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Never! The DUP’s tragic journey from Ian Paisley to King Lear – politicalbetting.com

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Comments

  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    Holding the referendum wasn't the problem. It was the way it was conducted, with dishonesty by Leave and incompetence by Remain.
    Both sides were dishonest. Claims from the Remain side that a Leave vote would bring about recession and economic catastrophe by the end of 2016 were blatant scaremongering - straight out of the Tory 2015 election campaign handbook. That was decisive in persuading me to vote Leave .
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    edited January 2021
    RobD said:

    Thanks, I guess the legislation website isn't as well maintained as I had thought it was. .
    There's an understatement for the ages!

    It's unforgivable really. People, normal people, should have a reasonable chance of being able to figure out what the law is if we are to live under the rule of law.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107
    gealbhan said:

    The print cartridges have arrived!

    It’s a vampire phone. Simples.
    Phone on desk has handset in cradle as well, Trump special by the looks of it.
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,964
    malcolmg said:

    Usual Tory play dumb act ( hopefully you are not as dumb as you make out) when they know all along the real answer. Westminster uses every opportunity, they have renaged on almost every supposed unwritten constitution item against Scotland , ignore the wishes of the Scottish people and their parliament.
    Absolutely, Malcolm. It is what the Conservatives do in England too. They organise a sloppy referendum, which is so soggy that they get away with it before the Electoral Commission only by declaring it to be only advisory; and then, afterwards, they declare that it was binding after all. Then declare that they need dictatorial powers in order to"get Brexit done", and then ride roughshod over all our constitutional safeguards and conventions.

    Their answer to all this, echoed faithfully by their sock puppets here on PB is that "we have an 80 seat majority in Parliament and we can do whatever we like". They pin their hopes on a spurious legality and pull every fast trick in the book (and a few more besides). And without trust, society breaks down.

    Good luck with your campaign for an independent Scotland.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177

    You're carrying this straw man a long way.

    Nobody said she was hated.

    Nobody even said she wasn't popular.
    The assertion was that she was out of touch. Clearly her voters disagree.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,333

    Araf Slow

    Driving in Wales is confusing and harder work.

    Do they have more accidents?

    They do now that the "EVO Triangle" is the UK's unofficial Nurburgring.

    I've done it in 18 minutes in a 996 Carrera S with Icelandic reg. plates I got off eBay.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,825
    edited January 2021
    Andy_JS said:

    I've been told that the Pfizer vaccine tends to leave you with an aching arm for a day or so, but that's it.
    If that. It's the guvnor.
  • I can see the same phone cable in both pictures.
    For those as visually challenged as Peston, the phone cord starts just by his watch and runs straight down his shirt.

    It's not at the same angle in the reflection the same way that his arm is at a different angle in the reflection.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,572
    Andy_JS said:

    I've been told that the Pfizer vaccine tends to leave you with an aching arm for a day or so, but that's it.
    I'd heard that was on the second dose? (My neighbours have had both and had no problems at all on either.)
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,364
    malcolmg said:

    Phone on desk has handset in cradle as well, Trump special by the looks of it.
    That, or he has two phones on his desk?
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107

    I can see the same phone cable in both pictures.
    Arf,Arf, Arf, do you have a squint, vertical in one and at 45 degrees in the other, faker than a 3 bob bit
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    kinabalu said:

    Nandy is NOT hated in Wigan. That's a ludicrous assertion by whoever is asserting it.
    No-one said she was hated. It was pointed out that she had a bigger than average swing against her in the GE. Gallowgate thinks she must therefore know more about red wall voters tgan HYUFD. Go figure!
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177
    felix said:

    I voted for the party with the 80 seat majority so ..yes.. i guess I must be. You, on the other hand.......seem a little too close to the red wall to notice how blue it's become - even in the likes of Wigan. :smiley:

    You might not be able to tell from Spain but Wigan voted Labour and so did many northern urban constituencies.
  • HYUFD said:

    If Boris followed Rajoy and ordered Sturgeon's arrest for treason then I am sure she would feel at home in Brussels which she seems to love so much
    You voted to stay in the EU too.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172

    Another advantage of bilingualism in Canada is that the PM is -- de facto -- bilingual. It is an unwritten law.

    So there is an intellectual hurdle for the PM to overcome.

    It acts as a safety valve to prevent the really stupid ever becoming Canadian PM.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,247
    RobD said:

    Without a doubt. Peston should have stuck to reagents.
    Not sure about huffing reagents for testing for COVID - would that be better or worse than smoking Oxy? Foxy?

    To be fair to Pesto, he has demonstrated a complete inability to deal with all the icky, geeky numbers stuff.

    Not being up to handling angles of reflection would be entirely in his wheelhouse.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177

    The law is what it is at any point in time. At the time of the Queen's Bench decision, that Boris was entitled to use his powers was the correct interpretation of the law. Agreed?

    Or is the flaw utterly unsettled until all possible avenues of appeal have been exhausted?


    The Supreme Court held that the High Court was wrong.

    What more is there to say?
  • In the days of satnav, why do we need signs? Just set your satnav to the language of choice and voila! (Other languages are available....)
    Bi-lingual road signs in Wales annoy me. What kind of a plonker can't figure out that Caerdydd is really the same place as Cardiff? And if the Welsh want to call Swansea Abertawe that's their busines. You don't expect to see signs to Florence when driving to Firenze.

    The locals get to decide what the place should be called. Everyone else, live with it.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    RobD said:

    Does Peston understand angles? It's right there in the mirror.
    Don't spoil it, I want to hold on to the belief they did something so pointlessly silly for a little while.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,795
    RobD said:

    Does Peston understand angles? It's right there in the mirror.
    It’s hardly news that Peston is just a bit thick.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    RobD said:

    Does Peston understand angles? It's right there in the mirror.
    You should have left it at 'understand'. No more is needed.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,538
    @Mary_Batty - here is the change in the Labour vote in 2019 compared with 2017 in constituencies in which they won between 57% and 67% of the vote in 2017 (they won 62.2% of the vote in Wigan in 2017).

    I'd suggest she did about par in 2019 given where her seat is. Like most MPs she is no more or less popular than her party.

    Wentworth and Dearne: -24.7 pp
    Barnsley Central: -23.8 pp
    Doncaster North: -22.1 pp
    Barnsley East: -21.9 pp
    Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford: -21.6 pp
    Jarrow: -20.0 pp
    Kingston upon Hull East: -19.1 pp
    Houghton and Sunderland South: -18.7 pp
    Washington and Sunderland West: -18.2 pp
    Easington: -18.2 pp
    Doncaster Central: -17.9 pp
    Leicester East: -16.2 pp
    South Shields: -15.9 pp
    Torfaen: -15.8 pp
    North Durham: -15.7 pp
    West Bromwich East: -15.7 pp
    Wigan: -15.5 pp
    Middlesbrough: -15.2 pp
    Makerfield: -15.1 pp
    Wansbeck: -15.1 pp
    North Tyneside: -14.8 pp
    Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney: -14.3 pp
    Islwyn: -14.1 pp
    Kingston upon Hull North: -14.0 pp
    Denton and Reddish: -13.5 pp
    Ogmore: -12.7 pp
    Sheffield South East: -12.4 pp
    Ashton-Under-Lyne: -12.3 pp
    Stalybridge and Hyde: -12.3 pp
    Wolverhampton South East: -11.8 pp
    Swansea East: -11.6 pp
    Gateshead: -11.5 pp
    Leeds East: -11.5 pp
    St Helens North: -11.5 pp
    Huddersfield: -11.4 pp
    Worsley and Eccles South: -11.3 pp
    Stockport: -11.3 pp
    Leicester West: -11.1 pp
    Nottingham North: -11.1 pp
    Brent North: -11.0 pp
    Coventry North East: -10.8 pp
    Hayes and Harlington: -10.7 pp
    Luton South: -10.6 pp
    Hampstead and Kilburn: -10.1 pp
    York Central: -10.0 pp
    Oldham West and Royton: -9.9 pp
    Rhondda: -9.7 pp
    Sheffield, Heeley: -9.7 pp
    Cynon Valley: -9.6 pp
    Bristol South: -9.5 pp
    Erith and Thamesmead: -9.5 pp
    Ealing North: -9.5 pp
    Feltham and Heston: -9.2 pp
    Southampton, Test: -9.2 pp
    Wythenshawe and Sale East: -8.9 pp
    Leeds West: -8.9 pp
    Blaenau Gwent: -8.8 pp
    Exeter: -8.8 pp
    Luton North: -8.7 pp
    Salford and Eccles: -8.7 pp
    Harrow West: -8.4 pp
    Ealing Central and Acton: -8.4 pp
    Walsall South: -8.2 pp
    Oxford East: -8.2 pp
    Swansea West: -8.1 pp
    Hornsey and Wood Green: -7.9 pp
    Bolton South East: -7.7 pp
    Birmingham, Erdington: -7.7 pp
    Greenwich and Woolwich: -7.6 pp
    Bristol East: -7.6 pp
    Newcastle Upon Tyne Central: -7.3 pp
    Derby South: -7.3 pp
    Ilford North: -7.2 pp
    Norwich South: -7.2 pp
    Brentford and Isleworth: -7.2 pp
    Nottingham South: -7.1 pp
    Tooting: -6.9 pp
    Birmingham, Selly Oak: -6.9 pp
    Brighton, Kemptown: -6.8 pp
    West Lancashire: -6.8 pp
    Islington South and Finsbury: -6.6 pp
    Stretford and Urmston: -6.5 pp
    Rochdale: -6.4 pp
    Enfield North: -6.2 pp
    Wirral South: -6.1 pp
    Hammersmith: -6.0 pp
    Hove: -5.8 pp
    Ellesmere Port and Neston: -5.8 pp
    Westminster North: -5.7 pp
    Leeds North East: -5.6 pp
    Sefton Central: -5.5 pp
    Lewisham West and Penge: -5.4 pp
    Cardiff South and Penarth: -5.4 pp
    Slough: -5.3 pp
    Bristol West: -3.7 pp
    Bradford East: -2.4 pp
    Birmingham, Yardley: -2.3 pp
    Vauxhall: -1.2 pp
    Cardiff Central: -1.2 pp
    Bradford West: 11.5 pp
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,860
    RobD said:

    Does Peston understand angles? It's right there in the mirror.
    It starts with losing a sense of perspective, and before long it leads to believing in wild conspiracy theories.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,572


    The Supreme Court held that the High Court was wrong.

    What more is there to say?
    Well, you could answer the question....
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,364
    edited January 2021
    malcolmg said:

    Arf,Arf, Arf, do you have a squint, vertical in one and at 45 degrees in the other, faker than a 3 bob bit
    Do you not understand angles either? It's because the phone is closer to the mirror than Johnson.
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,076


    Another advantage of bilingualism in Canada is that the PM is -- de facto -- bilingual. It is an unwritten law.

    So there is an intellectual hurdle for the PM to overcome.

    It acts as a safety valve to prevent the really stupid ever becoming Canadian PM.

    Weren't all of the Apartheid era South African PMs bilingual English/Afrikaans?
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177

    Well, you could answer the question....
    What question? The High Court gave their opinion on whether it was lawful. The Supreme Court held that they wrong.

    You may "support the High Court" but that's irrelevant. The Supreme Court held they were wrong so they were wrong.
  • RH1992RH1992 Posts: 788
    edited January 2021


    Another advantage of bilingualism in Canada is that the PM is -- de facto -- bilingual. It is an unwritten law.

    So there is an intellectual hurdle for the PM to overcome.

    It acts as a safety valve to prevent the really stupid ever becoming Canadian PM.

    Not really a big intellectual hurdle to becoming PM if a British PM of the calibre we have currently can also churn out boorish confidence in fluent French.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PEGtpSvGXEA

  • The assertion was that she was out of touch. Clearly her voters disagree.
    The original assertion was "hapless", which AFAIK means unlucky so a strange descriptor IMO. The only other assertion was that she'd had a bigger swing against her than average.

    You've argued against 3 different things (hated, unpopular, and now out of touch), none of which have been asserted by anyone today.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    tlg86 said:

    @Mary_Batty - here is the change in the Labour vote in 2019 compared with 2017 in constituencies in which they won between 57% and 67% of the vote in 2017 (they won 62.2% of the vote in Wigan in 2017).

    I'd suggest she did about par in 2019 given where her seat is. Like most MPs she is no more or less popular than her party.

    Wentworth and Dearne: -24.7 pp
    Barnsley Central: -23.8 pp
    Doncaster North: -22.1 pp
    Barnsley East: -21.9 pp
    Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford: -21.6 pp
    Jarrow: -20.0 pp
    Kingston upon Hull East: -19.1 pp
    Houghton and Sunderland South: -18.7 pp
    Washington and Sunderland West: -18.2 pp
    Easington: -18.2 pp
    Doncaster Central: -17.9 pp
    Leicester East: -16.2 pp
    South Shields: -15.9 pp
    Torfaen: -15.8 pp
    North Durham: -15.7 pp
    West Bromwich East: -15.7 pp
    Wigan: -15.5 pp
    Middlesbrough: -15.2 pp
    Makerfield: -15.1 pp
    Wansbeck: -15.1 pp
    North Tyneside: -14.8 pp
    Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney: -14.3 pp
    Islwyn: -14.1 pp
    Kingston upon Hull North: -14.0 pp
    Denton and Reddish: -13.5 pp
    Ogmore: -12.7 pp
    Sheffield South East: -12.4 pp
    Ashton-Under-Lyne: -12.3 pp
    Stalybridge and Hyde: -12.3 pp
    Wolverhampton South East: -11.8 pp
    Swansea East: -11.6 pp
    Gateshead: -11.5 pp
    Leeds East: -11.5 pp
    St Helens North: -11.5 pp
    Huddersfield: -11.4 pp
    Worsley and Eccles South: -11.3 pp
    Stockport: -11.3 pp
    Leicester West: -11.1 pp
    Nottingham North: -11.1 pp
    Brent North: -11.0 pp
    Coventry North East: -10.8 pp
    Hayes and Harlington: -10.7 pp
    Luton South: -10.6 pp
    Hampstead and Kilburn: -10.1 pp
    York Central: -10.0 pp
    Oldham West and Royton: -9.9 pp
    Rhondda: -9.7 pp
    Sheffield, Heeley: -9.7 pp
    Cynon Valley: -9.6 pp
    Bristol South: -9.5 pp
    Erith and Thamesmead: -9.5 pp
    Ealing North: -9.5 pp
    Feltham and Heston: -9.2 pp
    Southampton, Test: -9.2 pp
    Wythenshawe and Sale East: -8.9 pp
    Leeds West: -8.9 pp
    Blaenau Gwent: -8.8 pp
    Exeter: -8.8 pp
    Luton North: -8.7 pp
    Salford and Eccles: -8.7 pp
    Harrow West: -8.4 pp
    Ealing Central and Acton: -8.4 pp
    Walsall South: -8.2 pp
    Oxford East: -8.2 pp
    Swansea West: -8.1 pp
    Hornsey and Wood Green: -7.9 pp
    Bolton South East: -7.7 pp
    Birmingham, Erdington: -7.7 pp
    Greenwich and Woolwich: -7.6 pp
    Bristol East: -7.6 pp
    Newcastle Upon Tyne Central: -7.3 pp
    Derby South: -7.3 pp
    Ilford North: -7.2 pp
    Norwich South: -7.2 pp
    Brentford and Isleworth: -7.2 pp
    Nottingham South: -7.1 pp
    Tooting: -6.9 pp
    Birmingham, Selly Oak: -6.9 pp
    Brighton, Kemptown: -6.8 pp
    West Lancashire: -6.8 pp
    Islington South and Finsbury: -6.6 pp
    Stretford and Urmston: -6.5 pp
    Rochdale: -6.4 pp
    Enfield North: -6.2 pp
    Wirral South: -6.1 pp
    Hammersmith: -6.0 pp
    Hove: -5.8 pp
    Ellesmere Port and Neston: -5.8 pp
    Westminster North: -5.7 pp
    Leeds North East: -5.6 pp
    Sefton Central: -5.5 pp
    Lewisham West and Penge: -5.4 pp
    Cardiff South and Penarth: -5.4 pp
    Slough: -5.3 pp
    Bristol West: -3.7 pp
    Bradford East: -2.4 pp
    Birmingham, Yardley: -2.3 pp
    Vauxhall: -1.2 pp
    Cardiff Central: -1.2 pp
    Bradford West: 11.5 pp

    Well being shallow I am glad they kept her in, we don't have that many attractive MPs.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,572
    MaxPB said:

    Twitter is going to be seen as humanity's biggest error of the 21st century.
    Twitter. For twats, by twats...
  • Bi-lingual road signs in Wales annoy me. What kind of a plonker can't figure out that Caerdydd is really the same place as Cardiff? And if the Welsh want to call Swansea Abertawe that's their busines. You don't expect to see signs to Florence when driving to Firenze.

    The locals get to decide what the place should be called. Everyone else, live with it.
    One of my modest money-saving schemes is to have a huge sign saying "Araf" at every border crossing. Then it wouldn't be necessary to paint it on the road every 200 yards.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107
    RobD said:

    Does Peston understand angles? It's right there in the mirror.
    Oh Dear, you are getting worse than HYFUD and Phillip. How can the mirror change it from 45 degrees to vertical, can you not just admit it is obviously photoshopped to try and make Bozo look human.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177

    The original assertion was "hapless", which AFAIK means unlucky so a strange descriptor IMO. The only other assertion was that she'd had a bigger swing against her than average.

    You've argued against 3 different things (hated, unpopular, and now out of touch), none of which have been asserted by anyone today.
    Rubbish. The article was clearly posted as a "LOL look at woke out of touch Nandy".
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,364
    malcolmg said:

    Oh Dear, you are getting worse than HYFUD and Phillip. How can the mirror change it from 45 degrees to vertical, can you not just admit it is obviously photoshopped to try and make Bozo look human.
    Good lord. LOL. If you were here in person I could demonstrate this to you very easily.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601


    Another advantage of bilingualism in Canada is that the PM is -- de facto -- bilingual. It is an unwritten law.

    So there is an intellectual hurdle for the PM to overcome.

    It acts as a safety valve to prevent the really stupid ever becoming Canadian PM.

    That seems to presume anyone who speaks at least 2 languages is incapable of being really stupid. That seems a bit optimistic.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    RH1992 said:

    Not really an intellectual hurdle to becoming PM, I mean this PM can also speak fluent French.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PEGtpSvGXEA

    So can this other biped with a carefully mussed-up hairstyle. Which, admittedly, throws no real light on the intellectual powers of Canadian vs UK premiers. Really, it's the content that matters.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTfDT0kMnS8
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    It starts with losing a sense of perspective, and before long it leads to believing in wild conspiracy theories.
    It's the same as what happened to QAnon suckers. They slowly get dragged into a spiral of believing all of this bullshit because they want something to be true so desperately that they completely lose any sense of perspective. Peston desperately wants Boris to slip up or for the media to team to make some small gaffe, so he believes absolutely everything without question. Same as C4 with their whole "people of talent" vs "people of colour" bullshit last year.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107
    MaxPB said:

    Twitter is going to be seen as humanity's biggest error of the 21st century.
    LOL, Tories prefer tame propaganda units shocker from a couple of cultists
  • Nigelb said:

    Somehow I can’t see Boris fronting a campaign to big up Gaelic.
    Though it might be amusing to watch HYUFD throw himself enthusiastically into it.
    What’s Gaelic for riot baton?
  • malcolmg said:

    Arf,Arf, Arf, do you have a squint, vertical in one and at 45 degrees in the other, faker than a 3 bob bit
    Why the holy fuck would they add a different fake reflection to the picture? Are you completely mental?
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177
    malcolmg said:

    LOL, Tories prefer tame propaganda units shocker from a couple of cultists
    There's plenty of Tory frothers on Twitter too.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,860
    malcolmg said:

    Oh Dear, you are getting worse than HYFUD and Phillip. How can the mirror change it from 45 degrees to vertical, can you not just admit it is obviously photoshopped to try and make Bozo look human.
    It only looks vertical in the mirror because it’s in the same plane.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    malcolmg said:

    LOL, Tories prefer tame propaganda units shocker from a couple of cultists
    This place was so much better when you were banned, Malc. It's a shame the mods lifted it.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107
    gealbhan said:

    Doesn’t Belgium want to split themselves - Flanders and woollystan or something [insert joke about Haack and Spitt the Flemish comedians]

    Maybe Sturgeon can help them with their own illegal poll! 😏
    Idiots down to talking amongst themselves now.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,012
    malcolmg said:

    LOL, Tories prefer tame propaganda units shocker from a couple of cultists
    You would be stuffed Malky without the Internet, peddling your separatist nonsense would be impossible. You would be neutered...
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    edited January 2021
    Carnyx said:

    Ah, that's interesting. Of course, they can't vote if they are not living in Quebec, but there is still some effect you think?
    Yes, because the federal capital Ottawa is virtually on the boundary between Ontario and Quebec.

    You can easily work for the federal government and live in Quebec.

    In fact, that is the significance of the "Non" result from the Hull/Chapleau riding -- it is just across the river from Ottawa, but it is in Quebec. It was more strongly against independence even than the English-speaking Western Montreal ridings.
  • tlg86 said:

    @Mary_Batty - here is the change in the Labour vote in 2019 compared with 2017 in constituencies in which they won between 57% and 67% of the vote in 2017 (they won 62.2% of the vote in Wigan in 2017).

    I'd suggest she did about par in 2019 given where her seat is. Like most MPs she is no more or less popular than her party.

    Wentworth and Dearne: -24.7 pp
    Barnsley Central: -23.8 pp
    Doncaster North: -22.1 pp
    Barnsley East: -21.9 pp
    Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford: -21.6 pp
    Jarrow: -20.0 pp
    Kingston upon Hull East: -19.1 pp
    Houghton and Sunderland South: -18.7 pp
    Washington and Sunderland West: -18.2 pp
    Easington: -18.2 pp
    Doncaster Central: -17.9 pp
    Leicester East: -16.2 pp
    South Shields: -15.9 pp
    Torfaen: -15.8 pp
    North Durham: -15.7 pp
    West Bromwich East: -15.7 pp
    Wigan: -15.5 pp
    Middlesbrough: -15.2 pp
    Makerfield: -15.1 pp
    Wansbeck: -15.1 pp
    North Tyneside: -14.8 pp
    Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney: -14.3 pp
    Islwyn: -14.1 pp
    Kingston upon Hull North: -14.0 pp
    Denton and Reddish: -13.5 pp
    Ogmore: -12.7 pp
    Sheffield South East: -12.4 pp
    Ashton-Under-Lyne: -12.3 pp
    Stalybridge and Hyde: -12.3 pp
    Wolverhampton South East: -11.8 pp
    Swansea East: -11.6 pp
    Gateshead: -11.5 pp
    Leeds East: -11.5 pp
    St Helens North: -11.5 pp
    Huddersfield: -11.4 pp
    Worsley and Eccles South: -11.3 pp
    Stockport: -11.3 pp
    Leicester West: -11.1 pp
    Nottingham North: -11.1 pp
    Brent North: -11.0 pp
    Coventry North East: -10.8 pp
    Hayes and Harlington: -10.7 pp
    Luton South: -10.6 pp
    Hampstead and Kilburn: -10.1 pp
    York Central: -10.0 pp
    Oldham West and Royton: -9.9 pp
    Rhondda: -9.7 pp
    Sheffield, Heeley: -9.7 pp
    Cynon Valley: -9.6 pp
    Bristol South: -9.5 pp
    Erith and Thamesmead: -9.5 pp
    Ealing North: -9.5 pp
    Feltham and Heston: -9.2 pp
    Southampton, Test: -9.2 pp
    Wythenshawe and Sale East: -8.9 pp
    Leeds West: -8.9 pp
    Blaenau Gwent: -8.8 pp
    Exeter: -8.8 pp
    Luton North: -8.7 pp
    Salford and Eccles: -8.7 pp
    Harrow West: -8.4 pp
    Ealing Central and Acton: -8.4 pp
    Walsall South: -8.2 pp
    Oxford East: -8.2 pp
    Swansea West: -8.1 pp
    Hornsey and Wood Green: -7.9 pp
    Bolton South East: -7.7 pp
    Birmingham, Erdington: -7.7 pp
    Greenwich and Woolwich: -7.6 pp
    Bristol East: -7.6 pp
    Newcastle Upon Tyne Central: -7.3 pp
    Derby South: -7.3 pp
    Ilford North: -7.2 pp
    Norwich South: -7.2 pp
    Brentford and Isleworth: -7.2 pp
    Nottingham South: -7.1 pp
    Tooting: -6.9 pp
    Birmingham, Selly Oak: -6.9 pp
    Brighton, Kemptown: -6.8 pp
    West Lancashire: -6.8 pp
    Islington South and Finsbury: -6.6 pp
    Stretford and Urmston: -6.5 pp
    Rochdale: -6.4 pp
    Enfield North: -6.2 pp
    Wirral South: -6.1 pp
    Hammersmith: -6.0 pp
    Hove: -5.8 pp
    Ellesmere Port and Neston: -5.8 pp
    Westminster North: -5.7 pp
    Leeds North East: -5.6 pp
    Sefton Central: -5.5 pp
    Lewisham West and Penge: -5.4 pp
    Cardiff South and Penarth: -5.4 pp
    Slough: -5.3 pp
    Bristol West: -3.7 pp
    Bradford East: -2.4 pp
    Birmingham, Yardley: -2.3 pp
    Vauxhall: -1.2 pp
    Cardiff Central: -1.2 pp
    Bradford West: 11.5 pp

    Great work, thanks.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    What’s Gaelic for riot baton?
    Too civilised to have such a word. Big stick an bata mor is probably it,. though TUD is here (and I can't get this thing to put the accenty in).
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107
    gealbhan said:

    Doesn’t Belgium want to split themselves - Flanders and woollystan or something [insert joke about Haack and Spitt the Flemish comedians]

    Maybe Sturgeon can help them with their own illegal poll! 😏
    Idiots down to talking amongst themselves now.
    kle4 said:

    There's an understatement for the ages!

    It's unforgivable really. People, normal people, should have a reasonable chance of being able to figure out what the law is if we are to live under the rule of law.
    Ha Ha Ha, Tory caught lying after claiming he had just gone and read it caught red handed. The truth outs.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,364

    It only looks vertical in the mirror because it’s in the same plane.
    If the mirror were directly behind Johnson from our point of view it would look the same. But it's because the phone cable is pointing from Johnson towards the mirror that it creates what looks like an optical illusion.

    Can't believe I'm having to explain this.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,846
    malcolmg said:

    You must live in a different Scotland from me.
    Looking at different polls to you, certainly. Haven't spoken to enough people (sadly) to have anything else to go on.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601

    Why the holy fuck would they add a different fake reflection to the picture?
    Only a government stooge would ask that question.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107
    ClippP said:

    Absolutely, Malcolm. It is what the Conservatives do in England too. They organise a sloppy referendum, which is so soggy that they get away with it before the Electoral Commission only by declaring it to be only advisory; and then, afterwards, they declare that it was binding after all. Then declare that they need dictatorial powers in order to"get Brexit done", and then ride roughshod over all our constitutional safeguards and conventions.

    Their answer to all this, echoed faithfully by their sock puppets here on PB is that "we have an 80 seat majority in Parliament and we can do whatever we like". They pin their hopes on a spurious legality and pull every fast trick in the book (and a few more besides). And without trust, society breaks down.

    Good luck with your campaign for an independent Scotland.
    Thank you Clipp, how people in England can be fooled into voting for these absolute crooks is beyond me.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,825
    felix said:

    No-one said she was hated. It was pointed out that she had a bigger than average swing against her in the GE. Gallowgate thinks she must therefore know more about red wall voters tgan HYUFD. Go figure!
    That Lisa Nandy knows more about red wall voters than HYUFD is not an assertion that requires a tortuous debate. You just nod and move on.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177
    @YBarddCwsc thank you for the Quebec/Canada insight. It's very interesting.
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,076
    Nigelb said:

    More accurate to say that his opinion is of no more relevance than that of any other single voter. After all, the electorate does have some indirect influence in changing laws.

    So, infinitesimally relevant.
    Does the UK have infinitely many voters now? It must be all those EU immigrants getting last minute citizenship!
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,538
    That Tweet from Peston really ought to get him the sack. It's not so much that he's a complete fucking idiot that's the problem, it's that he's clearly looking at some weird anti-government shit on Twitter.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    ClippP said:

    Absolutely, Malcolm. It is what the Conservatives do in England too. They organise a sloppy referendum, which is so soggy that they get away with it before the Electoral Commission only by declaring it to be only advisory; and then, afterwards, they declare that it was binding after all. Then declare that they need dictatorial powers in order to"get Brexit done", and then ride roughshod over all our constitutional safeguards and conventions.
    They may have tried to act as though it was binding but they didn't argue that in court, because it wasn't. It was an attempted moral argument.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,786
    RobD said:

    I was saying she did proportionally worse than in the rest of the country. I don't think that is a particularly contentious assessment given the swings.
    Actually, given that Wigan voted 64% Leave in the 2016 referendum, Nandy did very well to hold the seat. The swing against Labour in 2019 was much higher than average in Leave seats, I believe, though I can't cite the figures.
  • Rubbish. The article was clearly posted as a "LOL look at woke out of touch Nandy".
    Ah, so it was the tone of the original tweet posting (which had no additional comment from HYUFD) that did it?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    tlg86 said:

    That Tweet from Peston really ought to get him the sack. It's not so much that he's a complete fucking idiot that's the problem, it's that he's clearly looking at some weird anti-government shit on Twitter.

    It's what I'd expect from the twatbot on here, for a supposedly serious journalist to be entertaining this conspiracy bullshit is quite damning.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    @YBarddCwsc thank you for the Quebec/Canada insight. It's very interesting.

    It is, isn't it? And arguably even less relevant to the Scottish situation than I had realised. That issue of the ill-defined border is very interesting.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,825

    The assertion was that she was out of touch. Clearly her voters disagree.
    She's not out of touch with the red wall. She's in touch with it. A bit too in touch if anything from a North London metro prog perspective. Nevertheless I voted for her as leader.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    RobD said:

    If the mirror were directly behind Johnson from our point of view it would look the same. But it's because the phone cable is pointing from Johnson towards the mirror that it creates what looks like an optical illusion.

    Can't believe I'm having to explain this.
    I hope the next photo shows him on the phone while a man saws him in half, it'll blow twitter's mind.
    But I hope out hope they really would fake a photo for absolutely no reason, just for laughs.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    eristdoof said:

    Does the UK have infinitely many voters now? It must be all those EU immigrants getting last minute citizenship!
    Anecdotally, around 20-30% of my European friends/colleagues are in the process of getting UK citizenship and a lot of the rest are looking to do it once they meet the residency requirements and get indefinitely leave to remain. I think the whole Brexit thing has got a lot of them (unnecessarily, but understandably) worried about their long term status here and a passport is the best way to resolve it for all of them.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,364

    A source in Number 10 has sent me the original, unphotoshopped photo of the phone call.


    They could have at least shopped out the cable in the mirror. ;)
  • Actually, given that Wigan voted 64% Leave in the 2016 referendum, Nandy did very well to hold the seat. The swing against Labour in 2019 was much higher than average in Leave seats, I believe, though I can't cite the figures.
    This needs to be said much more often: people vote in general elections on many issues, and the EU is but one issue. Pro EU people vote for anti-EU parties, and vice versa, and there is no contradiction there whatsoever.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    Also, this proves Dave's theory. Too many tweets make a twat.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107
    RobD said:

    That, or he has two phones on his desk?
    Possibly , but no way the cable can change from 45 degrees to vertical, they photoshopped it for some purpose. You would think at the money they pay their underlings they would be a bit better at it.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,116
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    edited January 2021


    Another advantage of bilingualism in Canada is that the PM is -- de facto -- bilingual. It is an unwritten law.

    So there is an intellectual hurdle for the PM to overcome.

    It acts as a safety valve to prevent the really stupid ever becoming Canadian PM.

    Drakeford is bilingual.

    Johnson speaks a great many languages.

    Sturgeon so far as I know only speaks English.

    I’m not sure your premise is valid...

    Edit - doesn’t Paul Davies speak Welsh as his first language as well?
  • RobD said:

    Does Peston understand angles? It's right there in the mirror.
    "what mirror"
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    malcolmg said:

    emphasise "some", many think differently and it is open to debate at present, no evidence or science to prove it is valid at present. Fingers crossed but far from certain, and based purely on crap government wanting to try and be popular by jabbing more people quickly rather than based on solid scientific evidence.
    Time will tell.
    Whilst I understand the reflexive urge to assume the worst of the Government at all times, the evidence in this case suggests that they were clearly following medical advice.

    It's not as if the change in the dosing regimen was even particularly popular. The first reaction to it was widespread whingeing from old crocs who had already had the first jab about being made to wait three months behind other people, rather than the three weeks they had originally been led to expect.

    If getting single shots into as many people as possible as quickly as possible will dampen the epidemic, cause the death toll to plummet, lift pressure from the hospitals and get education and the economy moving more quickly than going at a snail's pace, then it's well worth it. If delaying the second doses were ultimately to reduce the length of protection from the vaccine, and there had to be another complete cycle of booster shots for everyone in the Autumn as a consequence, then it would still be worth it. And even if the net result is that a very large group of people all get three-quarters of the protection expected, rather than a relatively small group of people getting all of it and the others getting none at all for months, then that's probably also worth it.

    This decision, according to the rationale that figures from Whitty downwards have laid out, is all about the mathematics of getting the best level of protection to the largest slice of the vulnerable population in the shortest possible period of time, and not about giving Boris Johnson an opportunity to show that the UK vaccine program is considerably more advanced than almost everybody else's. Even though it is.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,795
    MaxPB said:

    Not so much for monoclonal antibodies as they are derived from a vaccine response rather than the disease itself, however, it could prove to be the case that they also lead to viral mutations in the short term.

    I've got a meeting with a world leading viral immunological specialist in a few days and I'm going to ask all of these questions in mutation and vaccine evasion.
    I don’t think that’s quite right.
    The Regeneron antibody development process is very different than just the product of a vaccine response, as they are aiming to produce monoclonal antibodies, rather than the broad spectrum polyclonal vaccine response (though it’s not entirely different, as they are immunising genetically modified mice):
    https://www.regeneron.com/antibodies

    It’s rather the fact that the cocktail includes only a couple of antibodies to the spike protein (and also that the number of cases in which it’s used is dwarfed by the overall number of infections, so the opportunities aren’t as great), whereas both vaccine and infection responses produce a very large number of different antibodies. And that, as immune memory is laid down post antibody response, there are further opportunities for the immune system to diversify that response.

    That’s my very much non-expert understanding, so I’d be very interested in your contact’s answers.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107
    MaxPB said:

    This place was so much better when you were banned, Malc. It's a shame the mods lifted it.
    How Tory Max, I would not expect a right wing zealot like yourself to prefer democracy , you would rather read your own mince and think how smart you are. Speaking in an echo chamber is no great feat.Stick to the chumocracy and don't get out of your depth talking to real people.
  • malcolmg said:

    Possibly , but no way the cable can change from 45 degrees to vertical, they photoshopped it for some purpose. You would think at the money they pay their underlings they would be a bit better at it.
    You've definitely lost your marbles if you believe that.

    Please malc, stand back from the edge.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575

    A source in Number 10 has sent me the original, unphotoshopped photo of the phone call.


    #feelthebern
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,364
    malcolmg said:

    Possibly , but no way the cable can change from 45 degrees to vertical, they photoshopped it for some purpose. You would think at the money they pay their underlings they would be a bit better at it.
    He does - https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/F9D2/production/_116645936_borisbiden.jpg

    And it can, through a reflection. Get a mirror and look for yourself.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Jesus Christ. Does he think the sun and moon are about the same size?
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107

    Why the holy fuck would they add a different fake reflection to the picture? Are you completely mental?
    You think it is just because they have one of those fairground mirrors then.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    malcolmg said:

    How Tory Max, I would not expect a right wing zealot like yourself to prefer democracy , you would rather read your own mince and think how smart you are. Speaking in an echo chamber is no great feat.Stick to the chumocracy and don't get out of your depth talking to real people.
    Afternoon Malc, I hope those turnips are OK.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107

    Twitter. For twats, by twats...
    Methinks you dost protest too much
  • NEW THREAD

  • malcolmg said:

    You think it is just because they have one of those fairground mirrors then.
    No. It's a normal mirror. You fail to understand perspective and its effect on a 2d picture of a 3d world.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    IshmaelZ said:

    Jesus Christ. Does he think the sun and moon are about the same size?
    Ah, any excuse:
    https://youtu.be/MMiKyfd6hA0
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    edited January 2021
    malcolmg said:

    How Tory Max, I would not expect a right wing zealot like yourself to prefer democracy , you would rather read your own mince and think how smart you are. Speaking in an echo chamber is no great feat.Stick to the chumocracy and don't get out of your depth talking to real people.
    As much as I want Scotland to vote for independence, I'm willing to live with another bout of you lot bottling it just to see your reaction, Malc. Hopefully a really close one as well just to rub it in.

    I've always held to the idea that I could sit down with any PBer and have a pint and we would have a great time. You are the exception that proves the rule. Congratulations.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,795

    Whilst I understand the reflexive urge to assume the worst of the Government at all times, the evidence in this case suggests that they were clearly following medical advice.

    It's not as if the change in the dosing regimen was even particularly popular. The first reaction to it was widespread whingeing from old crocs who had already had the first jab about being made to wait three months behind other people, rather than the three weeks they had originally been led to expect.

    If getting single shots into as many people as possible as quickly as possible will dampen the epidemic, cause the death toll to plummet, lift pressure from the hospitals and get education and the economy moving more quickly than going at a snail's pace, then it's well worth it. If delaying the second doses were ultimately to reduce the length of protection from the vaccine, and there had to be another complete cycle of booster shots for everyone in the Autumn as a consequence, then it would still be worth it. And even if the net result is that a very large group of people all get three-quarters of the protection expected, rather than a relatively small group of people getting all of it and the others getting none at all for months, then that's probably also worth it.

    This decision, according to the rationale that figures from Whitty downwards have laid out, is all about the mathematics of getting the best level of protection to the largest slice of the vulnerable population in the shortest possible period of time, and not about giving Boris Johnson an opportunity to show that the UK vaccine program is considerably more advanced than almost everybody else's. Even though it is.
    Agreed.
    I’m not at all fond of the government, but this was done following the science advisors’ consensus. It was something of a gamble, as there are significant risks involved, and it was far from uncontested, but (fingers crossed) it is beginning to look as though it was justified.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107
    kle4 said:

    Don't spoil it, I want to hold on to the belief they did something so pointlessly silly for a little while.
    KLE, don't let the Tories take you in, they have form for mindless stupidity. I am only surprised they did not have a woman in the mirror reflection.
  • England new vaccinations

    First dose 443,330
    Second dose 774

    Total 444,104

    Yesterday 425,596
    Last week 277,209
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976

    It starts with losing a sense of perspective, and before long it leads to believing in wild conspiracy theories.
    He's probably going to want to refract this tweet soon.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,860
    malcolmg said:

    You think it is just because they have one of those fairground mirrors then.
    Do you think this is photoshopped?

    image
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107

    You would be stuffed Malky without the Internet, peddling your separatist nonsense would be impossible. You would be neutered...
    Irony meter just blew up
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,107

    No. It's a normal mirror. You fail to understand perspective and its effect on a 2d picture of a 3d world.
    OK Professor, it must be so
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    malcolmg said:

    Yes and given last 19 polls have had a range from 52-59 for Independence it is a big bit misleading into the bargain.
    Survation last week had the margin as 51 - 49!
  • A source in Number 10 has sent me the original, unphotoshopped photo of the phone call.


    Must be Photoshopped, surely 'New UK obesity strategy' BJ isn't that fat?
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    HYUFD said:
    I know these are stories about fringe outriders, but the Government gets into trouble more generally over this issue because of its chronic dishonesty and obfuscation, and its terrible lack of communication skills.

    Broadly speaking, one gets the impression that it wants to be very cautious but is afraid of making itself wildly unpopular if it is honest about the aim. So we get these dispiriting backpedalling announcements - first, the easing of restrictions will be considered in mid-February. Then there's a vague aspiration that the schools might come back in March. Then the timetable gets pushed back to Easter. Now (admittedly in the nutty Express, but it would be no surprise if it started cropping up elsewhere in the next five minutes,) dark mutterings about September. Even if the more pessimistic timetables are being made up by the newspapers, they're merely filling a vacuum created by the Government itself.

    I got into trouble for going on about excuses the other day, but I think in the right context it's valid to use the word nonetheless: instead of being upfront about what they want to do, they will fib and prevaricate until forced, and then pull out some piece of scientific advice or another and deploy it as an excuse to discard their false platitudes and do what they intended from the outset. It's why we really do need at least a broad and realistic timetable, and to understand the parameters which will determine exactly when each step can be delivered.

    The people who want all the restrictions gone in the next two months will be incandescent if, for example, the Government says it isn't minded to let pubs open or let people go to each others' houses until everyone over 40 has been vaccinated twice, but they're going to be even more angry if they are given no information at all (or, worse, led to believe in a rapid outcome) and then disappointed later.

    The Government is currently behaving like a man with a toothache who's in deep denial and doesn't want to make an expensive and painful trip to the dentist. It either won't talk about the problem or downplays it, all the while medicating with painkillers and knowing deep down that the treatment has to take place, and putting it off is just making the eventual outcome all the more agonising.

    If you think that we're all going to have to sit at home mouldering until June, or that the schools will be mothballed until September, or that foreign holidays are to be banned for the rest of the year, then don't keep it to yourselves. Tell us and explain why, FFS.
This discussion has been closed.