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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » A Politico survey of early voting data in key WH2020 swing sta

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  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    People tested positive 3,539...

    Up up and away.

    We need to know by how much testing has increased.
  • Pulpstar said:

    Most of rural USA (Including upstate NY) leans GOP so interesting there's an equal number of Biden/Trump paraphenalia out there.

    Texas is interesting, Fort Worth leans GOP but the southern border is actually Democrat (Even outside El Paso) despite having no major population centres (hispanic vote ?)
    Dallas/Houston and the rest of rural Texas follow the normal urban DEM-rural GOP polarisation of most of the rest of the country.
    I almost never take notice of signs. They are very misleading.

    If I do, it's the new ones going up (rather than the old ones coming down) that I take interest in.

    I knew something "weird" was going on in GE2017 when I saw far more Labour signs in Hampshire (well, a couple of dozen rather than virtually nill) in affluent areas that I'd never seen before.
  • We are headed into a second wave due to this Government's incompetence. Yet again we had foresight of other countries and we did nothing
  • rcs1000 said:

    There is a big Irish vote in the US (hence, historically, Noraid). And the Irish lobby is also very well organised. And while the Democrats are worse, there are plenty of Republican members of the Friends of Ireland caucus too.
    Israel and Ireland truly both have special relationships with the USA out of proportion to their heft and weight. It's voting lobby stuff.

    We have the origins/founding fathers/heritage stuff but (a) they don't think we really need special treatment and (b) realpolitik still gives close US-UK relations a meaningful real-world value.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    Andy_JS said:

    We need to know by how much testing has increased.
    Since the cases will be mostly backfills into the previous days, unless the testing is increasing exponentially as well it's safe to assume it's not a "more tests" effect
  • An election announcement isn't serious is it
  • FF43 said:

    Just thought of something.

    The Internal Market Bill is a poison pill. It doesn't just ostentatiously break the law. It takes aim at the Good Friday Agreement and drives a coach and horses through the devolution settlement. It is objectionable in every respect.

    IT IS INTENDED TO BE OBJECTIONABLE. Cunning plan alert !

    The aim is get a coalition of Starmer Labourites, SNP'ers, Tory rebels, useful idiots in the Lords etc to vote it down.

    Then go back to the EU and say, sorry can't give you UK State Aid intentions. The other lot voted it down.

    Now we can blame Starmer for No Deal. Wahey !!!!!

    ----

    Plausible?

    Are you suggesting it gets voted down in the Commons or the Lords? The former is a tall order.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,191

    People tested positive 3,539...

    Up up and away.

    I (not very bravely) forecast that the average next week would be over 3k a day. Looks like it may well exceed 4k.
  • Talk of a new political party on lockdownsceptic.co.uk to contest next year's locals with a specific anti-lockdown message.

    Probably come to nothing, but there is such a party in Germany being set up apparently.
  • FF43 said:

    Just thought of something.

    The Internal Market Bill is a poison pill. It doesn't just ostentatiously break the law. It takes aim at the Good Friday Agreement and drives a coach and horses through the devolution settlement. It is objectionable in every respect.

    IT IS INTENDED TO BE OBJECTIONABLE. Cunning plan alert !

    The aim is get a coalition of Starmer Labourites, SNP'ers, Tory rebels, useful idiots in the Lords etc to vote it down.

    Then go back to the EU and say, sorry can't give you UK State Aid intentions. The other lot voted it down.

    Now we can blame Starmer for No Deal. Wahey !!!!!

    ----

    Plausible?

    Well, one of the problems with No Deal - since ditching the May backstop - is the legal requirement for an Irish Sea border that Johnson promised wouldn't happen.

    Now they can say that it wouldn't have happened except for the fact that the Lords voted down the Internal Markets Bill - so nothing to do with him, but all the fault of unelected quislings and traitors.

    But we're jumping around scrabbling for a logical explanation for actions that are not internally consistent. It's a classic part of abusive behaviour. But our next chance to leave our abuser is not until 2024.
  • rcs1000 said:

    But here's the thing. And I wrote this on this board at the time.

    The EU didn't like Mrs May's backstop. Giving the UK unprecedented rights to access the CU/SM without payment was a situation it would be keen to avoid.

    So, they were incentivized to find a deal rather than to allow the clock to run down.

    In the case of Boris Johnsons Withdrawal Agreement, the shoe is on the other foot. It is the UK that is in the uncomfortable position if a deal is not reached.

    As I said at the time, this worsened the UK's negotiating position.

    What the UK government should say (assuming they believe it) is "we signed the Withdrawal Agreement on the basis that the EU was sincere in seeking a fair free trade agreement. Sadly, that assumption turned out to be incorrect, and we are therefore with regret walking away from it."

    That's the grown up way to deal with this.
    Mrs. May's Deal was better. We did actually cheery-pick: we got CU membership for free.

    Yes, the CU we couldn't escape etc. And Geoffrey Cox probably killed it with his statement. But I think we could have got to smart digitisation of that inside 5-10 years which would have allowed tariff variation.

    I was more comfortable with it than other Leavers as most of our economy is services and it protected our manufacturing base.
  • Andy_JS said:

    We need to know by how much testing has increased.
    And how many of these tests are still using the number of cycles that means it is easy to get false positives according to Henegan.
  • What possible reason would Boris call a GE for?
  • It's an Andrea Leadsom/ Marco Rubio thing.

    Sometimes Betfair just gets a boner for a candidate (or against a candidate) that it just can't shake.
    Didn't the Leadsome thing turn out to be down to a forgotten bot that just kept buying regardless?
  • Talk of a new political party on lockdownsceptic.co.uk to contest next year's locals with a specific anti-lockdown message.

    Probably come to nothing, but there is such a party in Germany being set up apparently.

    Very laudable, but forming a political party must be by some measure the least effective way of lobbying for political change there has ever been.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,235

    And how many of these tests are still using the number of cycles that means it is easy to get false positives according to Henegan.
    Positivity rate data here -

    image
  • Talk of a new political party on lockdownsceptic.co.uk to contest next year's locals with a specific anti-lockdown message.

    Probably come to nothing, but there is such a party in Germany being set up apparently.

    It will be a ragtag of ex-UKIPers and Brexit Party nutjobs - the ones that haven't realised they achieved a reverse takeover of the Conservative Party!
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884

    Are you suggesting it gets voted down in the Commons or the Lords? The former is a tall order.
    Lords will do. They just need to delay the passage of the bill by one month and the Brexit clock will run out. Result for Cummings.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    edited September 2020

    Are you suggesting it gets voted down in the Commons or the Lords? The former is a tall order.
    This may well be the plan, heads through the Commons, blocked in the Lords (Possibly SCOTUK) requires the useful idiocy Starmer seems to have swerved at PMQs.
    Independent Scotland (Good for Tories electorally)/Dissolution of SCOTUK/Peer stuffing the endgame rather than anything to do with the EU ?
    Just seen your latest post - No Deal effectively engineered by Cummings by reverse psychology puppeteering the Lords...
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,817

    Thanks for that.

    It seems that's actually correct - it was sent back to the embassy, because Trump later asked them for it back:
    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/2582745/donald-trump-has-asked-for-bust-of-winston-churchill-to-be-put-back-in-the-oval-office-after-obama-replaced-it-with-martin-luther-king/

    And the Indy story is totally wrong about the story being 'false' - the statue that stayed in The White House was a different bust.

    In other words, Obama sent the bust packing (don't get me wrong, I really don't care about his decor, and whilst I respect Churchill, I don't think the world should be required to kiss his arse), and he 'debunked' this totally true story by explaining that there was another bust of Churchill elsewhere in the White House, which he could have got rid of, but didn't.

    I make that Bojo 1
    Indy 0
    Kinabula 0
    Oh come on, this is desperate stuff. Boris Johnson wrote a tacky article in a tacky newspaper (yes it was in The Sun, I'm afraid) opining that because Obama was black - sorry of Kenyan heritage - he probably had an "ancestral dislike" of the British Empire, explaining why he was less anglocentric than the average POTUS, and as further evidence of this theory offered the false story that he (Obama) had on his 1st day in office ordered the removal of the iconic bust of the Great Man Winnie from the White House. Google the article if you think I'm making any part of this up. Obama always got a free pass? I should coco.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,342

    What possible reason would Boris call a GE for?
    So he didn't have to quit!
  • https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1304447417241210881

    Labour is on the side of the public again
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235

    And how many of these tests are still using the number of cycles that means it is easy to get false positives according to Henegan.
    Why would the FP rate suddenly jump up ?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,133
    edited September 2020

    People tested positive 3,539...

    Up up and away.

    Well over twice Italy’s and moving up toward three times Germany’s. It’ll be safer not to come home.

    Meanwhile today we dropped by the field where Steve McQueen’s abortive motorcycle jump scene in the Great Escape was filmed. It’s actually by the Austrian border, not near Switzerland, so had he cleared that second fence he might have been in for an unpleasant surprise.

  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,031
    edited September 2020

    We are headed into a second wave due to this Government's incompetence. Yet again we had foresight of other countries and we did nothing

    On this you are incorrect Horse

    If we are heading into a second wave this is consistent with the rest of Europe and all four nations have been taking similar action to mitigate the spread but it is clear that selfish and defiant behaviour by many including but not only the young are the biggest factors and that bad behaviour is not possible to prescribe
  • Grandiose said:

    Who is she aiming for?

    I can't believe Americans love their leaders bashing Britain too much...
    Irish vote would be my first instinct, which has a strong base in the Democratic Party.

    It might also be she equates Brexit/Trump so is projecting a bit of her hatred of the latter onto Brexit Britain as she sees the two things as two cheeks of the same arse.
  • On this you are incorrect Horse

    If we are heading into a second wave this is consistent with the rest of Europe and all four nations have been taking similar action to mitigate the spread but it is clear that selfish and defiant behaviour by any including but not only the young are the biggest factors and there is behaviour is not possible to prescribe
    Blame the young time, Johnson told them to go out and party
  • An election announcement isn't serious is it

    No.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    edited September 2020

    Positivity rate data here -

    image
    The positivity rate is very low right now so they must be doing huge numbers of tests to dredge up 3,500 new positive cases??

    Have I got that right?
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1304447417241210881

    Labour is on the side of the public again

    Would you vote for more free money?

    Hell yes.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,031
    edited September 2020

    Blame the young time, Johnson told them to go out and party
    I am highly critical of Boris over his breach of an international treaty but on this there is a clear consensus across the media that the young are a substantial factor in this spread not Boris
  • We are headed into a second wave due to this Government's incompetence. Yet again we had foresight of other countries and we did nothing

    Did nothing?

    Funny we have so many people complaining the government has done too much and we have more tests going on than almost anywhere else in the world - and you think the country has done nothing?

    What hasn't been done that you'd like?
  • Blame the young time, Johnson told them to go out and party
    No he didn't. The police have spent all summer trying to close down parties and raves.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,363

    The positivity rate is very low right now so they must be doing huge numbers of tests to dredge up 3,500 new positive cases??

    Have I got that right?
    That's right, but the ONS' random sampling is now also showing a significant increase in the rate.
  • Didn't the Leadsome thing turn out to be down to a forgotten bot that just kept buying regardless?
    I saw rumours about that, but never any evidence?
  • No he didn't. The police have spent all summer trying to close down parties and raves.
    He told us to all go back to the pub and live our lives as normal.

    The young are absolutely culpable but they cannot be held responsible for Government advice they were given.
  • The public is full of idiots, that is absolutely true - but Johnson is not blameless. He cocked up the advice after initially doing a good job.

    I warned of arrogance a few weeks ago, we were starting to feel like the virus had gone, when it hadn't. I am afraid I am being proven correct.
  • FF43 said:

    Just thought of something.

    The Internal Market Bill is a poison pill. It doesn't just ostentatiously break the law. It takes aim at the Good Friday Agreement and drives a coach and horses through the devolution settlement. It is objectionable in every respect.

    IT IS INTENDED TO BE OBJECTIONABLE. Cunning plan alert !

    The aim is get a coalition of Starmer Labourites, SNP'ers, Tory rebels, useful idiots in the Lords etc to vote it down.

    Then go back to the EU and say, sorry can't give you UK State Aid intentions. The other lot voted it down.

    Now we can blame Starmer for No Deal. Wahey !!!!!

    ----

    Plausible?

    I think it's cock-up rather than conspiracy.

    To the extent there was design I think it might have been to do a bit of sabre-rattling with the EU and/or protect the UK from State Aid trojan-horses in the event of No Deal (which is the cock-up).
  • Talk of a new political party on lockdownsceptic.co.uk to contest next year's locals with a specific anti-lockdown message.

    Probably come to nothing, but there is such a party in Germany being set up apparently.

    Talk about after the horse has bolted.

    If the elections are going ahead next year then the lockdown will have already finished.

    This is online/Twitter circlejerk stuff, its never going to attract many votes.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,363

    He told us to all go back to the pub and live our lives as normal.

    The young are absolutely culpable but they cannot be held responsible for Government advice they were given.
    They have been telling people to live life as normal?
  • He told us to all go back to the pub and live our lives as normal.

    The young are absolutely culpable but they cannot be held responsible for Government advice they were given.
    Again, no he didn't say live you life as normal at all.
  • Blame the young is always the easy way out. Cowards.
  • Again, no he didn't say live you life as normal at all.
    He did.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,363

    He did.
    I'd like to see this.
  • GE speculation lol
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    RobD said:

    That's right, but the ONS' random sampling is now also showing a significant increase in the rate.
    As I understand it they are upping the bar for a positive score to try to sift out false positives after Heneghan's criticisms. Is that correct?
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,363
    Scott_xP said:
    It'll only be breached if a deal isn't ratified, as I understand it, so this seems completely pointless.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,817

    You're as indefatigable as williamglenn.

    Barnier and Frost could both hold press conferences saying that the talks have collapsed and that there will be no deal and you would still be saying that this means an extension.
    We will see. On 1/1/21 we will either (i) be trading on WTO terms with the EU having failed to reach a deal or (ii) have signed an agreement that means continued close alignment.

    I say (ii).
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    edited September 2020

    He did.
    I have been plenty critical of the government handling of this, but there is a huge difference from saying the pub or restaurants are open with specific conditions and saying live your life as normal.

    People have partied when they shouldn't, ignored the rules of social distancing, and they have gone on foreign holidays where rather than a quiet week in the sun, they have lived life to the max without any thought about risk and it has led to a rise. And this has happened across Europe.
  • Why on earth would they want an election?
  • I think the problems with the 'rule of six' announcement aren't really much to do with the policy itself; it seems very reasonable, and is simpler, more logical, and clearer than what we had before. The problems are (a) that the government has lost so much authority by repeatedly changing the rules and by inconsistent messaging, and (b) that people are unsurprisingly fed up with the whole business.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,363

    As I understand it they are upping the bar for a positive score to try to sift out false positives after Heneghan's criticisms. Is that correct?
    I don't know anything about that. Are you saying there have been changes to the ONS' methodology?
  • I think the problems with the 'rule of six' announcement aren't really much to do with the policy itself; it seems very reasonable, and is simpler, more logical, and clearer than what we had before. The problems are (a) that the government has lost so much authority by repeatedly changing the rules and by inconsistent messaging, and (b) that people are unsurprisingly fed up with the whole business.

    The policy now is what we should have had when we came out of lockdown.
  • The public is full of idiots, that is absolutely true - but Johnson is not blameless. He cocked up the advice after initially doing a good job.

    I warned of arrogance a few weeks ago, we were starting to feel like the virus had gone, when it hadn't. I am afraid I am being proven correct.

    Are you putting Sturgeon, Drakeford and Foster in the same category otherwise your comment is ill conceived
  • He told us to all go back to the pub and live our lives as normal.

    The young are absolutely culpable but they cannot be held responsible for Government advice they were given.
    To go to the pub in a covid-secure manner, not to go to raves and house parties which is what is causing the spread.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,148
    RobD said:

    It'll only be breached if a deal isn't ratified, as I understand it, so this seems completely pointless.

    BoZo's bill breaches it
  • To go to the pub in a covid-secure manner, not to go to raves and house parties which is what is causing the spread.
    That is not the only cause of the spread. The young cannot be held 100% responsible.
  • "We do nothing..."

    "Yup, it's another world-beater."

    "No, we do no nothing until our heads have actually been cut-off."

    "And then we.. spring into action, do we?"
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,363
    Scott_xP said:

    BoZo's bill breaches it
    Really? I thought the provisions in the WA were if there was no deal. If there's a FTA, then the provisions are no longer needed.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,817

    So, it would appear that this time Johnson was telling the truth. Given his track record on honesty and accuracy I think you two are entitled to celebrate.
    If we define "truth" quite generously. Which given who it is I'm not inclined to.
  • That is not the only cause of the spread. The young cannot be held 100% responsible.
    Not 100% but primarily responsible absolutely.

    And that's just a matter of fact not judgement.
  • The policy now is what we should have had when we came out of lockdown.
    Yes, I think that's right. Maybe with the Scottish/Welsh modification of excluding younger children from the six.
  • I think it's cock-up rather than conspiracy.

    To the extent there was design I think it might have been to do a bit of sabre-rattling with the EU and/or protect the UK from State Aid trojan-horses in the event of No Deal (which is the cock-up).
    I simply cannot understand why Boris has done this for no apparent advantage rather than just declare the talks are over and no deal at the end of December
  • Not 100% but primarily responsible absolutely.

    And that's just a matter of fact not judgement.
    Prove it's the primary reason.

    Remember when you said the other day about the young voting Tory, this is the kind of thing I meant when you blame them for every problem
  • Why on earth would they want an election?

    Nobody wants an election. A few said it this morning as a joke, I wonder if that's where it has come from.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,363

    Prove it's the primary reason.

    Remember when you said the other day about the young voting Tory, this is the kind of thing I meant when you blame them for every problem
    Isn't that what the imperial study suggested, that the most significant rise is in the 18-24 age group?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    edited September 2020

    Prove it's the primary reason.

    Remember when you said the other day about the young voting Tory, this is the kind of thing I meant when you blame them for every problem
    Across Europe its the same pattern...

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/13/global-report-covid-19-spikes-across-europe-linked-to-young-people
  • I simply cannot understand why Boris has done this for no apparent advantage rather than just declare the talks are over and no deal at the end of December

    Presumably because someone has told him what a mess the border down the Irish Sea is going to be.

    We just have to hope that someone also gets round to telling him what a mess the Dover crossing is going to be...
  • The median vote last parliament (excepting the opportunistic voter-downers) was for customs union membership plus a 2nd ref.

    Basically, putting May's Deal to a vote:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-47728333
  • Right now young people

    cannot travel
    cannot associate in groups
    cannot afford to buy houses
    have big personal debts if they went to university
    Will inherit an enormous debt mountain from the boomers
    Pay then highest taxes in 50 years to fund the care of the elderly
    Will soon experience mass unemployment
    Missed a whole term of education
    Are having their development affected by mask wearing and other mentally traumatic events

    Its a dreadful, dreadful situation and anybody blaming them for their fantastic compliance and fortitude in this period is a c8nt.
    Well said.
  • Prove it's the primary reason.

    Remember when you said the other day about the young voting Tory, this is the kind of thing I meant when you blame them for every problem
    The data show that the young are the ones catching and spreading the virus currently. That's not a blame thing, its scientific data. And its data coming up right across Europe.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/sep/08/how-europe-is-tackling-spread-of-covid-19-with-appeal-to-young-people

    And you still seem to be misunderstanding what I said about the young voting Tory. I said the government is working to win the votes of the young in the future as they get older - not that they are voting Tory in the present. Nobody is voting in the present since there is no election in the present.
  • What possible reason would Boris call a GE for?
    To get Brexit done!
  • CorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorseBattery Posts: 21,436
    edited September 2020
    Funny, they wanted the young to get back to the office just last week, now they're to blame for everything.

    This is the Tory way in a nutshell, never the fault of anyone over 50
  • Prove it's the primary reason.

    Remember when you said the other day about the young voting Tory, this is the kind of thing I meant when you blame them for every problem
    You are now being silly.

    It is the experts who are saying this from the analysis of the data
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    RobD said:

    I don't know anything about that. Are you saying there have been changes to the ONS' methodology?
    No I read that some testing is picking up dead virus from months ago and calling that a positive.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    edited September 2020

    Right now young people

    cannot travel
    cannot associate in groups
    cannot afford to buy houses
    have big personal debts if they went to university
    Will inherit an enormous debt mountain from the boomers
    Pay then highest taxes in 50 years to fund the care of the elderly
    Will soon experience mass unemployment
    Missed a whole term of education
    Are having their development affected by mask wearing and other mentally traumatic events

    Its a dreadful, dreadful situation and anybody blaming them for their fantastic compliance and fortitude in this period is a c8nt.
    Nice one. I, for one, wouldn`t dream of denying them some hedonism in their shite lives and wouldn`t blame them, or anyone else for that matter, for giving me the virus because my health is my responsibility not anyone else`s.

    Well said, Contrarian.
  • I think the problems with the 'rule of six' announcement aren't really much to do with the policy itself; it seems very reasonable, and is simpler, more logical, and clearer than what we had before. The problems are (a) that the government has lost so much authority by repeatedly changing the rules and by inconsistent messaging, and (b) that people are unsurprisingly fed up with the whole business.

    And, the fact the people at the top of Government take no notice of the rules whatsoever hasn't been missed either.
  • Covid cases are clearly rising, but I worry about the accuracy of the data. Unless I'm missing something, we have no idea about the number of people being tested, just the number of tests. Worldometer says we have had over 19 million tests in the UK - that would be around 30% of the population, if it was people, rather than tests. But the number of people tested is way below that - 5%? 10%? I've no idea - has anybody? I understand some other countries are recording people tested, rather than number of tests.

    I also suspect that the Covid death rate is now being underestimated due to the 28-day cut off. My understanding is that quite a lot of deaths take longer than 28 days from the initial Covid diagnosis.

    The UK Statistics Authority has gone very quiet since it raised concerns about government (mis)use of data back in April. I wouldn't be surprised if it has been muzzled.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,080
    RobD said:

    It'll only be breached if a deal isn't ratified, as I understand it, so this seems completely pointless.
    ... or threaten to breach..
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,363

    No I read that some testing is picking up dead virus from months ago and calling that a positive.
    Ah, okay. I am not sure that would cause a sudden shift in the prevalence rate in the ONS's study over the course of a week. That would be a more gradual shift as more people move into the "has had it" category.
  • Stocky said:

    Nice one. I, for one, wouldn`t dream of denying them some hedonism in their shite lives and wouldn`t blame them, or anyone else for that matter, for giving me the virus because my health is my responsibility not anyone else`s.

    Well said, Contrarian.
    Nice to have you on side Stocky.
  • Young people including myself have had an absolutely rotten deal since 2010 (and even before).

    You simultaneously want us to back to work and stimulate the economy and then also blame us for the problems in the country.

    Today's COVID blame is yesterday's attacks on young people for eating too many avocados.
  • Funny, they wanted the young to get back to the office just last week, now they're to blame for everything.

    This is the Tory way in a nutshell, never the fault of anyone over 50

    Nobody is "blaming" the young.

    Blame is such a perjorative term.

    The data says that the young are spreading the virus - in order to deal with this we need to know what's happening and react to it, not put our heads in the sand or cast blame. Its not a blame issue, it is just an issue of knowing the facts.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,363
    Barnesian said:

    ... or threaten to breach..
    If there's not a deal to ratify, it won't matter. If there is a deal to ratify, why on earth would they not ratify it given it would render the whole thing moot?
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,482

    Nice to have you on side Stocky.
    If any young person wishes to swap I'd be up for it.
  • RobD said:

    If there's not a deal to ratify, it won't matter. If there is a deal to ratify, why on earth would they not ratify it given it would render the whole thing moot?
    Precisely. This is empty virtue signalling. It is entirely moot.
  • I don't know what Boris is up to but I am as confident as I can be there won't be an early election due to:

    1) Having one 6 months ago
    2) The polls showing the Cons would lose seats
    3) The new MPs not yet having a chance to build up incumbancy
    4) No boundary changes
    5) A looming COVID 2nd wave (we're still not even having local by-elections)
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    Omnium said:

    If any young person wishes to swap I'd be up for it.
    Oh yes - the things I`d do differently if I had my time again!
  • Right now young people

    cannot travel
    cannot associate in groups
    cannot afford to buy houses
    have big personal debts if they went to university
    Will inherit an enormous debt mountain from the boomers
    Pay then highest taxes in 50 years to fund the care of the elderly
    Will soon experience mass unemployment
    Missed a whole term of education
    Are having their development affected by mask wearing and other mentally traumatic events

    Its a dreadful, dreadful situation and anybody blaming them for their fantastic compliance and fortitude in this period is a c8nt.
    It's not that bad. They can still have sex, as long as it's not in groups of more than six.
  • It's not that bad. They can still have sex, as long as it's not in groups of more than six.
    We're advised to wear masks now
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