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A problem about enforcement remains Johnson’s failure to do anything about the Cummings lockdown bre

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  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,186
  • kinabalu said:

    You're working hard (aka waffling) to deflect and obscure. I guess I know why.

    It's like this -

    The Empire was big and lasted a long time and thus was decidedly notable. The essence of Empire was the colonization of other countries and other peoples. The enterprise was undeniably fueled by a sense of white supremacy - which is racism. This racism was in turn validated and cemented in the consciousness of both exploited and exploiter by the fact of the colonization.

    The British Empire was a notable example of racist colonialism.

    In italics since now demonstrated beyond all reasonable doubt. Although one really should not have to.
    It has not been demonstrated beyond all reasonable doubt.

    You continuously asserting this ever more vigorously doesn't make it more convincing or true.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,186
    alex_ said:

    Why not? Government's discovered the MMT.
    Triple lock stays but other benefits and public sector pay frozen?
  • Triple lock stays but other benefits and public sector pay frozen?
    Gotta look after the client vote.
  • Triple lock stays but other benefits and public sector pay frozen?
    That will test Dishy Rishi popularity.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    edited September 2020

    There will be but they won't be in the public domain. But it won't be so much the case numbers themselves that are the critical factor (how trustworthy they are as a metric in isolation is very dubious) but them combined with a great many other factors all together - like the ONS survey, the estimate R rate, the test positivity rate and more.
    Why does this need to be secret information? Surely it's helpful for public buy in if they can be treated like adults and be given some of the information about how things are progressing? As it is everything's likely to be judged (by the public) against that ridiculous graph yesterday.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    Fair enough, really. You can't have people waving their naked ballots around in a Northeast winter.
  • solarflaresolarflare Posts: 3,888
    The depressing thing about it all is that the unlocking from the first time round wasn't really finished even as it was, plenty of stuff hadn't even got back to any sort of normal before today, and it won't now for possibly more than 6 more months.

    Tried to see what the options were like to go for a swim, half the swimming pools even vaguely near me still not open and the other half only open for a short handful of hours in the day, that is if you can get one of the slots you have to pre-book in advance. Also tried to get a dental checkup, told by my practice not on the NHS but they'll happily do it if I stump 60 quid for a private appointment. Just to do a checkup, not even any specific dental work. I daresay in a year's time we might have solved covid but with a major dental work backlog.

    Feel sorry for the other stuff that hadn't even reopened yet before today.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,142
    While Starmer nods along with anything Boris and Nicola do to lock us up, it falls to Farage to be the only leader with a dissenting voice

    https://twitter.com/Nigel_Farage/status/1308504632893812737?s=20
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited September 2020
    alex_ said:

    Why does this need to be secret information? Surely it's helpful for public buy in if they can be treated like adults and be given some of the information about how things are progressing?
    For the reason I said, there won't be a clear threshold you need to take it all together.

    Lets say the case figure has risen to 12,000 in 2 weeks but in that time the positivity rate has fallen to 0.8% and the ONS is estimating R around 1 etc . . . or in 2 weeks the case figure is 12,000 but in that time the positivity rate has increased to 2%, the R is estimated at 1.6 etc

    Which 12,000 case scenario would you prefer? The cases in isolation only tell part of the story.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,888
    alex_ said:

    It's all very well Johnson standing up and saying that "people must follow the rules or we will tighten them", but it begs the question as to how it will be judged if people are following the rules. What are they expecting to happen to case numbers? Some people won't follow the rules regardless of what they are so simply tightening them in response won't have much effect.

    But equally without setting any objectives, projected outcomes for avoidance of further tightening, how will this be assessed. Case numbers are inevitably going to continue to rise, but this doesn't mean that they will necessarily rise dangerously. And a large amount of the vulnerable population are protecting themselves. If in two weeks time cases have risen to 12,000 will that be evidence that people aren't "following the rules"? What if they rise to 12,000 in 6 weeks? Or 10 weeks?

    There have to be some objectives. Dare i say it some forecasts...

    I know I've banged on about this before, but were any aims outlined?
    He'd fail his Ofsted if they weren't put front and centre.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,554
    IshmaelZ said:

    The British Empire was an empire, in other words. Everything you say is true, but it works equally well if you substitute Roman, Babylonian or Achaemenid for British. That's human nature for you.
    Yep. Totally agree with that observation. It was one racist exploitative undertaking amongst many. But it was our racist exploitative undertaking. And it was relatively recent. This to me makes it of particular interest and relevance. Others prefer to re-classify it as something more benign than it objectively was. They use the man-of-the-world phrase "it's complicated" to seek to achieve this. I'm neither fooled nor impressed by such talk.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited September 2020
    dixiedean said:

    I know I've banged on about this before, but were any aims outlined?
    He'd fail his Ofsted if they weren't put front and centre.
    The aim that has been outlined is to curtail the rise in infections. That is getting the R down, same as was said earlier this year.

    Obsessing over case numbers misses the fact they're not the issue.
  • Labour should back removing the Triple Lock - but they won't because it's political suicide.

    Pensioners should not be immune, they have been almost entirely protected from austerity whilst young people have been screwed.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,146
    edited September 2020
    IshmaelZ said:

    The British Empire was an empire, in other words. Everything you say is true, but it works equally well if you substitute Roman, Babylonian or Achaemenid for British. That's human nature for you.
    Only one of those empires was largely the product of that great achievement of western civilisation, the Enlightenment. It seems enlightenment was no great guarantee of better, improved empires.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,888

    The aim that has been outlined is to curtail the rise in infections. That is getting the R down, same as was said earlier this year.

    Obsessing over case numbers misses the fact they're not the issue.
    Fair enough. I didn't listen but chose meditation for the sake of my sanity instead.
    So it is a suppression strategy then.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    For the reason I said, there won't be a clear threshold you need to take it all together.

    Lets say the case figure has risen to 12,000 in 2 weeks but in that time the positivity rate has fallen to 0.8% and the ONS is estimating R around 1 etc . . . or in 2 weeks the case figure is 12,000 but in that time the positivity rate has increased to 2%, the R is estimated at 1.6 etc

    Which 12,000 case scenario would you prefer? The cases in isolation only tell part of the story.
    I'm not saying its simple. But what is the underlying strategy? The aims and objectives? Does it matter if case numbers continue to rise? Does it matter what the rate is? How important are levels of hospitalisations?

    We don't need detailed numbers. But you may have confidence that Johnson isn't often acting on a whim. The papers are basically already saying that he has gone against CMO/CSO advice to produce a compromise within the cabinet. Measures have to be given some time to work. There is a bit of a supertanker effect.

    But i suspect that for all the talk of "six months", there will be new measures announced within two weeks.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,614
    edited September 2020

    Labour should back removing the Triple Lock - but they won't because it's political suicide.

    Pensioners should not be immune, they have been almost entirely protected from austerity whilst young people have been screwed.

    Only 10% of pensioners went to university unlike the almost 50% who go now so tuition fees was never an issue for them as most of them never went anyway, plenty of pensioners also rely on social care from the council and most have paid into the system through NI all their lives.

    Blair even won pensioners in 1997 so yes you are right it would not be sensible if Labour wants to win and certainly if it wants a chance to win big to scrap the triple lock
  • Labour should back removing the Triple Lock - but they won't because it's political suicide.

    Pensioners should not be immune, they have been almost entirely protected from austerity whilst young people have been screwed.

    not suspending it for one year is insane, given the odd stats on average wages thanks to covid.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    The British Empire as Noble Trading Endeavour is certainly a take.

    It was Mercantilism writ large. Resources were extracted by force from the colonies. The colonies were prohibited from developing industries to produce finished goods instead forced to buy finished goods from Britain extracting even more wealth from them.

    The irony of Tata buying up the ends of the British steel industry given the various prohibitions the British imposed on the industry in India when a colony is hard not to laugh at.

  • HYUFD said:

    Only 10% of pensioners went to university unlike the 40% who go now so tuition fees was never an issue for them as most of them never went anyway, plenty of pensioners also rely on social care from the council and most have paid into the system through NI all their lives
    I pay in and get significantly less than they do and they've been protected since 2010 whilst my services have been slashed. Justify it? You can't.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,855

    To prove there's a racist legacy of Empire you'd have to show that the cause of racist attitudes in the UK is because of the Empire (and elsewhere) using evidence.

    And, yet, evidence shows racist attitudes are most prevalent in Bulgaria and Romania (which had no colonial empire whatsoever) and low in the UK and Netherlands (which did) and Sweden (which did not). In fact, surveys show the UK has some of the most progressive attitudes to race in Europe - as do its former dominions in Canada, Australia and New Zealand. They are worse in parts of India, Pakistan, Nigeria and parts of the Carribean. South Africa is mixed.

    So there's no causal link which has been demonstrated. Sorry.

    Rather than echoing a fashionable consensus, and asserting it ever more vociferously in order to try to convince me, you'll have to provide me with evidence - not just shout out what you believe to be true.
    I think that just demonstrates that we have had multiple ethnic communities in our countries for longer. For some this exacerbates their racism, but for others it gives social contact that gets rid of some or all of their prejudices. So, one of the positives of Empire is that it has created a multicultural Britain, with declining levels of racism. Still room for improvement though.

    Personally, I don't get hung up on the French, Portuguese, or Russians being worse in some ways than our own Imperialists. It is more useful and productive to show that we are better people than our historical predecesors. The comparisons should be 21st century Britain vs 19th Century Britain, not 19th Century Britain vs 19th Century Russia or 16th Century Spain.
  • The aim that has been outlined is to curtail the rise in infections. That is getting the R down, same as was said earlier this year.

    Obsessing over case numbers misses the fact they're not the issue.
    https://twitter.com/AllieHBNews/status/1308512738264702976/photo/1
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,172

    Labour should back removing the Triple Lock - but they won't because it's political suicide.

    Pensioners should not be immune, they have been almost entirely protected from austerity whilst young people have been screwed.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZwKXYjqCPY
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,614

    I pay in and get significantly less than they do and they've been protected since 2010 whilst my services have been slashed. Justify it? You can't.
    You won't when you reach pension age and NI was originally set up to fund pensions, healthcare and unemployment insurance only by Lloyd George
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,398
    isam said:

    While Starmer nods along with anything Boris and Nicola do to lock us up, it falls to Farage to be the only leader with a dissenting voice

    https://twitter.com/Nigel_Farage/status/1308504632893812737?s=20

    This was the same Nigel Farage who surrendered to Boris Johnson last autumn and handed him an 80-seat majority. Instead of whingeing from the side-lines, why doesn't he re-launch the Brexit Party and start fighting the Conservatives in the seats his party's surrender handed to the blue team?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,888

    not suspending it for one year is insane, given the odd stats on average wages thanks to covid.
    What rise are they in for?
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    Re: triple lock - it's bad enough with the guaranteed 2.5% rise (which has an enormous cumulative impact with inflation in the doldrums). But i seriously can't believe that a situation where there is an anomolous rise in wages bounce back will not lead to calls for reform. The Treasury will have to put their foot down eventually.
  • sarissasarissa Posts: 2,096
    Boris channeling Victorian jingoism - what a surprise!

    “ We have the PPE, we have the beds, we have the Nightingales,”

    “We've got the ships, we've got the men, we've got the money too,“
  • isamisam Posts: 41,142
    stodge said:

    This was the same Nigel Farage who surrendered to Boris Johnson last autumn and handed him an 80-seat majority. Instead of whingeing from the side-lines, why doesn't he re-launch the Brexit Party and start fighting the Conservatives in the seats his party's surrender handed to the blue team?


    That's him.

    Are you trying to say he surrendered?!

    The Brexit Party doesn't need to be relaunched, as I don't think it disbanded. But I would bet odds on they will fight the Conservatives over this issue, and do quite well as the only party representing those who don't wish to be locked up by the Westminster consensus
  • not suspending it for one year is insane, given the odd stats on average wages thanks to covid.
    The whole policy is insane, if you apply it continuously within a couple of hundred years over 100% of govt spending would need to go state pensions, and thats based on a stable pensioner base.

    A policy that guarantees one group an ever increasing share of the pie regardless of circumstances is clearly wrong. That it gives that ever increasing share to the richest cohort in society makes it insane.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    What's really shocking about the COVID rules is the complete lack of debate in the House of Commons. The occasional ministerial statement and questions isn't sufficient. Labour support guarantees that giving Parliament more of a chance to explore the issues won't undermine the Government. In fact, but getting the issues in the open they should welcome debate and the chance to explain their case in depth.

    Unless none of them understand it of course...
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,186
    dixiedean said:

    What rise are they in for?
    2.5%
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    kinabalu said:

    Yep. Totally agree with that observation. It was one racist exploitative undertaking amongst many. But it was our racist exploitative undertaking. And it was relatively recent. This to me makes it of particular interest and relevance. Others prefer to re-classify it as something more benign than it objectively was. They use the man-of-the-world phrase "it's complicated" to seek to achieve this. I'm neither fooled nor impressed by such talk.
    Departing from the moral issues for a moment, it seems obvious that the raw historical material of the world would be vastly impoverished if all that had ever existed were pacifist social democracies from the start. Wherever they arise in the world, empires seem to inject a sense of well, ambition, not mention flair and grandeur, into a civilization's undertakings, whether those be organizational, technological, military, or artistic. It creates a vast stage for human drama - look at the Russia of Peter or Catherine and compare it to what had gone before.

    This is one of the major factors that makes people instinctively resile against the grinding sociological mediocrity of taking the -isms as the measure of all things.
  • dixiedean said:

    What rise are they in for?
    I expect 2.5% which isn't too bad all things considered.

    Its next year the anomaly would hit, so next year that it would need to be suspended if so.
  • https://twitter.com/AllieHBNews/status/1308512738264702976/photo/1
    "told" is such a weak word there. "Told" by whom?

    I don't believe Vallance or Whitty said any such thing, at least nobody has quoted them as saying any such thing.
  • The big news is on the Guardian front page, Dishy Rishi is going to have a big announcement in the next few days.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,180
    edited September 2020

    "told" is such a weak word there. "Told" by whom?

    I don't believe Vallance or Whitty said any such thing, at least nobody has quoted them as saying any such thing.
    They are quoting an academic for UEA. Its just his opinion.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,398
    isam said:


    That's him.

    Are you trying to say he surrendered?!

    The Brexit Party doesn't need to be relaunched, as I don't think it disbanded. But I would bet odds on they will fight the Conservatives over this issue, and do quite well as the only party representing those who don't wish to be locked up by the Westminster consensus

    "Surrender" is perhaps a little excessive - I suppose Farage made the judgement that Johnson could be trusted to deliver Brexit (unlike most other Conservatives) and that getting him back with a majority was infinitely preferable to any other realistic option.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,614
    edited September 2020
    isam said:



    That's him.

    Are you trying to say he surrendered?!

    The Brexit Party doesn't need to be relaunched, as I don't think it disbanded. But I would bet odds on they will fight the Conservatives over this issue, and do quite well as the only party representing those who don't wish to be locked up by the Westminster consensus
    According to Yougov today 15% of Leavers think the new measures go too far compared to only 9% of Remainers. 15% of Tories think the measures go too far, only 10% of Labour voters and 7% of LDs think they go too far.

    A plurality of Scots, Londoners and those in the Midlands and Wales think the measures are about right or go too far, a plurality of Southerners and Northerners however think the measures do not go far enough.

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/health/survey-results/daily/2020/09/22/ffff7/2?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=daily_questions&utm_campaign=question_2
  • alex_ said:

    Re: triple lock - it's bad enough with the guaranteed 2.5% rise (which has an enormous cumulative impact with inflation in the doldrums). But i seriously can't believe that a situation where there is an anomolous rise in wages bounce back will not lead to calls for reform. The Treasury will have to put their foot down eventually.

    For this reason long term it is probably good if they stick with it. The voting public are collectively too uninterested and mathematically illiterate to understand the problems with the triple lock. They see it as being nice to pensioners and rewarding their hard work.

    When they get their 15% rise next year, the British sense of fair play will make the policy toxic and finally ready for repeal.
  • As the situation changes the policy changes.

    Do people think we should continue doing the same thing irrespective of the situation ?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,168
    Scott_xP said:
    We don't have the worst rate in Europe.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,142
    edited September 2020
    stodge said:

    "Surrender" is perhaps a little excessive - I suppose Farage made the judgement that Johnson could be trusted to deliver Brexit (unlike most other Conservatives) and that getting him back with a majority was infinitely preferable to any other realistic option.

    I think that's right

    Actually, your mob, the LDs, seem to be making more noises than any other Westminster party on the matter of whether locking us up is definitely the correct response, good for them (Davey and Cable). Whether it is genuine or as a way of distinguishing themselves from the rest, it is certainly welcome. I have been astonished by the way this has been shoved through unquestioningly
  • I expect 2.5% which isn't too bad all things considered.

    Its next year the anomaly would hit, so next year that it would need to be suspended if so.
    It should be removed now. Young people ignored as usual.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,317

    They are quoting an academic for UEA. Its just his opinion.
    Was he actually told anything? I doubt it, unless he's on the government's advisory panel.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556

    It should be removed now. Young people ignored as usual.
    Maybe they should try, y'know, voting or something.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,168

    The depressing thing about it all is that the unlocking from the first time round wasn't really finished even as it was, plenty of stuff hadn't even got back to any sort of normal before today, and it won't now for possibly more than 6 more months.

    Tried to see what the options were like to go for a swim, half the swimming pools even vaguely near me still not open and the other half only open for a short handful of hours in the day, that is if you can get one of the slots you have to pre-book in advance. Also tried to get a dental checkup, told by my practice not on the NHS but they'll happily do it if I stump 60 quid for a private appointment. Just to do a checkup, not even any specific dental work. I daresay in a year's time we might have solved covid but with a major dental work backlog.

    Feel sorry for the other stuff that hadn't even reopened yet before today.

    Since the chemicals in swimming pools kill the virus, they're the one thing that should always have remained open.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,855

    The big news is on the Guardian front page, Dishy Rishi is going to have a big announcement in the next few days.

    U turn on Furlough?
  • Foxy said:

    U turn on Furlough?
    Yes and no. Looks like he has been consulting with businesses of a different scheme(s) to support them through.
  • On the Empire I'd argue that the experience of Empire did more to create racism, than did racism create Empire.
  • New thread
  • It should be removed now. Young people ignored as usual.
    It should be but its not about young people.
  • The bar is now shut....now f##k off to the new thread.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,614
    Andy_JS said:
    Yes, Spain at 661 deaths per million and Belgium at 858 deaths per million both have a worse death rate than the UK with 615 deaths per million

    https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,186
    Andy_JS said:
    We do have the highest number of deaths in Europe though.
  • Andy_JS said:
    Unaccustomed as I am to defending Piers, he didn't mention death rates.
  • Foxy said:

    U turn on Furlough?
    Moving to the German style system, Kurzarbeit is being tipped up. Doesnt seem that different to furlough.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,614

    The big news is on the Guardian front page, Dishy Rishi is going to have a big announcement in the next few days.

    Cake for all to be funded by a 100% tax on Piers Morgan and Lord Adonis
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,554

    To prove there's a racist legacy of Empire you'd have to show that the cause of racist attitudes in the UK is because of the Empire (and elsewhere) using evidence.

    And, yet, evidence shows racist attitudes are most prevalent in Bulgaria and Romania (which had no colonial empire whatsoever) and low in the UK and Netherlands (which did) and Sweden (which did not). In fact, surveys show the UK has some of the most progressive attitudes to race in Europe - as do its former dominions in Canada, Australia and New Zealand. They are worse in parts of India, Pakistan, Nigeria and parts of the Carribean. South Africa is mixed.

    So there's no causal link which has been demonstrated. Sorry.

    Rather than echoing a fashionable consensus, and asserting it ever more vociferously in order to try to convince me, you'll have to provide me with evidence - not just shout out what you believe to be true.
    I sense you are impervious to reason on this topic due to parochial cognitive bias. You will obviously disagree with this, but such is my genuine feeling. Proof? That is your burden. That there IS a racist legacy from a relatively recent racist undertaking which encompassed a quarter of the world's area and population is the clear and obvious default. It is for someone who dissents from this to attempt to disprove it. The fact that western countries are these days more progressive on matters of race than less developed parts of the world does not come anywhere near doing that. The west is more liberal and progressive on most things and there are many reasons for this, not least affluence and education.
  • Anyway, if I'm spotted commenting on here again in the near future please remind me to bog off. I'm feeling very down about the situation and need to step away from it. I intend to bake Sachertorte and knit socks. I wish you all well.
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,071
    Andy_JS said:

    Since the chemicals in swimming pools kill the virus, they're the one thing that should always have remained open.
    But you need to wear masks in the changing rooms and showers :-)
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,554

    It has not been demonstrated beyond all reasonable doubt.

    You continuously asserting this ever more vigorously doesn't make it more convincing or true.
    It has been demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt to all those who are free of parochial cognitive bias on this sensitive topic. Which is all I can ever aspire to.
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,071
    Andy_JS said:
    Toll means number not rate.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,317
    New thread.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,554
    Foxy said:

    I think that just demonstrates that we have had multiple ethnic communities in our countries for longer. For some this exacerbates their racism, but for others it gives social contact that gets rid of some or all of their prejudices. So, one of the positives of Empire is that it has created a multicultural Britain, with declining levels of racism. Still room for improvement though.

    Personally, I don't get hung up on the French, Portuguese, or Russians being worse in some ways than our own Imperialists. It is more useful and productive to show that we are better people than our historical predecesors. The comparisons should be 21st century Britain vs 19th Century Britain, not 19th Century Britain vs 19th Century Russia or 16th Century Spain.
    And just possibly it might be that "colonial guilt" has also contributed something to our now being more liberal on race than some other countries who do not have such a history. So in this sense - if it's true - the legacy of Empire is OTOH racism aplenty, and then OTOH and over time a reduction in same. Which really would be "complicated". :smile:
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,614
    Hunt on newsnight says he would not have got the 80 seat majority Boris did had he been leader
  • kinabalu said:

    I sense you are impervious to reason on this topic due to parochial cognitive bias. You will obviously disagree with this, but such is my genuine feeling. Proof? That is your burden. That there IS a racist legacy from a relatively recent racist undertaking which encompassed a quarter of the world's area and population is the clear and obvious default. It is for someone who dissents from this to attempt to disprove it. The fact that western countries are these days more progressive on matters of race than less developed parts of the world does not come anywhere near doing that. The west is more liberal and progressive on most things and there are many reasons for this, not least affluence and education.
    Right. It's my job to find the proof. And if I don't I'm guilty of parochial cognitive bias.

    Got it.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,554

    Departing from the moral issues for a moment, it seems obvious that the raw historical material of the world would be vastly impoverished if all that had ever existed were pacifist social democracies from the start. Wherever they arise in the world, empires seem to inject a sense of well, ambition, not mention flair and grandeur, into a civilization's undertakings, whether those be organizational, technological, military, or artistic. It creates a vast stage for human drama - look at the Russia of Peter or Catherine and compare it to what had gone before.

    This is one of the major factors that makes people instinctively resile against the grinding sociological mediocrity of taking the -isms as the measure of all things.
    You can make this same argument - and imo with more relevance to the world today - for cities over the sticks.
  • kinabalu said:

    It has been demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt to all those who are free of parochial cognitive bias on this sensitive topic. Which is all I can ever aspire to.
    We're going round in circles here.

    Here's the problem: you can't prove it but you still earnestly believe it to be true.

    You have no idea how to respond to those who don't share your dogma so instead you suggest that if they disagree with you then that's their problem.

    I'll leave others to decide how convincing they think that is.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,554
    isam said:

    I think that's right

    Actually, your mob, the LDs, seem to be making more noises than any other Westminster party on the matter of whether locking us up is definitely the correct response, good for them (Davey and Cable). Whether it is genuine or as a way of distinguishing themselves from the rest, it is certainly welcome. I have been astonished by the way this has been shoved through unquestioningly
    "Locked up" seems a tad fruity (!) as a description of this sad sad situation.

    I'm off to Waitrose tomorrow morning. Then golf in the afternoon.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,554
    edited September 2020

    We're going round in circles here.

    Here's the problem: you can't prove it but you still earnestly believe it to be true.

    You have no idea how to respond to those who don't share your dogma so instead you suggest that if they disagree with you then that's their problem.

    I'll leave others to decide how convincing they think that is.
    Yep - I am also ok to leave it like that. I'm happy enough with my posts on this topic on this thread. Such is not always the case but it is here. :smile:
  • sarissa said:

    Boris channeling Victorian jingoism - what a surprise!

    “ We have the PPE, we have the beds, we have the Nightingales,”

    “We've got the ships, we've got the men, we've got the money too,“

    "And the Turks lynched grand-dad in Constaninople!"
This discussion has been closed.