Undefined discussion subject.
Comments
-
First0
-
You weren't wrong PtP.1
-
Who'd have thunk 'You ain't black' might end up being a positive?0
-
If Biden wants to win the Midwest Whitmer looks a better pick now than Klobuchar0
-
FPT
DougSeal said:
» show previous quotes
FFS read the post and calm down you angry little troll. I’m not saying there is discrimination, indeed down thread I say there isn’t, but there is a point to be answered beyond your usual hyperbolic “Little Englander” bullshit.
I’m throwing it out as a discussion point. “Bollox” is not an answer. Neither is “well, it can’t be discriminatory if YOU’RE doing it too.” In any event “we’re” not - the argument stems from the fact that English Unis charge the same wherever you reside on these islands. That the Scots don’t is probably justified a justified policy but there is an argument both ways that can’t be shut down by your direly repetitive, and frankly increasingly hysterical, insults.
Wah Wah Wah , you really are a big jessie, I am perfectly calm thank you very much , despite the rubbish I read on here about Scotland.. Bollox describes it perfectly. It is 100% fair, there can be NO argument whatsoever that it is in any way discriminatory.0 -
-
-
-
That will be him off the invite listScott_xP said:0 -
Picking a sitting governor in the middle of a pandemic is perhaps not the smartest of things to do. She has a job, and should be left to get on with it.HYUFD said:If Biden wants to win the Midwest Whitmer looks a better pick now than Klobuchar
Also, your complete fixation on the VP pick being important because of the state they come from is quite possibly not shared by those making the choice.
We will see.0 -
A special place in hell...williamglenn said:0 -
-
-
To win the EC Biden needs Pennsylvania where he was born and raised, Michigan where Whitmer is governor and has high approval ratings for her handling of the pandemic and Nebraska 02 where he was 10% ahead in the last poll there.Nigelb said:
Picking a sitting governor in the middle of a pandemic is perhaps not the smartest of things to do. She has a job, and should be left to get on with it.HYUFD said:If Biden wants to win the Midwest Whitmer looks a better pick now than Klobuchar
Also, your complete fixation on the VP pick being important because of the state they come from is quite possibly not shared by those making the choice.
We will see.
Those should be his main focus0 -
Klobuchar collapse KLAXON!!!0
-
0
-
https://twitter.com/PeterMannionMP/status/1266761082166751239malcolmg said:That will be him off the invite list
0 -
I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.0
-
A reminder of my prediction yesterday: Tories will be the most unpopular government in living memory by next summer.tlg86 said:
A special place in hell...williamglenn said:1 -
0
-
Quite.. shouldnt enter the political arena. If he is sacked he deserves it.rottenborough said:0 -
-
As I have been saying, PB Tories who think this be forgotten in a week or two are imho wrong. The anger is unlike anything I've seen, at least since poll tax or perhaps MPs expenses.Scott_xP said:2 -
Dominic Cummings better hope people don’t start getting sacked just because they deserve it for flagrant breaches of government policy.squareroot2 said:
Quite.. shouldnt enter the political arena. If he is sacked he deserves it.rottenborough said:0 -
Behind closed doors, admittedly. How can you get anywhere near social distancing in Rugby?ydoethur said:
0 -
At least, Prof VT knows a lot about football as well. I didn't see him when Boston played at Rochdale, but as a BGS old boy, he can't be all bad.
He followed me, albeit briefly, to Roche so I will support him anyway. Cummings Is a bad 'un and VT is now un-sackable.0 -
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.0 -
The sad truth is that most people don’t get dismissed because they “deserve” it. In Cummings case an employer with half a backbone would have got shot of him because of the massive repetitional damage caused by having him around. Whether or not he was “guilty” is very much a secondary consideration in such cases.ydoethur said:
Dominic Cummings better hope people don’t start getting sacked just because they deserve it for flagrant breaches of government policy.squareroot2 said:
Quite.. shouldnt enter the political arena. If he is sacked he deserves it.rottenborough said:0 -
DougSeal - there is the point that the previous policy was equitable in the sense that anyone who passed the entrance selection got fees paid - at least when I were a young un. But the discrimination arose because the "English" Gmt ordained that fees should be paid* and the Welsh and NI admins followed [or maybe they didn't have devolution in that area then? - same result anyway] but the Scottish Gmt did not. This is a historical poijnt though.malcolmg said:FPT
DougSeal said:
» show previous quotes
FFS read the post and calm down you angry little troll. I’m not saying there is discrimination, indeed down thread I say there isn’t, but there is a point to be answered beyond your usual hyperbolic “Little Englander” bullshit.
I’m throwing it out as a discussion point. “Bollox” is not an answer. Neither is “well, it can’t be discriminatory if YOU’RE doing it too.” In any event “we’re” not - the argument stems from the fact that English Unis charge the same wherever you reside on these islands. That the Scots don’t is probably justified a justified policy but there is an argument both ways that can’t be shut down by your direly repetitive, and frankly increasingly hysterical, insults.
Wah Wah Wah , you really are a big jessie, I am perfectly calm thank you very much , despite the rubbish I read on here about Scotland.. Bollox describes it perfectly. It is 100% fair, there can be NO argument whatsoever that it is in any way discriminatory.0 -
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.0 -
TuesdayDougSeal said:The sad truth is that most people don’t get dismissed because they “deserve” it. In Cummings case an employer with half a backbone would have got shot of him because of the massive repetitional damage caused by having him around. Whether or not he was “guilty” is very much a secondary consideration in such cases.
Crisis meeting in Downing Street. Thinking back, before holding a press conference, we probably should have held a press conference to check it was safe to hold a press conference.
“The daytrip to Barnard Castle does sound bad,” says Matt Hancock. “Even to our supporters.”
I roll my eyes and ask why we are even listening to the views of people I don’t respect at all.
“Because there aren’t any other people?” suggests Matt.
Then I remind him that he already tweeted I hadn’t done anything wrong.
Although he says he regrets that now, and it was only because I was holding that cattle prod.
Rishi Sunak says the problem might be that people just don’t find me very relatable.
“Why not?” I snap. “Because I drove to a castle?”
“It’s not like it was his wife’s castle,” agrees Michael Gove.
“Exactly!” I say. “That’s a completely different castle.”
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/my-week-dominic-cummings-67h27wsxs?shareToken=f811589c4832cd0fb69831f92f7475d80 -
Without spectators I assume.ydoethur said:0 -
There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=211 -
I had no idea that corner of Warwickshire was so crowded.OldKingCole said:
Behind closed doors, admittedly. How can you get anywhere near social distancing in Rugby?ydoethur said:1 -
CorrectHorseBattery's dreams might come true with this poll.williamglenn said:1 -
Visit the disused Central railway station?OldKingCole said:
Behind closed doors, admittedly. How can you get anywhere near social distancing in Rugby?ydoethur said:1 -
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.0 -
Never seen so much point-missing. The victims of the Scottish policy aren't wannabe English students who have more than enough perfectly good English universities to go to. It's the Scots, who are discriminated against by quotas on free places. So if you're English your 9 grand gets you a place to read physics or history or modern languages, but if you're Scottish you had better be o.k. with basket-weaving and applied theology, or soap opera studies. A quite unbelievable policy of self inflicted apartheid.malcolmg said:FPT
DougSeal said:
» show previous quotes
FFS read the post and calm down you angry little troll. I’m not saying there is discrimination, indeed down thread I say there isn’t, but there is a point to be answered beyond your usual hyperbolic “Little Englander” bullshit.
I’m throwing it out as a discussion point. “Bollox” is not an answer. Neither is “well, it can’t be discriminatory if YOU’RE doing it too.” In any event “we’re” not - the argument stems from the fact that English Unis charge the same wherever you reside on these islands. That the Scots don’t is probably justified a justified policy but there is an argument both ways that can’t be shut down by your direly repetitive, and frankly increasingly hysterical, insults.
Wah Wah Wah , you really are a big jessie, I am perfectly calm thank you very much , despite the rubbish I read on here about Scotland.. Bollox describes it perfectly. It is 100% fair, there can be NO argument whatsoever that it is in any way discriminatory.
https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/heartache-straight-students-rejected-top-136746080 -
He should be grateful that it won't get any attention. Very much NOT his place to be commenting on the domestic affairs of another country.williamglenn said:There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=210 -
+1williamglenn said:There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=210 -
How can you social distance when helping a jockey to mount a horse?OldKingCole said:
Behind closed doors, admittedly. How can you get anywhere near social distancing in Rugby?ydoethur said:0 -
China says hello.tlg86 said:
He should be grateful that it won't get any attention. Very much NOT his place to be commenting on the domestic affairs of another country.williamglenn said:There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=212 -
Oh dear
https://twitter.com/AnthonyMangnal1/status/1266682664775548931
https://twitter.com/AnthonyMangnal1/status/1266682665975021568
The third paragraph of Mr Mangnall’s response reads: "[Insert if there has been a bereavement: May I add my condolences to the recent loss of your family member.
"The current situation has made the ability to mourn the passing of loved ones all the more difficult. I send my best wishes to you and your family.]"0 -
I fear President Xi would agree with you.tlg86 said:
He should be grateful that it won't get any attention. Very much NOT his place to be commenting on the domestic affairs of another country.williamglenn said:There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=210 -
There is a very weak correlation between tweets saying a poll is exciting, and the actual poll being exciting.tlg86 said:
A special place in hell...williamglenn said:0 -
Just watching conference on delay.
Hopeless journalist thinks Everton v Liverpool is on BBC.
In fact it's free to air on Pick TV, simulcast on Sky Sports.0 -
Makes a refreshing change from Palestine.tlg86 said:
He should be grateful that it won't get any attention. Very much NOT his place to be commenting on the domestic affairs of another country.williamglenn said:There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=212 -
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.0 -
I disagree with all this. In America when politicians spoke up about injustices in Northern Ireland their audience was not on this side of the pond but Irish-American voters. Similarly Starmer is not talking to the Yanks but Labour’s large constituency of Black voters - many of whom have suffered similarly (although I hope and believe not to the same widespread extent as in the US) so it’s politics as normal.tlg86 said:
He should be grateful that it won't get any attention. Very much NOT his place to be commenting on the domestic affairs of another country.williamglenn said:There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=210 -
President Trump on the other hand....ydoethur said:
I fear President Xi would agree with you.tlg86 said:
He should be grateful that it won't get any attention. Very much NOT his place to be commenting on the domestic affairs of another country.williamglenn said:There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=210 -
If so, do you not think that is incredibly harsh? I know you think Cummings is as thick as mince, but I assume Ferguson and Calderwood are competent and good at what they do. It seems ridiculous that these indiscretions should end their professional careers.ydoethur said:
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.0 -
Core vote strategy. Perhaps the Tories don't have much to worry about after all.DougSeal said:
I disagree with all this. In America when politicians spoke up about injustices in Northern Ireland their audience was not on this side of the pond but Irish-American voters. Similarly Starmer is not talking to the Yanks but Labour’s large constituency of Black voters - many of whom have suffered similarly (although I hope and believe not to the same widespread extent as in the US) so it’s politics as normal.tlg86 said:
He should be grateful that it won't get any attention. Very much NOT his place to be commenting on the domestic affairs of another country.williamglenn said:There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=210 -
It's almost strong but inverse.rcs1000 said:
There is a very weak correlation between tweets saying a poll is exciting, and the actual poll being exciting.tlg86 said:
A special place in hell...williamglenn said:0 -
If I had done what any of them had done, I would undoubtedly have been sacked and very probably banned from teaching for two years, for bringing the school and the profession into disrepute. There are clauses in my contract and in Teachers’ Standards that set this out.tlg86 said:
If so, do you not think that is incredibly harsh? I know you think Cummings is as thick as mince, but I assume Ferguson and Calderwood are competent and good at what they do. It seems ridiculous that these indiscretions should end their professional careers.ydoethur said:
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.
So no, I do not think it is harsh. They broke their own rules for their own benefit. Are people so selfish and lacking in judgement fit to hold high public office?0 -
The Tories probably have a rock solid 40% in polling and will get at least that at the next election regardless of whatever happens with Cummings/Covid/economy due to the way voting is split across Brexit and generational lines.
Really difficult too see how Labour gets much more than 38% and ~250 seats like 2017 as a best case scenario.
HYUFD has been more accurate on a lot of things than other posters but it's hard to see how Labour can do well enough to cobble together a rainbow coalition let alone become largest party etc as long as Brexit is such a divisive/salient issue.2 -
I find that hard to believe. If you can provide an example of a teacher being sacked for similar offences, I'll retract that.ydoethur said:
If I had done what any of them had done, I would undoubtedly have been sacked and very probably banned from teaching for two years, for bringing the school and the profession into disrepute. There are clauses in my contract and in Teachers’ Standards that set this out.tlg86 said:
If so, do you not think that is incredibly harsh? I know you think Cummings is as thick as mince, but I assume Ferguson and Calderwood are competent and good at what they do. It seems ridiculous that these indiscretions should end their professional careers.ydoethur said:
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.
So no, I do not think it is harsh. They broke their own rules for their own benefit. Are people so selfish and lacking in judgement fit to hold high public office?0 -
The 'woman is Scotland' is a medic, and therefore would have no problem whatsoever in finding new employment!ydoethur said:
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.
Ferguson has, presumably gone back to his university.0 -
They can get on off the ground if they have to. Or put a portable mounting block in the paddock. Or a chair.ydoethur said:
How can you social distance when helping a jockey to mount a horse?OldKingCole said:
Behind closed doors, admittedly. How can you get anywhere near social distancing in Rugby?ydoethur said:0 -
-
+1 - although I might not get struck off I could expect a suspension and/or fine from the SRA (or whatever the Law Society’s enforcement arm is calling itself that week) and I would find it incredibly hard to find another Law Firm.ydoethur said:
If I had done what any of them had done, I would undoubtedly have been sacked and very probably banned from teaching for two years, for bringing the school and the profession into disrepute. There are clauses in my contract and in Teachers’ Standards that set this out.tlg86 said:
If so, do you not think that is incredibly harsh? I know you think Cummings is as thick as mince, but I assume Ferguson and Calderwood are competent and good at what they do. It seems ridiculous that these indiscretions should end their professional careers.ydoethur said:
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.
So no, I do not think it is harsh. They broke their own rules for their own benefit. Are people so selfish and lacking in judgement fit to hold high public office?0 -
Suggest he continues to focus on the poison in his own party before he starts on other countries.Andy_JS said:
+1williamglenn said:There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=211 -
It's a lot cheaper to defect or de-activate when the alternative is no longer a loony enabler of anti-Semitism.Scott_xP said:1 -
It's actually not that difficultt. You just lower your outstretched hand and the jockey puts his toe in it and liftls himself off. There's minimal contact.IshmaelZ said:
They can get on off the ground if they have to. Or put a portable mounting block in the paddock. Or a chair.ydoethur said:
How can you social distance when helping a jockey to mount a horse?OldKingCole said:
Behind closed doors, admittedly. How can you get anywhere near social distancing in Rugby?ydoethur said:
A much bigger problem is a tight finish where the jockeys will be within a couple of feet and exerting maximum effort. Even with masks, that's risky.
As for Rugby, forget it. Warwickshire is no place for social distancing, ever.0 -
But how would they know? Do you get struck off for speeding offences?DougSeal said:
+1 - although I might not get struck off I could expect a suspension and/or fine from the SRA (or whatever the Law Society’s enforcement arm is calling itself that week) and I would find it incredibly hard to find another Law Firm.ydoethur said:
If I had done what any of them had done, I would undoubtedly have been sacked and very probably banned from teaching for two years, for bringing the school and the profession into disrepute. There are clauses in my contract and in Teachers’ Standards that set this out.tlg86 said:
If so, do you not think that is incredibly harsh? I know you think Cummings is as thick as mince, but I assume Ferguson and Calderwood are competent and good at what they do. It seems ridiculous that these indiscretions should end their professional careers.ydoethur said:
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.
So no, I do not think it is harsh. They broke their own rules for their own benefit. Are people so selfish and lacking in judgement fit to hold high public office?0 -
I agree that, as much as I like to rip the piss out of him, HYUFD has a lot of insight. Certainly more than me on politics. Where I differ is that I just cannot see, with everything else going on, Brexit being a remotely salient issue come 2024. I don’t even think it’s one now, it divides opinion to be sure, but it’s dropping in the list of issues people care about and will drop further.Gary_Burton said:The Tories probably have a rock solid 40% in polling and will get at least that at the next election regardless of whatever happens with Cummings/Covid/economy due to the way voting is split across Brexit and generational lines.
Really difficult too see how Labour gets much more than 38% and ~250 seats like 2017 as a best case scenario.
HYUFD has been more accurate on a lot of things than other posters but it's hard to see how Labour can do well enough to cobble together a rainbow coalition let alone become largest party etc as long as Brexit is such a divisive/salient issue.1 -
Showboatingrottenborough said:
Suggest he continues to focus on the poison in his own party before he starts on other countries.Andy_JS said:
+1williamglenn said:There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=210 -
The Defense Department ordered the Army to prepare military police units to deploy to Minneapolis after another night of protests.
RIGHT NOWThe Pentagon says that active-duty units from across the country have been put on notice, at the behest of President Trump.
NYTimes
0 -
You must have very strong arms, I have to offer both hands with the fingers laced together. But I agree you can do it without your faces getting particularly close.Peter_the_Punter said:
It's actually not that difficultt. You just lower your outstretched hand and the jockey puts his toe in it and liftls himself off. There's minimal contact.IshmaelZ said:
They can get on off the ground if they have to. Or put a portable mounting block in the paddock. Or a chair.ydoethur said:
How can you social distance when helping a jockey to mount a horse?OldKingCole said:
Behind closed doors, admittedly. How can you get anywhere near social distancing in Rugby?ydoethur said:
A much bigger problem is a tight finish where the jockeys will be within a couple of feet and exerting maximum effort. Even with masks, that's risky.
As for Rugby, forget it. Warwickshire is no place for social distancing, ever.0 -
Trump's election campaign in full:
"Smash the enemies of the people within and smash the enemies of America without"0 -
I agree. Twattish Tweet.tlg86 said:
He should be grateful that it won't get any attention. Very much NOT his place to be commenting on the domestic affairs of another country.williamglenn said:There’s something weird about referring to this as if it had happened here. We don’t need to import American culture wars.
https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1266672661679218688?s=210 -
I admire your optimismDougSeal said:
I agree that, as much as I like to rip the piss out of him, HYUFD has a lot of insight. Certainly more than me on politics. Where I differ is that I just cannot see, with everything else going on, Brexit being a remotely salient issue come 2024. I don’t even think it’s one now, it divides opinion to be sure, but it’s dropping in the list of issues people care about and will drop further.Gary_Burton said:The Tories probably have a rock solid 40% in polling and will get at least that at the next election regardless of whatever happens with Cummings/Covid/economy due to the way voting is split across Brexit and generational lines.
Really difficult too see how Labour gets much more than 38% and ~250 seats like 2017 as a best case scenario.
HYUFD has been more accurate on a lot of things than other posters but it's hard to see how Labour can do well enough to cobble together a rainbow coalition let alone become largest party etc as long as Brexit is such a divisive/salient issue.0 -
How does the Hodge work that out? Mass social unrest is normally the thing politicians fear the most.rottenborough said:0 -
MPs expenses is similar, but was against all the parties. This hits the Tories, and especially new tory voters who thought Boris was a (posh) man of the people.rottenborough said:
As I have been saying, PB Tories who think this be forgotten in a week or two are imho wrong. The anger is unlike anything I've seen, at least since poll tax or perhaps MPs expenses.Scott_xP said:0 -
You thick half wit, more bollox , I would not wipe your arse with the daily retard. When you have no clue what you are talking about best to keep it to yourself.IshmaelZ said:
Never seen so much point-missing. The victims of the Scottish policy aren't wannabe English students who have more than enough perfectly good English universities to go to. It's the Scots, who are discriminated against by quotas on free places. So if you're English your 9 grand gets you a place to read physics or history or modern languages, but if you're Scottish you had better be o.k. with basket-weaving and applied theology, or soap opera studies. A quite unbelievable policy of self inflicted apartheid.malcolmg said:FPT
DougSeal said:
» show previous quotes
FFS read the post and calm down you angry little troll. I’m not saying there is discrimination, indeed down thread I say there isn’t, but there is a point to be answered beyond your usual hyperbolic “Little Englander” bullshit.
I’m throwing it out as a discussion point. “Bollox” is not an answer. Neither is “well, it can’t be discriminatory if YOU’RE doing it too.” In any event “we’re” not - the argument stems from the fact that English Unis charge the same wherever you reside on these islands. That the Scots don’t is probably justified a justified policy but there is an argument both ways that can’t be shut down by your direly repetitive, and frankly increasingly hysterical, insults.
Wah Wah Wah , you really are a big jessie, I am perfectly calm thank you very much , despite the rubbish I read on here about Scotland.. Bollox describes it perfectly. It is 100% fair, there can be NO argument whatsoever that it is in any way discriminatory.
https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/heartache-straight-students-rejected-top-136746080 -
Don't tell Hitchens but that Lord Sumption bloke is being ignored yet again on R4 at this very minute. Shocking the way that he's been silenced.0
-
Trump thrives off uncomfortable division? I dont think the unrest makes him walk it, but it probably does improve his chances of scaring enough swing voters from voting Democrat.Stark_Dawning said:
How does the Hodge work that out? Mass social unrest is normally the thing politicians fear the most.rottenborough said:1 -
The issue would not be the offence itself (no, you don’t get struck off for speeding offences but, unless it’s a fixed penalty, you have to self report any conviction) but I would be fined or suspended bringing the profession into disrepute if my trivial transgressions were publicised as Cummings’ have been. By definition that means the SRA would obviously know about it.tlg86 said:
But how would they know? Do you get struck off for speeding offences?DougSeal said:
+1 - although I might not get struck off I could expect a suspension and/or fine from the SRA (or whatever the Law Society’s enforcement arm is calling itself that week) and I would find it incredibly hard to find another Law Firm.ydoethur said:
If I had done what any of them had done, I would undoubtedly have been sacked and very probably banned from teaching for two years, for bringing the school and the profession into disrepute. There are clauses in my contract and in Teachers’ Standards that set this out.tlg86 said:
If so, do you not think that is incredibly harsh? I know you think Cummings is as thick as mince, but I assume Ferguson and Calderwood are competent and good at what they do. It seems ridiculous that these indiscretions should end their professional careers.ydoethur said:
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.
So no, I do not think it is harsh. They broke their own rules for their own benefit. Are people so selfish and lacking in judgement fit to hold high public office?
For example, in 2018 Mark Lewis, who is Jewish, was fined £2,500 at the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal after he ‘wished death’ to trolls taunting him with anti-Semitic abuse on Twitter. A bonkers prosecution that caused a lot of disquiet - but that is how seriously it’s taken.
0 -
Kind of sums up the knowledge of Scotland on here, pretty pathetic comment and that is being polite.OldKingCole said:
The 'woman is Scotland' is a medic, and therefore would have no problem whatsoever in finding new employment!ydoethur said:
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.
Ferguson has, presumably gone back to his university.0 -
Not surprised. I would not be gobsmacked to learn that they have lost as many traditional shire Tories as new red wallers over this.Scott_xP said:
Personal statements of change of allegiance always look a bit astroturfish, so I won't make one.0 -
You are unusually chipper today, Malcolm.malcolmg said:
You thick half wit, more bollox , I would not wipe your arse with the daily retard. When you have no clue what you are talking about best to keep it to yourself.IshmaelZ said:
Never seen so much point-missing. The victims of the Scottish policy aren't wannabe English students who have more than enough perfectly good English universities to go to. It's the Scots, who are discriminated against by quotas on free places. So if you're English your 9 grand gets you a place to read physics or history or modern languages, but if you're Scottish you had better be o.k. with basket-weaving and applied theology, or soap opera studies. A quite unbelievable policy of self inflicted apartheid.malcolmg said:FPT
DougSeal said:
» show previous quotes
FFS read the post and calm down you angry little troll. I’m not saying there is discrimination, indeed down thread I say there isn’t, but there is a point to be answered beyond your usual hyperbolic “Little Englander” bullshit.
I’m throwing it out as a discussion point. “Bollox” is not an answer. Neither is “well, it can’t be discriminatory if YOU’RE doing it too.” In any event “we’re” not - the argument stems from the fact that English Unis charge the same wherever you reside on these islands. That the Scots don’t is probably justified a justified policy but there is an argument both ways that can’t be shut down by your direly repetitive, and frankly increasingly hysterical, insults.
Wah Wah Wah , you really are a big jessie, I am perfectly calm thank you very much , despite the rubbish I read on here about Scotland.. Bollox describes it perfectly. It is 100% fair, there can be NO argument whatsoever that it is in any way discriminatory.
https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/heartache-straight-students-rejected-top-136746081 -
That would be difficult, as it’s a new offence. Some idea of how strict these people can be may be found here:tlg86 said:
I find that hard to believe. If you can provide an example of a teacher being sacked for similar offences, I'll retract that.ydoethur said:
If I had done what any of them had done, I would undoubtedly have been sacked and very probably banned from teaching for two years, for bringing the school and the profession into disrepute. There are clauses in my contract and in Teachers’ Standards that set this out.tlg86 said:
If so, do you not think that is incredibly harsh? I know you think Cummings is as thick as mince, but I assume Ferguson and Calderwood are competent and good at what they do. It seems ridiculous that these indiscretions should end their professional careers.ydoethur said:
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.
So no, I do not think it is harsh. They broke their own rules for their own benefit. Are people so selfish and lacking in judgement fit to hold high public office?
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/854798/OFFICIAL_SENSITIVE_-_SOS_WEB_Decision_Chester__Mark_Robert.pdf (banned from teaching for lying in court to try and avoid a driving penalty - admittedly he did go to prison)
Or here:
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/874272/OFFICIAL_SENSITIVE_Turner_Philip_SoS_Decision_REDACTED__007_.pdf (again, though, this did partly involve conduct in a school).
The relevant standards are here:
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/665520/Teachers__Standards.pdf
Page 14, which is the key part, talks about not undermining the rule of law. My contract also says I must not engage in any conduct that would bring the school into any form of disrepute (which this certainly would) or I am subject to summary dismissal.
So you may find it hard to believe, but I’m pretty confident it would happen.0 -
The last time this happened in an election year, the LA Riots of May 1992, similarly triggered by police brutality on a black man, the Republican incumbent failed to be re-elected.rottenborough said:2 -
get them a step ladder, however given you can have an assortment of anybody in your back garden , what is the difference. They have turned it into a farce.ydoethur said:
How can you social distance when helping a jockey to mount a horse?OldKingCole said:
Behind closed doors, admittedly. How can you get anywhere near social distancing in Rugby?ydoethur said:0 -
So you only get struck off if it gets publicised by the media. I think that's wrong.DougSeal said:
The issue would not be the offence itself (no, you don’t get struck off for speeding offences but, unless it’s a fixed penalty, you have to self report any conviction) but I would be fined or suspended bringing the profession into disrepute if my trivial transgressions were publicised as Cummings’ have been. By definition that means the SRA would obviously know about it.tlg86 said:
But how would they know? Do you get struck off for speeding offences?DougSeal said:
+1 - although I might not get struck off I could expect a suspension and/or fine from the SRA (or whatever the Law Society’s enforcement arm is calling itself that week) and I would find it incredibly hard to find another Law Firm.ydoethur said:
If I had done what any of them had done, I would undoubtedly have been sacked and very probably banned from teaching for two years, for bringing the school and the profession into disrepute. There are clauses in my contract and in Teachers’ Standards that set this out.tlg86 said:
If so, do you not think that is incredibly harsh? I know you think Cummings is as thick as mince, but I assume Ferguson and Calderwood are competent and good at what they do. It seems ridiculous that these indiscretions should end their professional careers.ydoethur said:
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.
So no, I do not think it is harsh. They broke their own rules for their own benefit. Are people so selfish and lacking in judgement fit to hold high public office?
For example, in 2018 Mark Lewis, who is Jewish, was fined £2,500 at the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal after he ‘wished death’ to trolls taunting him with anti-Semitic abuse on Twitter. A bonkers prosecution that caused a lot of disquiet - but that is how seriously it’s taken.0 -
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-46427990malcolmg said:
You thick half wit, more bollox , I would not wipe your arse with the daily retard. When you have no clue what you are talking about best to keep it to yourself.IshmaelZ said:
Never seen so much point-missing. The victims of the Scottish policy aren't wannabe English students who have more than enough perfectly good English universities to go to. It's the Scots, who are discriminated against by quotas on free places. So if you're English your 9 grand gets you a place to read physics or history or modern languages, but if you're Scottish you had better be o.k. with basket-weaving and applied theology, or soap opera studies. A quite unbelievable policy of self inflicted apartheid.malcolmg said:FPT
DougSeal said:
» show previous quotes
FFS read the post and calm down you angry little troll. I’m not saying there is discrimination, indeed down thread I say there isn’t, but there is a point to be answered beyond your usual hyperbolic “Little Englander” bullshit.
I’m throwing it out as a discussion point. “Bollox” is not an answer. Neither is “well, it can’t be discriminatory if YOU’RE doing it too.” In any event “we’re” not - the argument stems from the fact that English Unis charge the same wherever you reside on these islands. That the Scots don’t is probably justified a justified policy but there is an argument both ways that can’t be shut down by your direly repetitive, and frankly increasingly hysterical, insults.
Wah Wah Wah , you really are a big jessie, I am perfectly calm thank you very much , despite the rubbish I read on here about Scotland.. Bollox describes it perfectly. It is 100% fair, there can be NO argument whatsoever that it is in any way discriminatory.
https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/heartache-straight-students-rejected-top-13674608
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/01/01/15000-scots-miss-university-place-snp-government-cap-criticised/
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/scottish-students-squeezed-out-of-university-places-59p7wvcnh
https://www.ed.ac.uk/student-recruitment/admissions-advice/admissions-statistics
https://www.scotsman.com/news/scottish-news/scottish-youngsters-losing-out-english-counterparts-university-places-1410778
https://www.pressreader.com/uk/scottish-daily-mail/20200102/281552292780675
And so on...0 -
Too many people go to university.0
-
Rob, the bollox is worse than normal fare, looks like the loonies have been let out for the day. I am having a wonderful day in the garden , just about to get BBQ on the go , all is well apart from some half wits on here trying to think and making a cod of it.RobD said:
You are unusually chipper today, Malcolm.malcolmg said:
You thick half wit, more bollox , I would not wipe your arse with the daily retard. When you have no clue what you are talking about best to keep it to yourself.IshmaelZ said:
Never seen so much point-missing. The victims of the Scottish policy aren't wannabe English students who have more than enough perfectly good English universities to go to. It's the Scots, who are discriminated against by quotas on free places. So if you're English your 9 grand gets you a place to read physics or history or modern languages, but if you're Scottish you had better be o.k. with basket-weaving and applied theology, or soap opera studies. A quite unbelievable policy of self inflicted apartheid.malcolmg said:FPT
DougSeal said:
» show previous quotes
FFS read the post and calm down you angry little troll. I’m not saying there is discrimination, indeed down thread I say there isn’t, but there is a point to be answered beyond your usual hyperbolic “Little Englander” bullshit.
I’m throwing it out as a discussion point. “Bollox” is not an answer. Neither is “well, it can’t be discriminatory if YOU’RE doing it too.” In any event “we’re” not - the argument stems from the fact that English Unis charge the same wherever you reside on these islands. That the Scots don’t is probably justified a justified policy but there is an argument both ways that can’t be shut down by your direly repetitive, and frankly increasingly hysterical, insults.
Wah Wah Wah , you really are a big jessie, I am perfectly calm thank you very much , despite the rubbish I read on here about Scotland.. Bollox describes it perfectly. It is 100% fair, there can be NO argument whatsoever that it is in any way discriminatory.
https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/heartache-straight-students-rejected-top-136746080 -
I agree Starmer is unlikely to win over Tory voters on anything like the scale Blair did in 1997.Gary_Burton said:The Tories probably have a rock solid 40% in polling and will get at least that at the next election regardless of whatever happens with Cummings/Covid/economy due to the way voting is split across Brexit and generational lines.
Really difficult too see how Labour gets much more than 38% and ~250 seats like 2017 as a best case scenario.
HYUFD has been more accurate on a lot of things than other posters but it's hard to see how Labour can do well enough to cobble together a rainbow coalition let alone become largest party etc as long as Brexit is such a divisive/salient issue.
However remember in 1964 Labour scraped in with barely any increase in its voteshare at all and in February 1974 got in despite losing votes as Tory voters went Liberal.
I think that is a possibility if we go to WTO terms Brexit and Tory Remainers go LD, I cannot see Labour getting over 40% with Starmer, agreed0 -
They sound more serious to me. The second one did make me snigger:ydoethur said:
That would be difficult, as it’s a new offence. Some idea of how strict these people can be may be found here:tlg86 said:
I find that hard to believe. If you can provide an example of a teacher being sacked for similar offences, I'll retract that.ydoethur said:
If I had done what any of them had done, I would undoubtedly have been sacked and very probably banned from teaching for two years, for bringing the school and the profession into disrepute. There are clauses in my contract and in Teachers’ Standards that set this out.tlg86 said:
If so, do you not think that is incredibly harsh? I know you think Cummings is as thick as mince, but I assume Ferguson and Calderwood are competent and good at what they do. It seems ridiculous that these indiscretions should end their professional careers.ydoethur said:
I would assume so. It depends on whether they held the positions on secondment from another place of work or were employed directly by the government.tlg86 said:
Here's something I've been wondering about. Are Ferguson and the woman in Scotland now unemployed?ydoethur said:
OK, so any three of the above along with tlg86 and Square Root, plus presumably the ghost of Harry Flashman (if they have phone lines to wherever such spirits go).tlg86 said:
If I was asked whether he should go I would say "no", even though I'd have sacked him if I had been the PM.ydoethur said:
I agree.MaxPB said:I think the poll is going to be more or less evens within the MoE.
The 3% who say Cummings should stay may just be because they happened to ring Lord Wakefield, Matt Hancock and Bluest Blue.
So no, I do not think it is harsh. They broke their own rules for their own benefit. Are people so selfish and lacking in judgement fit to hold high public office?
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/854798/OFFICIAL_SENSITIVE_-_SOS_WEB_Decision_Chester__Mark_Robert.pdf (banned from teaching for lying in court to try and avoid a driving penalty - admittedly he did go to prison)
Or here:
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/874272/OFFICIAL_SENSITIVE_Turner_Philip_SoS_Decision_REDACTED__007_.pdf (again, though, this did partly involve conduct in a school).
The relevant standards are here:
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/665520/Teachers__Standards.pdf
Page 14, which is the key part, talks about not undermining the rule of law. My contract also says I must not engage in any conduct that would bring the school into any form of disrepute (which this certainly would) or I am subject to summary dismissal.
So you may find it hard to believe, but I’m pretty confident it would happen.
2. During one or more lessons with pupils he expressed inappropriate views and/or
discussed inappropriate topics leading to one or more pupils suggesting that:
a. on or around 13 July 2018, “All Mexicans were criminals and/or bad” or
words to that effect;
b. on or around 4 September 2018, if a person of an ethnic minority is
unhappy with a country’s policies they should “leave the country”.
I used to have fantastic arguments with my RE teacher who was from Ghana. She was a big fan of Robert Mugabe and thought what he was doing in 2002-03 was fantastic. Now, I obviously wasn't a snowflake about it, but I'm guessing an education panel wouldn't have too much of a problem with her giving those opinions.0