know I'm going to regret saying this BUT... robbed "at gunpoint"? It makes it sound almost as if you and your fellow Scots have been kidnapped by force and taken hostage or something?

    In which case, what were the 55% thinking in 2014? Why didn't they run away screaming when given the chance? Was it a mass outbreak of Stockholm Syndrome?

    Seriously, whereas most tax does indeed end up being aggregated centrally, and thus Scotland ends up very largely dependent on a block grant (which I agree is wrong: the failure to devolve tax raising powers to the Scottish Parliament that are commensurate with its responsibilities is one of the two basic flaws in the devolution settlement,) Scotland gets back more from the UK Treasury than it pays in tax. This has been the case for most (though not all) of the period since devolution commenced, even allowing for a geographical share of North Sea revenues.

    Given that Scotland has more money spent on it than it raises, what it gets back is obviously not minimal; moreover, there must necessarily be a net flow of capital from cash "squandered on pet projects" (e.g. HS2, which I acknowledge looks increasingly useless given the way the world is now moving) to cash spent on nice things for Scotland, and not the other way around. Returning to 2014 for a moment, that's probably what saved the Union the last time around. It was perfectly obvious to most Scottish taxpayers that they were receiving meaningful support from South of the Border. If Scotland were a sustained net contributor to the UK Treasury, as Catalonia is to Spain, then the Yes campaign would probably have won.

    I will now retire to trench with helmet and await verbal hand grenades.
    Not at all , a good post but some inaccuracies there. As you say it is far from optimal for Scotland as policy and spending is mainly decided by England and English priorities, these are not suitable for a small country. You are wrong in that Scotland if you look back 30 - 40 years is a NET contributer to UK, last numbers I saw were £68B and even if supposedly in deficit last couple of years we are still in the green for contributing. You should also know we pay a share of HS2 as they claim it benefits Scotland but as a special project they don't add it to Barnett, which is common, whereas with Forth bridge they refused to contribute at all.
    The NO vote was down to over 65's and people not born in Scotland, indigenous people were in favour and vote was swung by people from outwith Scotland, lots from EU as scared to be out and many English naturally but far from all. Still if the cowardly pensioners had any backbone it would still have been won.
    Young people are very in favour of independence, Europeans realise what a balls they made and some more English will realise they really don't want to be under the Tories so next time, good few of the old pensioners will be gone and so next time the result is going to be very different. Hence Tories stalling but it is only a matter of time.
    @Black_Rook
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