Howdy, Stranger!

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

Options

politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » While the nation has been enjoying Sunak’s half price food dea

SystemSystem Posts: 11,687
edited August 2020 in General
imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » While the nation has been enjoying Sunak’s half price food deal he’s been knocked backwards in the PM v Chancellor polling

We’ve now had the initial three day session of the extraordinary half price meal deal announced by Chancellor Sunak last month and from my totally unscientific findings it has certainly grabbed the public’s attention. Just about everybody I’ve meet over the first three days is talking about it and certainly participating cafes and restaurants seemed to have been full.

Read the full story here

«13456

Comments

  • Options
    I normally don't do this but it's been over 2 hours so.. 1st!
  • Options
    All the PB Brits bloated from their Rishi-roni discount blowouts. Personally think going to crowded restaurants for discount grub can be problematic at the best of times, let alone during raging pandemic.

    Though you can take precautions. Such as asking for extra leeks in you soup.
  • Options
    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,289
    Yes, I actually overhead people wandering around town yesterday evening moaning that they’d been turned away from everywhere they tried to go for a meal.
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 32,003
    We had a fairly stressful day yesterday....... some roofing problems, all of which were sorted....... so at 5.30 when everyone had gone I rang three of our favourite eating places to see if we could have a table. All fully booked outside. Never mind, at least they were taking money, which they haven't been since March.
  • Options
    Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,982
    Seizing control is all very well. Sometimes forgotten is that power is useful only when you have a notion of what you want to do with it. Boris Johnson has stumbled upon this truth during an ill-starred year in 10 Downing Street. Mr Johnson’s personal ambition never looked beyond becoming prime minister. With his hands finally on the levers of power, but lacking anything resembling a prospectus, he has been lost.

    Initially, he seemed to think Brexit — “taking back control” as the Brexiters call it — would be purpose enough. In the event, his premiership is being shaped by coronavirus. Here, all the decision-making has belonged to No 10 from the outset, with no one in Brussels to gainsay British politicians. The policy and communications strategy have belonged to the prime minister and his special adviser Dominic Cummings. The result has been a shambles.


    https://www.ft.com/content/f029ebf7-557c-46cc-81ca-ae94202d5229
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 32,003
    Scott_xP said:

    Seizing control is all very well. Sometimes forgotten is that power is useful only when you have a notion of what you want to do with it. Boris Johnson has stumbled upon this truth during an ill-starred year in 10 Downing Street. Mr Johnson’s personal ambition never looked beyond becoming prime minister. With his hands finally on the levers of power, but lacking anything resembling a prospectus, he has been lost.

    Initially, he seemed to think Brexit — “taking back control” as the Brexiters call it — would be purpose enough. In the event, his premiership is being shaped by coronavirus. Here, all the decision-making has belonged to No 10 from the outset, with no one in Brussels to gainsay British politicians. The policy and communications strategy have belonged to the prime minister and his special adviser Dominic Cummings. The result has been a shambles.


    https://www.ft.com/content/f029ebf7-557c-46cc-81ca-ae94202d5229

    Thought-provoking post. What is the Government going to do next year, apart from deal with the continuing problem of coronavirus?
    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.
  • Options
    Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,982

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
  • Options
    Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981
    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 32,003
    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    See what you mean! In other words, yes, there will be eye-catching drama, but with PM Johnson having to explain himself. And there won't be a fridge in which to hide.
    One wonders, how many old-fashioned Conservatives there still are in the House; who put honour and reputation above fortune, or perchance, becoming a Lord.
  • Options

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,686
    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    A nice little earner when Bozo was spaffing money about.

    Ear loop masks are OK in offices etc, but not good enough in hot zones.
  • Options
    kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 3,956
    I would guess that the chancellor's problem is less that he's out of the limelight and more that even if their job is safe, most people read in the news about wave after wave of redundancies, probably know someone who has been made redundant, or whose business is on the edge. And wonder how safe their job is.

    And his answer to this is a government sponsored Meerkat Meal. Amateur hour.
  • Options
    nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    See what you mean! In other words, yes, there will be eye-catching drama, but with PM Johnson having to explain himself. And there won't be a fridge in which to hide.
    One wonders, how many old-fashioned Conservatives there still are in the House; who put honour and reputation above fortune, or perchance, becoming a Lord.
    It will be buried and never heard of again.
  • Options
    eekeek Posts: 24,983
    Scott_xP said:
    Tried but Failed to help Desmond avoid £40m in CIL
  • Options
    eekeek Posts: 24,983

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    See what you mean! In other words, yes, there will be eye-catching drama, but with PM Johnson having to explain himself. And there won't be a fridge in which to hide.
    One wonders, how many old-fashioned Conservatives there still are in the House; who put honour and reputation above fortune, or perchance, becoming a Lord.
    None.
  • Options
    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,190

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    That's basically how Cameron got the gig, although that was in opposition. Personally I think Hancock has performed well in front of the press over the last six months. I know some on here think he's done a bad job, which might be the case, but in a way all that matters is, as you say, do they look the part.
  • Options
    Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981
    edited August 2020
    ..
  • Options
    Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,686
    edited August 2020

    All the PB Brits bloated from their Rishi-roni discount blowouts. Personally think going to crowded restaurants for discount grub can be problematic at the best of times, let alone during raging pandemic.

    Though you can take precautions. Such as asking for extra leeks in you soup.

    It will be interesting what Track and Trace starts to pick up, or more likely local Public Health*. Are we going to see a repetition of the Aberdeen pub crawl?

    I suspect in much of the country eating in is low risk, but low risk is not zero risk. With thousands of restaurants participating, even places like Leicester and Blackburn, it surely is just a matter of time.

    *Local councils are proving far more effective at tracing on a fraction of the budget:
    https://amp.theguardian.com/society/2020/aug/04/english-councils-with-highest-covid-rates-launch-own-test-and-trace-systems?__twitter_impression=true
  • Options
    eristdooferistdoof Posts: 4,897

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    No! You ARE financially 10 pounds worse off. Had you not used the offer you would have been 20 pounds worse off.
  • Options
    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,289

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    Not if you weren't planning to eat out on a Monday evening in the first place!
  • Options
    Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,982
    Foxy said:

    It will be interesting what Track and Trace starts to pick up, or more likely local Public Health*. Are we going to see a repetition of the Aberdeen pub crawl?


  • Options
    eristdooferistdoof Posts: 4,897
    edited August 2020
    IanB2 said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    Not if you weren't planning to eat out on a Monday evening in the first place!
    Even if she was planning to eat out on a Monday in the first place, she would still be financially worse off.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,287
    edited August 2020
    eristdoof said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    No! You ARE financially 10 pounds worse off. Had you not used the offer you would have been 20 pounds worse off.
    Depends on what you were planning to eat instead.

    If it was Pot Noodles, then yes, you would be £10 worse off. Plus you would be worse off still as you would eat something horrible and then probably throw it up.

    If you had bought rump steak to cook at home with potatoes, maybe not.
  • Options
    noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 20,770
    tlg86 said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    That's basically how Cameron got the gig, although that was in opposition. Personally I think Hancock has performed well in front of the press over the last six months. I know some on here think he's done a bad job, which might be the case, but in a way all that matters is, as you say, do they look the part.
    The problem for Hancock was that anything related to health was made his responsibility. When the PM was out of action that left him with responsibility for about 60% of what was important at the time, whilst most cabinet members had responsibility for less than 2% of priority tasks. I dont believe that anyone on the planet would have done well in that scenario so the fault for his work lies with the PM and Raab, the acting PM.

    Gove and Milling, in the cabinet without any departmental responsibilities, should have stepped up to help, test, track and trace could have been led by the Home Secretary, care homes by the Communities Secretary, sourcing PPE could have been the responsibility of the Business and Industrial Strategy, leaving Hancock to focus on the NHS.

    Given the hand he was dealt by his managers I would agree he has done well, but in terms of overall effectiveness it was poor because he was trying to do much, and therefore could only focus on firefighting daily issues.
  • Options
    NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,347
    Scott_xP said:

    Foxy said:

    It will be interesting what Track and Trace starts to pick up, or more likely local Public Health*. Are we going to see a repetition of the Aberdeen pub crawl?


    You must really hate the polls at the moment. All the effort you put in with your mind numbing retweeting and the Tories have gone up in the polls.
  • Options
    squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,359

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    This thread tells us exactly why Johnson/Cummings are so keen to emasculate judicial review. Without it, it gets much easier to throw public money at their mates.

    Sounds like libel to me. Hope you have deep pockets.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,259
    Jenrick defending his bonkers planning rule changes on R4.

    Or should I say Cummings's plans.

  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,259
    edited August 2020
    Jenrick saying very few people get involved when there is a planning application near or next to them.

    Of course they don't as there are very few grounds you can complain about. People look up the list of reasons you can object and there is usually sod all.
  • Options
    Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981
    eristdoof said:

    IanB2 said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    Not if you weren't planning to eat out on a Monday evening in the first place!
    Even if she was planning to eat out on a Monday in the first place, she would still be financially worse off.
    Is this the Ebeneezer Scrooge school of economic thought? Earn as much as possible and spend as little as possible?

    No doubt gruel will be fine whilst sitting up at night polishing your groats and shekels...

    (BTW - there are no pockets in a shroud)
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,287

    eristdoof said:

    IanB2 said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    Not if you weren't planning to eat out on a Monday evening in the first place!
    Even if she was planning to eat out on a Monday in the first place, she would still be financially worse off.
    Is this the Ebeneezer Scrooge school of economic thought? Earn as much as possible and spend as little as possible?

    No doubt gruel will be fine whilst sitting up at night polishing your groats and shekels...

    (BTW - there are no pockets in a shroud)
    Plenty of space in a coffin though.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,259
    Robinson now hammering Jenrick over Westferry.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,287

    Gove and Milling, in the cabinet without any departmental responsibilities, should have stepped up to help

    Speaking as somebody who has met Amanda Milling a number of times and quite likes her as a person - she really, really shouldn’t. You think things are bad now? Let her loose on them and she’ll find a way to make them worse.

    As for Gove...
  • Options

    eristdoof said:

    IanB2 said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    Not if you weren't planning to eat out on a Monday evening in the first place!
    Even if she was planning to eat out on a Monday in the first place, she would still be financially worse off.
    Is this the Ebeneezer Scrooge school of economic thought? Earn as much as possible and spend as little as possible?

    No doubt gruel will be fine whilst sitting up at night polishing your groats and shekels...

    (BTW - there are no pockets in a shroud)
    If you think you can’t take it with you, go and look at the Sutton Hoo exhibits at the British Museum for how our ancestors viewed the subject.
  • Options

    Jenrick defending his bonkers planning rule changes on R4.

    Or should I say Cummings's plans.

    It is time for real change to planning and as far as I can see it is vested interests including architects who are complaining most at the threat to their fee base

    As long as building regulations are followed and enforced this is a long overdue change
  • Options
    Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981
    ydoethur said:

    eristdoof said:

    IanB2 said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    Not if you weren't planning to eat out on a Monday evening in the first place!
    Even if she was planning to eat out on a Monday in the first place, she would still be financially worse off.
    Is this the Ebeneezer Scrooge school of economic thought? Earn as much as possible and spend as little as possible?

    No doubt gruel will be fine whilst sitting up at night polishing your groats and shekels...

    (BTW - there are no pockets in a shroud)
    Plenty of space in a coffin though.
    No there isn't.....
  • Options

    Scott_xP said:

    Foxy said:

    It will be interesting what Track and Trace starts to pick up, or more likely local Public Health*. Are we going to see a repetition of the Aberdeen pub crawl?


    You must really hate the polls at the moment. All the effort you put in with your mind numbing retweeting and the Tories have gone up in the polls.
    Nerve, touched.
  • Options
    noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 20,770
    edited August 2020
    ydoethur said:

    Gove and Milling, in the cabinet without any departmental responsibilities, should have stepped up to help

    Speaking as somebody who has met Amanda Milling a number of times and quite likes her as a person - she really, really shouldn’t. You think things are bad now? Let her loose on them and she’ll find a way to make them worse.

    As for Gove...
    I have hardly heard her speak let alone met her so cannot have a view. But again, the fault lies with the PM for his cabinet choices and delegated roles and responsibilities, not Hancock for failing to succeed on an impossible job.
  • Options

    Scott_xP said:

    Foxy said:

    It will be interesting what Track and Trace starts to pick up, or more likely local Public Health*. Are we going to see a repetition of the Aberdeen pub crawl?


    You must really hate the polls at the moment. All the effort you put in with your mind numbing retweeting and the Tories have gone up in the polls.
    Nerve, touched.
    Quite. Scott seems pretty rattled at the moment.
  • Options

    ydoethur said:

    eristdoof said:

    IanB2 said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    Not if you weren't planning to eat out on a Monday evening in the first place!
    Even if she was planning to eat out on a Monday in the first place, she would still be financially worse off.
    Is this the Ebeneezer Scrooge school of economic thought? Earn as much as possible and spend as little as possible?

    No doubt gruel will be fine whilst sitting up at night polishing your groats and shekels...

    (BTW - there are no pockets in a shroud)
    Plenty of space in a coffin though.
    No there isn't.....
    Did you never watch Time Team?
  • Options

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    This thread tells us exactly why Johnson/Cummings are so keen to emasculate judicial review. Without it, it gets much easier to throw public money at their mates.

    Sounds like libel to me. Hope you have deep pockets.
    On what basis is it libel?

  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,308
    Rishi's dishies seem to be a real hit. As some targeted expenditure to help a particularly vulnerable industry it is a clever piece of work and may well save some employment that would otherwise have been lost.

    I would say he and the Treasury have had the best crisis of any government department by a distance but whether Rishi can avoid opprobrium during the more difficult days ahead remains to be seen.
  • Options

    Scott_xP said:

    Foxy said:

    It will be interesting what Track and Trace starts to pick up, or more likely local Public Health*. Are we going to see a repetition of the Aberdeen pub crawl?


    You must really hate the polls at the moment. All the effort you put in with your mind numbing retweeting and the Tories have gone up in the polls.
    Nerve, touched.
    Quite. Scott seems pretty rattled at the moment.
    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    Boris is chaotic and mistakes are being made.

    I am neutral at present over Conservative v Labour but it's certain that Starmer, or indeed anyone else, would be making multitudes of errors and really there is nobody in labour, outside of Starmer, who is recognisable by the public or gives confidence they would know what they are doing
  • Options
    Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981

    eristdoof said:

    IanB2 said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    Not if you weren't planning to eat out on a Monday evening in the first place!
    Even if she was planning to eat out on a Monday in the first place, she would still be financially worse off.
    Is this the Ebeneezer Scrooge school of economic thought? Earn as much as possible and spend as little as possible?

    No doubt gruel will be fine whilst sitting up at night polishing your groats and shekels...

    (BTW - there are no pockets in a shroud)
    If you think you can’t take it with you, go and look at the Sutton Hoo exhibits at the British Museum for how our ancestors viewed the subject.
    Our ancestors? They were East Angles.

    Mine are Cruithin with likely some Pict.
  • Options

    Jenrick defending his bonkers planning rule changes on R4.

    Or should I say Cummings's plans.

    It is time for real change to planning and as far as I can see it is vested interests including architects who are complaining most at the threat to their fee base

    As long as building regulations are followed and enforced this is a long overdue change
    We’ll see how this one plays out. Tory areas will be most affected.

  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,686

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    This thread tells us exactly why Johnson/Cummings are so keen to emasculate judicial review. Without it, it gets much easier to throw public money at their mates.

    Sounds like libel to me. Hope you have deep pockets.
    On what basis is it libel?

    Indeed there is a pattern:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1291264253874380800?s=19

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1290727606640357378?s=09

  • Options
    Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,982

    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    On the contrary.

    The number of my fans who whine incessantly about the posts is increasing steadily

    You guys seem nervous about something
  • Options
    DavidL said:

    Rishi's dishies seem to be a real hit. As some targeted expenditure to help a particularly vulnerable industry it is a clever piece of work and may well save some employment that would otherwise have been lost.

    I would say he and the Treasury have had the best crisis of any government department by a distance but whether Rishi can avoid opprobrium during the more difficult days ahead remains to be seen.

    It’s a smart gimmick. I’ve seen plenty of queues of people waiting to get into places down here in Cornwall, so it should save some jobs for a while. As you say, though, the real test for Brand Sunak is still to come.

  • Options

    Jenrick defending his bonkers planning rule changes on R4.

    Or should I say Cummings's plans.

    It is time for real change to planning and as far as I can see it is vested interests including architects who are complaining most at the threat to their fee base

    As long as building regulations are followed and enforced this is a long overdue change
    We’ll see how this one plays out. Tory areas will be most affected.

    To be honest that should not be the factor and this ripping up of red tape is long overdue, but of course building regulations must remain in place and be enforced
  • Options
    Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981

    ydoethur said:

    eristdoof said:

    IanB2 said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    Not if you weren't planning to eat out on a Monday evening in the first place!
    Even if she was planning to eat out on a Monday in the first place, she would still be financially worse off.
    Is this the Ebeneezer Scrooge school of economic thought? Earn as much as possible and spend as little as possible?

    No doubt gruel will be fine whilst sitting up at night polishing your groats and shekels...

    (BTW - there are no pockets in a shroud)
    Plenty of space in a coffin though.
    No there isn't.....
    Did you never watch Time Team?
    Have you ever seen a dead body laid out in a coffin at the undertakers?
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,315
    edited August 2020
    Foxy said:

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    This thread tells us exactly why Johnson/Cummings are so keen to emasculate judicial review. Without it, it gets much easier to throw public money at their mates.

    Sounds like libel to me. Hope you have deep pockets.
    On what basis is it libel?

    Indeed there is a pattern:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1291264253874380800?s=19

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1290727606640357378?s=09

    The pattern here is too upset the elite/ establishment and it is working
  • Options

    ydoethur said:

    eristdoof said:

    IanB2 said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    Not if you weren't planning to eat out on a Monday evening in the first place!
    Even if she was planning to eat out on a Monday in the first place, she would still be financially worse off.
    Is this the Ebeneezer Scrooge school of economic thought? Earn as much as possible and spend as little as possible?

    No doubt gruel will be fine whilst sitting up at night polishing your groats and shekels...

    (BTW - there are no pockets in a shroud)
    Plenty of space in a coffin though.
    No there isn't.....
    Did you never watch Time Team?
    Have you ever seen a dead body laid out in a coffin at the undertakers?
    I have on several occasions unfortunately
  • Options
    Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,060
    edited August 2020

    eristdoof said:

    IanB2 said:

    Anyone handing out free money is bound to be popular. I wonder what will happen to his ratings when he wants the money back?

    Look beyond the "free money" crack (and of course for many people, furlough is a forced pay cut, not free money). Just compare the demeanour at briefings of the various ministers. Boris looks shambolic; Matt Hancock like a deer caught in headlights; and so on until you get to Rishi who seems confident and in command of his brief. Rishi looks like he belongs. That is why he might well succeed Boris.
    You do not think that the "Eating Out" scheme is "free money"? If I can eat a meal for £20 or the same meal for £10, surely the second variation makes me £10 better off?
    Not if you weren't planning to eat out on a Monday evening in the first place!
    Even if she was planning to eat out on a Monday in the first place, she would still be financially worse off.
    Is this the Ebeneezer Scrooge school of economic thought? Earn as much as possible and spend as little as possible?

    No doubt gruel will be fine whilst sitting up at night polishing your groats and shekels...

    (BTW - there are no pockets in a shroud)
    If you think you can’t take it with you, go and look at the Sutton Hoo exhibits at the British Museum for how our ancestors viewed the subject.
    Our ancestors? They were East Angles.

    Mine are Cruithin with likely some Pict.
    I was being a bit facetious, but you might be interested in this:

    https://www.britishmuseum.org/visit/object-trails/death-memory-meaning

    It shows that “taking it with you” is a common idea across a large part of history and pre-history.
  • Options

    Foxy said:

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    This thread tells us exactly why Johnson/Cummings are so keen to emasculate judicial review. Without it, it gets much easier to throw public money at their mates.

    Sounds like libel to me. Hope you have deep pockets.
    On what basis is it libel?

    Indeed there is a pattern:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1291264253874380800?s=19

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1290727606640357378?s=09

    The pattern here is too upset the elite and it is working
    The elite is loving it. This government of the elite is handing over public money left, right and centre to very wealthy, immensely privileged people. What’s to get upset about?

  • Options
    Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 13,003
    HMS Enterprise is on her way to Beirut; doubtless to provide support to the city's prostitutes and allied trades.

    Echo class was always considered a plum draft in the RN due to the (relative) luxury of the crew accommodation and the unlikelihood of ever having to do any hard graft.
  • Options
    nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    Scott_xP said:

    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    On the contrary.

    The number of my fans who whine incessantly about the posts is increasing steadily

    You guys seem nervous about something
    Well if they didn’t do anything wrong then There would be nothing to post would there?
  • Options

    Foxy said:

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    This thread tells us exactly why Johnson/Cummings are so keen to emasculate judicial review. Without it, it gets much easier to throw public money at their mates.

    Sounds like libel to me. Hope you have deep pockets.
    On what basis is it libel?

    Indeed there is a pattern:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1291264253874380800?s=19

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1290727606640357378?s=09

    The pattern here is too upset the elite and it is working
    The elite is loving it. This government of the elite is handing over public money left, right and centre to very wealthy, immensely privileged people. What’s to get upset about?

    It has gone on in politics in all parties since politics began

    I am not condoning it but am indicating that even beyond that the elite/establishment are seeing change that is driving them near insane.
  • Options
    Scott_xP said:

    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    On the contrary.

    The number of my fans who whine incessantly about the posts is increasing steadily

    You guys seem nervous about something
    I don't see the point. No-one on this forum has any power to change anything
  • Options
    Scott_xP said:

    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    On the contrary.

    The number of my fans who whine incessantly about the posts is increasing steadily

    You guys seem nervous about something
    But by your own logic the amount that you “whine” about the government must mean that you are nervous about something!

    There is probably a technical term for the “you are complaining about something therefore I must be right” logical fallacy, but it does get a bit tedious whichever side is doing it.
  • Options
    Scott_xP said:

    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    On the contrary.

    The number of my fans who whine incessantly about the posts is increasing steadily

    You guys seem nervous about something
    Maybe your mental health
  • Options
    NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,347

    Scott_xP said:

    Foxy said:

    It will be interesting what Track and Trace starts to pick up, or more likely local Public Health*. Are we going to see a repetition of the Aberdeen pub crawl?


    You must really hate the polls at the moment. All the effort you put in with your mind numbing retweeting and the Tories have gone up in the polls.
    Nerve, touched.
    Just stating a fact.

    As can be seen by my posts about masks I most certainly do not agree with everything the Government does.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,798

    Jenrick saying very few people get involved when there is a planning application near or next to them.

    Of course they don't as there are very few grounds you can complain about. People look up the list of reasons you can object and there is usually sod all.

    Oh it doesnt stop them, believe me. The only area people complain with less justification if upset is rights of way modifications.

    As previously observed fundamentally theres a disconnect at work here. The public want planning policies and procedures to work to say no to things, the government want policies and procedures to work to say yes to things. And in the middle you have developers messing about even if the policies are not what is holding them up.
  • Options
    Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 13,003



    I am not condoning it but am indicating that even beyond that the elite/establishment are seeing change that is driving them near insane.

    Johnson is the very definition of establishment elite and he is using his government's power to enrich other members of the establishment elite.

    As the forum's soi disant paladin of probity I am surprised you are so sanguine about it. But, hey, 80+ majority and all that. Enjoy it while it lasts.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,798

    Jenrick defending his bonkers planning rule changes on R4.

    Or should I say Cummings's plans.

    It is time for real change to planning and as far as I can see it is vested interests including architects who are complaining most at the threat to their fee base

    As long as building regulations are followed and enforced this is a long overdue change
    We’ll see how this one plays out. Tory areas will be most affected.

    To be honest that should not be the factor and this ripping up of red tape is long overdue, but of course building regulations must remain in place and be enforced
    Tory cllrs going bananas is definitely going to be a factor.
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,607
    Hmm, I think national lockdowns are about to become a thing in a lot of European countries again. I'm surprised that Spain hasn't already implemented a full national lockdown the figures are very bad, they are looking at 4-6k new cases per day at the moment. Only the UK and Italy look like a second wave might not be as bad, it could be because both had such publicly awful initial outbreaks that tourists are avoiding them or people are too scared to travel.
  • Options

    Foxy said:

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    This thread tells us exactly why Johnson/Cummings are so keen to emasculate judicial review. Without it, it gets much easier to throw public money at their mates.

    Sounds like libel to me. Hope you have deep pockets.
    On what basis is it libel?

    Indeed there is a pattern:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1291264253874380800?s=19

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1290727606640357378?s=09

    The pattern here is too upset the elite and it is working
    The elite is loving it. This government of the elite is handing over public money left, right and centre to very wealthy, immensely privileged people. What’s to get upset about?

    It has gone on in politics in all parties since politics began

    I am not condoning it but am indicating that even beyond that the elite/establishment are seeing change that is driving them near insane.
    How are Cummings, Johnson and co not part of the elite/establishment? They run the country!! They are currently in the process of centralising power and removing scrutiny. Where this ends is anyone’s guess, but up to now they are following the Orban/Erdogan playbook almost to the letter. If you don’t find that concerning, so be it - but let’s not pretend that when democracies break down it’s the existing elites that suffer.

  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,308

    Scott_xP said:

    Foxy said:

    It will be interesting what Track and Trace starts to pick up, or more likely local Public Health*. Are we going to see a repetition of the Aberdeen pub crawl?


    You must really hate the polls at the moment. All the effort you put in with your mind numbing retweeting and the Tories have gone up in the polls.
    Nerve, touched.
    Quite. Scott seems pretty rattled at the moment.
    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    Boris is chaotic and mistakes are being made.

    I am neutral at present over Conservative v Labour but it's certain that Starmer, or indeed anyone else, would be making multitudes of errors and really there is nobody in labour, outside of Starmer, who is recognisable by the public or gives confidence they would know what they are doing
    I think having a Shadow Chancellor with zero cut through is a particular problem for SKS. Labour remains suspect in how they would manage the economy and need both credibility and substance there.

    I am sure that I have kept my disdain for Brown well hidden over the years and you may not have picked up on it but even I would accept that he had considerable substance and was a key part of the Blair proposition in 1997. SKS needs a Brown, ideally without the accompanying psychosis, and I think he will struggle until he gets one. It's very unfortunate that Ed Balls is no longer in the Commons. I think he could do worse than Ed Miliband myself.
  • Options
    MaxPB said:

    Hmm, I think national lockdowns are about to become a thing in a lot of European countries again. I'm surprised that Spain hasn't already implemented a full national lockdown the figures are very bad, they are looking at 4-6k new cases per day at the moment. Only the UK and Italy look like a second wave might not be as bad, it could be because both had such publicly awful initial outbreaks that tourists are avoiding them or people are too scared to travel.

    Spain’s outbreaks remain very localised. Why shut down Extremadura if most of the problems are hundreds of miles to the north-east?

  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,798
    edited August 2020
    Scott_xP said:

    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    On the contrary.

    The number of my fans who whine incessantly about the posts is increasing steadily

    You guys seem nervous about something
    While theres no point in people objecting to your personal style, supernaturally divining the hidden meaning behind their doing so seems equally pointless. It's like Corbynites saying the reason Tories attacked him was they feared him winning.

    Sure it was a possible motivation, but there were clearly other possible motivations which were more likely, and theres risks in presuming an attack is for the reason you want than the reason people give.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,436

    Scott_xP said:

    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    On the contrary.

    The number of my fans who whine incessantly about the posts is increasing steadily

    You guys seem nervous about something
    I don't see the point. No-one on this forum has any power to change anything
    I am reminded of Farmer Tupaq....
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081

    Foxy said:

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    This thread tells us exactly why Johnson/Cummings are so keen to emasculate judicial review. Without it, it gets much easier to throw public money at their mates.

    Sounds like libel to me. Hope you have deep pockets.
    On what basis is it libel?

    Indeed there is a pattern:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1291264253874380800?s=19

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1290727606640357378?s=09

    The pattern here is too upset the elite and it is working
    The elite is loving it. This government of the elite is handing over public money left, right and centre to very wealthy, immensely privileged people. What’s to get upset about?

    It has gone on in politics in all parties since politics began

    I am not condoning it but am indicating that even beyond that the elite/establishment are seeing change that is driving them near insane.
    Who on earth is this phantom “elite” you keep talking about? @Scott_xP ? Come on...
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,798

    Scott_xP said:

    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    On the contrary.

    The number of my fans who whine incessantly about the posts is increasing steadily

    You guys seem nervous about something
    But by your own logic the amount that you “whine” about the government must mean that you are nervous about something!

    There is probably a technical term for the “you are complaining about something therefore I must be right” logical fallacy, but it does get a bit tedious whichever side is doing it.
    Yes, it goes along with the 'this upsets the right people' fallacy.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,308

    Scott_xP said:

    Foxy said:

    It will be interesting what Track and Trace starts to pick up, or more likely local Public Health*. Are we going to see a repetition of the Aberdeen pub crawl?


    You must really hate the polls at the moment. All the effort you put in with your mind numbing retweeting and the Tories have gone up in the polls.
    Nerve, touched.
    Just stating a fact.

    As can be seen by my posts about masks I most certainly do not agree with everything the Government does.
    And, maybe I've misread this, but do you not also have some minor reservations about their Brexit strategy (as does @Scott_xP of course)?
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,607
    Also I've been looking into the city consensus for GDP next week, I think our estimates are much more pessimistic, the range is -10% to -14% with most coming in the upper tier at close to -10%, that would take the peak to trough drop to -16%, July has been pencilled in for +6% and August for something like +4% and I'm sticking in +3% for September. If the economy performs anywhere near that, we'd be up to 95% of peak GDP by the end of September. I have to say last night felt like things were closer to normal than most people realised.

    Brining in flight restrictions from hot zones is an absolute must. People should not be allowed to arrive into the UK from any of the current red listed countries at all even if it means pissing off giant baby Trump and the airlines. The last thing we need is a bunch of irresponsible people going to India and Pakistan in October after monsoon season ends and coming back infected in December setting off a whole new wave.
  • Options

    Foxy said:

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    This thread tells us exactly why Johnson/Cummings are so keen to emasculate judicial review. Without it, it gets much easier to throw public money at their mates.

    Sounds like libel to me. Hope you have deep pockets.
    On what basis is it libel?

    Indeed there is a pattern:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1291264253874380800?s=19

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1290727606640357378?s=09

    The pattern here is too upset the elite and it is working
    The elite is loving it. This government of the elite is handing over public money left, right and centre to very wealthy, immensely privileged people. What’s to get upset about?

    It has gone on in politics in all parties since politics began

    I am not condoning it but am indicating that even beyond that the elite/establishment are seeing change that is driving them near insane.
    Who on earth is this phantom “elite” you keep talking about? @Scott_xP ? Come on...
    The remain establishment and the liberal metropolitan elite who cannot accept brexit or change
  • Options
    Once judicial review is emasculated, there’ll be more of this, but we won’t get to know about it ...
    https://twitter.com/peter_tl/status/1291278120117469185?s=21
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,308

    MaxPB said:

    Hmm, I think national lockdowns are about to become a thing in a lot of European countries again. I'm surprised that Spain hasn't already implemented a full national lockdown the figures are very bad, they are looking at 4-6k new cases per day at the moment. Only the UK and Italy look like a second wave might not be as bad, it could be because both had such publicly awful initial outbreaks that tourists are avoiding them or people are too scared to travel.

    Spain’s outbreaks remain very localised. Why shut down Extremadura if most of the problems are hundreds of miles to the north-east?

    Well there are a variety of reasons, not least of which is the ease of internal movement. I can understand why local lockdowns have become a thing again, the economics give us no choice, but I really thought that we had established as early as March from the Italian experience that they just did not work and facilitated the spread of the virus to other areas.
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081

    Foxy said:

    Scott_xP said:

    The answer has to be sort out trade agreements with everyone, and protect, so far as possible, the British economy. The trouble is that none of that is likely to be dramatic and eye-catching.

    Oh, there will be eye-catching drama...

    https://twitter.com/steverichards14/status/1291256678239932417
    This thread tells us exactly why Johnson/Cummings are so keen to emasculate judicial review. Without it, it gets much easier to throw public money at their mates.

    Sounds like libel to me. Hope you have deep pockets.
    On what basis is it libel?

    Indeed there is a pattern:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1291264253874380800?s=19

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1290727606640357378?s=09

    The pattern here is too upset the elite and it is working
    The elite is loving it. This government of the elite is handing over public money left, right and centre to very wealthy, immensely privileged people. What’s to get upset about?

    It has gone on in politics in all parties since politics began

    I am not condoning it but am indicating that even beyond that the elite/establishment are seeing change that is driving them near insane.
    Who on earth is this phantom “elite” you keep talking about? @Scott_xP ? Come on...
    The remain establishment and the liberal metropolitan elite who cannot accept brexit or change
    You’re starting to sound like a conspiracy nutcase Big G. That entire comment was vacuous and without meaning.
  • Options
    Anyway it is a lovely day and time to do some outside painting

    Have a good day folks, too nice not to be out and enjoying the weather

  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,436

    MaxPB said:

    Hmm, I think national lockdowns are about to become a thing in a lot of European countries again. I'm surprised that Spain hasn't already implemented a full national lockdown the figures are very bad, they are looking at 4-6k new cases per day at the moment. Only the UK and Italy look like a second wave might not be as bad, it could be because both had such publicly awful initial outbreaks that tourists are avoiding them or people are too scared to travel.

    Spain’s outbreaks remain very localised. Why shut down Extremadura if most of the problems are hundreds of miles to the north-east?

    All of the recent European increases* are localised - at least that I am aware of. UK, France, Germany, Spain etc.

    So local lockdowns are the pattern....

    In the rush of positive/negative nationalism, it is often useful to step back and ask yourself - what is happening elsewhere?

    *Not sure that "second wave" is the right term for "Increase on the tail end of epidemic curve". Like this -

    image
  • Options
    DavidL said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Foxy said:

    It will be interesting what Track and Trace starts to pick up, or more likely local Public Health*. Are we going to see a repetition of the Aberdeen pub crawl?


    You must really hate the polls at the moment. All the effort you put in with your mind numbing retweeting and the Tories have gone up in the polls.
    Nerve, touched.
    Quite. Scott seems pretty rattled at the moment.
    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    Boris is chaotic and mistakes are being made.

    I am neutral at present over Conservative v Labour but it's certain that Starmer, or indeed anyone else, would be making multitudes of errors and really there is nobody in labour, outside of Starmer, who is recognisable by the public or gives confidence they would know what they are doing
    I think having a Shadow Chancellor with zero cut through is a particular problem for SKS. Labour remains suspect in how they would manage the economy and need both credibility and substance there.

    I am sure that I have kept my disdain for Brown well hidden over the years and you may not have picked up on it but even I would accept that he had considerable substance and was a key part of the Blair proposition in 1997. SKS needs a Brown, ideally without the accompanying psychosis, and I think he will struggle until he gets one. It's very unfortunate that Ed Balls is no longer in the Commons. I think he could do worse than Ed Miliband myself.
    I couldn’t tell you who the Shadow Chancellor is at the moment without looking them up, and I’ve been on this site most days since a long time before Sir Kier became Labour Leader.

    One of my abiding memories of Election night back in December was seeing the Ed B and George O double act on ITV and wishing that both were still senior members of their respective parties.
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,607
    edited August 2020

    MaxPB said:

    Hmm, I think national lockdowns are about to become a thing in a lot of European countries again. I'm surprised that Spain hasn't already implemented a full national lockdown the figures are very bad, they are looking at 4-6k new cases per day at the moment. Only the UK and Italy look like a second wave might not be as bad, it could be because both had such publicly awful initial outbreaks that tourists are avoiding them or people are too scared to travel.

    Spain’s outbreaks remain very localised. Why shut down Extremadura if most of the problems are hundreds of miles to the north-east?

    Because people move about and have probably already done so. Someone who went to Barcelona comes back to Birmingham, infects someone else because who gives s fuck about quarantine when the threat of consequences are zero, that person travels to Majorca and infects people there. I'm sure incidences such as these have taken place multiple times, just replace Birmingham for Madrid, Munich or Oslo.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,308
    MaxPB said:

    Also I've been looking into the city consensus for GDP next week, I think our estimates are much more pessimistic, the range is -10% to -14% with most coming in the upper tier at close to -10%, that would take the peak to trough drop to -16%, July has been pencilled in for +6% and August for something like +4% and I'm sticking in +3% for September. If the economy performs anywhere near that, we'd be up to 95% of peak GDP by the end of September. I have to say last night felt like things were closer to normal than most people realised.

    Brining in flight restrictions from hot zones is an absolute must. People should not be allowed to arrive into the UK from any of the current red listed countries at all even if it means pissing off giant baby Trump and the airlines. The last thing we need is a bunch of irresponsible people going to India and Pakistan in October after monsoon season ends and coming back infected in December setting off a whole new wave.

    And what do we do about the thousands of foreign students due to return over the next few weeks? Having worked so hard to limit the incidence of the virus in our own community this is an obvious and incredible risk. The Scottish government says it does not have the capacity to test them all. God alone knows why not. It should be mandatory if they are to attend classes.
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,607
    DavidL said:

    MaxPB said:

    Also I've been looking into the city consensus for GDP next week, I think our estimates are much more pessimistic, the range is -10% to -14% with most coming in the upper tier at close to -10%, that would take the peak to trough drop to -16%, July has been pencilled in for +6% and August for something like +4% and I'm sticking in +3% for September. If the economy performs anywhere near that, we'd be up to 95% of peak GDP by the end of September. I have to say last night felt like things were closer to normal than most people realised.

    Brining in flight restrictions from hot zones is an absolute must. People should not be allowed to arrive into the UK from any of the current red listed countries at all even if it means pissing off giant baby Trump and the airlines. The last thing we need is a bunch of irresponsible people going to India and Pakistan in October after monsoon season ends and coming back infected in December setting off a whole new wave.

    And what do we do about the thousands of foreign students due to return over the next few weeks? Having worked so hard to limit the incidence of the virus in our own community this is an obvious and incredible risk. The Scottish government says it does not have the capacity to test them all. God alone knows why not. It should be mandatory if they are to attend classes.
    That's easy, make them arrive two weeks before the start of term, test them on arrival and put them in forced quarantine if they have it. Students are very easy to track because of visa requirements.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,308

    DavidL said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Foxy said:

    It will be interesting what Track and Trace starts to pick up, or more likely local Public Health*. Are we going to see a repetition of the Aberdeen pub crawl?


    You must really hate the polls at the moment. All the effort you put in with your mind numbing retweeting and the Tories have gone up in the polls.
    Nerve, touched.
    Quite. Scott seems pretty rattled at the moment.
    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    Boris is chaotic and mistakes are being made.

    I am neutral at present over Conservative v Labour but it's certain that Starmer, or indeed anyone else, would be making multitudes of errors and really there is nobody in labour, outside of Starmer, who is recognisable by the public or gives confidence they would know what they are doing
    I think having a Shadow Chancellor with zero cut through is a particular problem for SKS. Labour remains suspect in how they would manage the economy and need both credibility and substance there.

    I am sure that I have kept my disdain for Brown well hidden over the years and you may not have picked up on it but even I would accept that he had considerable substance and was a key part of the Blair proposition in 1997. SKS needs a Brown, ideally without the accompanying psychosis, and I think he will struggle until he gets one. It's very unfortunate that Ed Balls is no longer in the Commons. I think he could do worse than Ed Miliband myself.
    I couldn’t tell you who the Shadow Chancellor is at the moment without looking them up, and I’ve been on this site most days since a long time before Sir Kier became Labour Leader.

    One of my abiding memories of Election night back in December was seeing the Ed B and George O double act on ITV and wishing that both were still senior members of their respective parties.
    Absolutely, they were excellent and clearly really liked each other.
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081
    Interesting. Not in the manifesto? I thought FPTP protected us from policies not in the manifesto? Clearly not.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,798
    Scott_xP said:
    I think that first point is perfectly right, but I wonder if they truly have the guts to push it further when the effects become clear.
  • Options
    DavidL said:

    MaxPB said:

    Hmm, I think national lockdowns are about to become a thing in a lot of European countries again. I'm surprised that Spain hasn't already implemented a full national lockdown the figures are very bad, they are looking at 4-6k new cases per day at the moment. Only the UK and Italy look like a second wave might not be as bad, it could be because both had such publicly awful initial outbreaks that tourists are avoiding them or people are too scared to travel.

    Spain’s outbreaks remain very localised. Why shut down Extremadura if most of the problems are hundreds of miles to the north-east?

    Well there are a variety of reasons, not least of which is the ease of internal movement. I can understand why local lockdowns have become a thing again, the economics give us no choice, but I really thought that we had established as early as March from the Italian experience that they just did not work and facilitated the spread of the virus to other areas.
    Ease of internal movement is an issue, for sure. It’s very tough to get from NE Spain to SE Spain without being able to fly. It is not a regular journey. Spain is a very big country with a lot of empty bits between population centres away from the coasts and Madrid. At this stage, it’s hard to see the case for a national lockdown.

  • Options

    Scott_xP said:

    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    On the contrary.

    The number of my fans who whine incessantly about the posts is increasing steadily

    You guys seem nervous about something
    Maybe your mental health
    Ouch.
    image
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 32,003

    Scott_xP said:

    The closer 1st January comes the more Scott posts anti Boris/ Cummings/ HMG tweets and it is almost 24/7

    However, there is little evidence they are having any effect

    On the contrary.

    The number of my fans who whine incessantly about the posts is increasing steadily

    You guys seem nervous about something
    I don't see the point. No-one on this forum has any power to change anything
    Fysics Teacher and Ydoethur do, by instilling ambition and inspiration into young minds.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,028

    Jenrick defending his bonkers planning rule changes on R4.

    Or should I say Cummings's plans.

    It is time for real change to planning and as far as I can see it is vested interests including architects who are complaining most at the threat to their fee base

    As long as building regulations are followed and enforced this is a long overdue change
    We’ll see how this one plays out. Tory areas will be most affected.

    The plans protect the green belt, they simply ensure planning permission is granted to individual schemes in zones approved for planning permission under council local plans
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,436
    MaxPB said:

    Also I've been looking into the city consensus for GDP next week, I think our estimates are much more pessimistic, the range is -10% to -14% with most coming in the upper tier at close to -10%, that would take the peak to trough drop to -16%, July has been pencilled in for +6% and August for something like +4% and I'm sticking in +3% for September. If the economy performs anywhere near that, we'd be up to 95% of peak GDP by the end of September. I have to say last night felt like things were closer to normal than most people realised.

    Brining in flight restrictions from hot zones is an absolute must. People should not be allowed to arrive into the UK from any of the current red listed countries at all even if it means pissing off giant baby Trump and the airlines. The last thing we need is a bunch of irresponsible people going to India and Pakistan in October after monsoon season ends and coming back infected in December setting off a whole new wave.

    What do you think of -

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-53675467

    ??
This discussion has been closed.