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The pressure mounts on Johnson ahead of Monday’s “COVID roadmap” statement – politicalbetting.com

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  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    DougSeal said:

    You don’t mention the impact of natural infection. Down here in Kent and in London there is, I am virtually certain, a degree of population immunity amongst the most exposed sections of the workforce. Not total herd immunity by any stretch but vaccination puts us closer. Family friends of ours, whole family had symptoms (all fine now), save for their 5 year old. Naive to think he didn’t get it but those young immune systems...
    It's true that while eroding R by about 20% below what it would be wouldn't help much at an R of 4 (down to 3.2; hardly slows it) or even 2 (down to 1.6) - when restrictions push it somewhere close to 1, it could actually make all the difference.

    From 1.1 to 0.9 helps a hell of a lot. From 1.0 to 0.8, also.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,735

    A significant number of teachers do the job because it fits in well with child care responsibilities. In fact we have a number of pupils who get a lift to school with their teacher parent(s).
    Round here the strongest selling point of a job in the local Catholic trust is guaranteed places for your children.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    edited February 2021
    If Starmer is going to channel the spirit of Attlee, he better get cracking.

    Not only is he a policy free zone, I don’t even see any evidence that ideological outriders - the left wing think tanks, intellectuals etc - have much interesting to say.

    That wasn’t the case for Thatcher, Blair or even Cameron.

    Or for Attlee.
  • It certainly means those (on both sides of the Channel) who were hoping for a "softening" of the agreement are in for a disappointment. I wonder if he will accelerate checks on this side of the Channel?
  • It certainly means those (on both sides of the Channel) who were hoping for a "softening" of the agreement are in for a disappointment. I wonder if he will accelerate checks on this side of the Channel?
    Reciprocity should be key.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,716

    No one seriously believes our biggest risks are in East Asia.

    Unless you are talking more Wu-Flu, to which the best response is probably not to deploy an aircraft carrier.
    You realise the majority of the world's advanced chip manufacturing is situated in Taiwan - and a good slug of the rest in South Korea ?

    What you might see as regional issues on the other side of the globe have global consequences. Irrespective of any superpower ambitions China might have.
  • Nigelb said:

    You realise the majority of the world's advanced chip manufacturing is situated in Taiwan - and a good slug of the rest in South Korea ?

    What you might see as regional issues on the other side of the globe have global consequences. Irrespective of any superpower ambitions China might have.
    He literally said the other day that China invading Taiwan would not affect the UK. 🤦🏻‍♂️

    How to deal with that level of mindboggling ignorance?
  • SandraMcSandraMc Posts: 727

    Since it took Churchill's 1950s Conservative government two more years to end sugar rationing, perhaps things were a bit more complicated than you make out.
    I remember reading George Melly's "Rum, Bum and Concertina" some years ago, which describes his time in the Royal Navy. He says that after the War he was amazed that when when he visited European countries, so many had luxuries like cream cakes when rationing was so strict back in Britain and he wondered why.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,106

    It is obvious. Socialists were in power from 1945-1951 when most of those key decisions on nationalising the economy were made, and directing its investment. And don't forget, much as it might pain you to hear this, that Attlee got us into the Korean War and the Malaya Emergency and advocated a "new colonialism" in Africa, focussed on keeping African colonies as strategic Cold War assets while modernising their economies - they thus came under an increased degree of direct control from London. This didn't change until 1957-1958 with Macmillan took over. The best you could say is that Churchill/Eden represented an interregnum which didn't change very much, other than ending rationing and trying to be a bit more sensible on the economy, which is also true.

    Attlee was instrumental in developing Britain's nuclear deterrent, and would be shocked to hear your views about Trident - although familiar with them from the left-wing of his party - as he saw it as a necessity to prevent nuclear blackmail, and level the playing field for the UK against other powers with massive and overwhelming conventional armed forces.
    At least back then he had the justification that we still felt that we could act independently as a power on the global stage, before the brutal reality checkpoint of Suez. Since Suez the idea that our own nuclear weapons achieve anything separate from the deterrence of the American umbrella is an illusion. Even were the latter to disappear under some Trump redux, there isn't a credible scenario where Trident makes sense, not least because the threats of violence that we face no longer come from conventional military nations.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    You're in so far in de Nile you're walking like an Egyptian.

    China are the world's number one long term threat - and as a country in the world they are our number one long term threat too.

    Russia are piddly bit players. Russia to China is like England/the UK to the USA. Russia used to be a superpower, they're not anymore, they're just playing at it nowadays.

    The consequences of Sindy need to be dealt with but we'll get over that one way or another, its not that consequential for dealing with our enemies.

    The Middle East we're still dealing with but its not as significant as China.

    China are the new evil empire, they're every bit as much a threat as the USSR was. If you deny that you're not big or clever, you're just showing how little attention you're paying.
    So Russia is not a threat, the Middle East “we are dealing with”, and I am trying to “big and clever” to suggest otherwise?

    It’s a view.
  • eek said:

    As I said before hindsight is a wonderful thing and trying to avoid Diesel made perfect sense given that at the time we needed to import it but we didn't need to import coal.

    Beeching literally did what he was asked to do - yes he probably cut too much but the requirements created a criteria that left him with little choice. Especially as by then it was obvious that road was the future for both freight and public transport.
    Of course it is. You're absolutely right. Hindsight makes wise men of us all. But, I doubt I'd have been arguing for socialism at the time, and neither were many leading Conservatives, and all these points were made then - but, by the time the 1950s came round, they felt it was simply the price of post-war democracy.

    Beeching, hmm. I'm often tried to be sympathetic to him. The trouble is he was so dogmatic. He was interviewed again in the early 1980s, before he died, and the main regret he seemed to have was that he didn't go further, including closing the ECML between Newcastle and Edinburgh on the basis that it would only inconvenience Berwick-upon-Tweed and the WCML was sufficient. He wanted to only prioritise 3,000 miles for investment of the over 10,000 miles we have today.

    He didn't take into account anything but raw commercial profitability of a line. There was no Treasury Green Book analysis of RoI for the wider or local economy, nor the displacement costs of maintenance or congestion onto the roads, and the savings he actually achieved in the end were very modest. So, I think he was actually rather an unimaginative and dogmatic man, and entirely unrepentant even with the benefit of 20 years hindsight - which is when I'd expect someone reflective to acknowledge what they got wrong.

    I think he overclosed about 1,000-2,000 route miles, failed to recommend general operational economies on the balance of the retained network, and the omission on recommendations of how to handle of land disposals post closure was grossly irresponsible - and it directly inhibits feasible reopenings today.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g39gLzZd68Y
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,716

    Churchill was largely in the wilderness in those years, and broadly ignored.

    The story of India is that it got each level of progressive self-government and reform about 20 years later than it should have done, when compared to the other dominions, and then only to about 60-70% of the level that it should have done.

    I think had it moved on a similar trajectory to Australia and Canada, provincial and local self-government in the 1850s and 1860s, and broader home rule by the 1880s and 1890s, with full dominion status in the 1920s and 1930s, then we'd have had a much more positive long-term relationship over the last 60-70 years with India as a close ally throughout, which would have helped immeasurably with the Cold War, and it might be an influential member of a far more powerful "Six Eyes" today.
    It's a nice piece of alternate history, but given contemporary British attitudes, none of that was remotely possible.
  • So Russia is not a threat, the Middle East “we are dealing with”, and I am trying to “big and clever” to suggest otherwise?

    It’s a view.
    Russia is a threat, but a minor one compared to China. Absolutely, 100%.

    Russia is not the USSR. China could be.
  • IanB2 said:

    At least back then he had the justification that we still felt that we could act independently as a power on the global stage, before the brutal reality checkpoint of Suez. Since Suez the idea that our own nuclear weapons achieve anything separate from the deterrence of the American umbrella is an illusion. Even were the latter to disappear under some Trump redux, there isn't a credible scenario where Trident makes sense, not least because the threats of violence that we face no longer come from conventional military nations.
    The writing was on the wall well before Suez. It's just no-one wanted to face up to it.

    I disagree with you on Trident. It prevents nuclear blackmail by rogue states or groups, and also a scenario where a major prospective enemy calculates they can directly threaten Britain unilaterally without inviting an American response.

    They are complimentary assets.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    He literally said the other day that China invading Taiwan would not affect the UK. 🤦🏻‍♂️

    How to deal with that level of mindboggling ignorance?
    PB Brexiters love to talk about deploying their divisions (how many do they have?) into the Far East because it fits their ideology that Europe - ie the continent we live in - can be ignored.

    It’s sheer fantasy, and does not bode well for the U.K.’s future prosperity which has to be based on the world as it is.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited February 2021

    PB Brexiters love to talk about deploying their divisions (how many do they have?) into the Far East because it fits their ideology that Europe - ie the continent we live in - can be ignored.

    It’s sheer fantasy, and does not bode well for the U.K.’s future prosperity which has to be based on the world as it is.
    The world as it is is a single planet where any part of the planet can be accessed from any other part of the planet.

    Which western European country are we more likely to risk armed conflict with over China?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    The government's cautious approach is sensible in order to minimise the risk of mutations and the current vaccine not then being effective
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,319



    He literally said the other day that China invading Taiwan would not affect the UK. 🤦🏻‍♂️


    What do you think the UK would do if China did invade Taiwan? I'd guess at absolutely nothing.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180

    everything in place for half a million doses a week</>

    Do you have some more info you can share? - not seen very much about preparations for mass vaccination in European countries, to date.
    I didn't keep the link but yesterday The man in charge of health in the Junta de Andalucia gave an interview in which he outlined the capacity for delivery in place - with venues for mass vaccinations. However, he added that we were reliant solely now on central government delivering the vaccines. He said it was hoped for bigger supplies in March or April. If it happens , great but no-one is holding their breath. Also in Spain, Pfizer and Modena are reserved for 60+ and those with health issues. AZN for the younger. They also follow rigidly the 2 doses in 1 month regime - which will add unnecessary delays to protecting the maximum number of people.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    edited February 2021
    Nigelb said:

    You realise the majority of the world's advanced chip manufacturing is situated in Taiwan - and a good slug of the rest in South Korea ?

    What you might see as regional issues on the other side of the globe have global consequences. Irrespective of any superpower ambitions China might have.
    Yes I do realise that.

    But unless you can convince me that computer chips are more strategically important than food, energy, and the great preponderance of our trade, I’m not going to put it up there as our #1 issue.

    ALL democratic countries have an interest in avoiding a Chinese invasion of Taiwan of course.

    But we are not at the front of the queue.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,716
    DougSeal said:

    India, or the various bits of it, had a very high degree of self-government before the East India Company showed up.
    And of course some of that self-government (the princely states) were not at all enthusiastic for the idea of a government of the whole of India.
  • Dura_Ace said:


    What do you think the UK would do if China did invade Taiwan? I'd guess at absolutely nothing.
    Which is why prevention is better than cure.

    The USA and friends like the UK, Singapore, South Korea and many more projecting their strength around Taiwan is more likely to deter China from invading in the first place.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    The world as it is is a single planet where any part of the planet can be accessed from any other part of the planet.

    Which western European country are we more likely to risk armed conflict with over China?
    Russia routinely sends its subs and planes into “Western European” seas and airspace.
  • IanB2 said:

    It is simplifying only slightly to say that Churchill was wrong about pretty much everything over his long political career, except the threat from the Nazis.
    That's a huge oversimplification. Churchill was a romantic Victorian imperialist, and held over those attitudes from the 1880s and 1890s for far too long, but he also gave some of the most powerful insights into human nature ever made, and championed a number of important social and economic reforms. He was utterly instrumental to the post-war democratic settlement, intelligently critiquing absolutism, dictatorship and communism - and butchering their arguments brilliantly.

    If he had a weakness it was his emotional and erratic personality, which became a strength in WWII, of course.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    edited February 2021

    The writing was on the wall well before Suez. It's just no-one wanted to face up to it.

    I disagree with you on Trident. It prevents nuclear blackmail by rogue states or groups, and also a scenario where a major prospective enemy calculates they can directly threaten Britain unilaterally without inviting an American response.

    They are complimentary assets.
    We have not been a superpower since Attlee gave India independence. Morally he may have been right to do so but Churchill was our last leader of global significance there is no doubt about that. By the time Eden was PM we could not act independently outside of our territory without co ordinating with the US first, even with French support.

    I agree on Trident, as long as Putin, Xi and Kim Jong Un and potentially Iran have nuclear weapons, so should we
  • Andy_JS said:

    It was always difficult to believe that the Chinese death toll reached around 4,000 in April and then didnt increase at all for many months.
    No one believes the official estimate, the question is how much higher the true figure is. Even 100,000 would imply a similar death rate to the UK - Hubei has ~61m people.

    I think earlier estimates of 40,000 are closer to the truth - the Chinese crackdown may have been too late, but I am sure it got the job done.
  • They all have a matter of weeks (one or two months, if they're lucky) before China are onto this and nail their shackles to the floor for good.

    I'd tell all BNO passport holders to apply now, and slip out via multiple routes on multiple pretexts as soon as the Rona restrictions allow - and before if they can.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038

    You're in so far in de Nile you're walking like an Egyptian.

    China are the world's number one long term threat - and as a country in the world they are our number one long term threat too.

    Russia are piddly bit players. Russia to China is like England/the UK to the USA. Russia used to be a superpower, they're not anymore, they're just playing at it nowadays.

    The consequences of Sindy need to be dealt with but we'll get over that one way or another, its not that consequential for dealing with our enemies.

    The Middle East we're still dealing with but its not as significant as China.

    China are the new evil empire, they're every bit as much a threat as the USSR was. If you deny that you're not big or clever, you're just showing how little attention you're paying.
    Realistically now Hong Kong is no longer a British colony we will not do anything about China, even if they invade Taiwan, unless the US has done something first
  • Yes I do realise that.

    But unless you can convince me that computer chips are more strategically important than food, energy, and the great preponderance of our trade, I’m not going to put it up there as our #1 issue.

    ALL democratic countries have an interest in avoiding a Chinese invasion of Taiwan of course.

    But we are not at the front of the queue.
    The UK is not at risk of strategically losing food, energy, trade or anything else. You think Russia are going to be able to cut our food and energy off? How?

    We're not at the front of the queue in avoiding a Chinese invasion of Taiwan. We are a part of an alliance doing that though and working together with our allies to prevent it. If China invaded Taiwan and said they were refusing to supply chips to the western world then we would be devastated economically far more than anything that could happen from Brexit, Sindy or any other petty trivial distracitons like that.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,106
    edited February 2021

    That's a huge oversimplification. Churchill was a romantic Victorian imperialist, and held over those attitudes from the 1880s and 1890s for far too long, but he also gave some of the most powerful insights into human nature ever made, and championed a number of important social and economic reforms. He was utterly instrumental to the post-war democratic settlement, intelligently critiquing absolutism, dictatorship and communism - and butchering their arguments brilliantly.

    If he had a weakness it was his emotional and erratic personality, which became a strength in WWII, of course.
    A fair point on communism. If you broaden my point to encompass the threat from totalitarianism, I think it stands.

    As an aside, he once sent a destroyer to deal with a strike in Liverpool, I believe.

    As a further aside, had WWII been fought as he wanted rather than as the Americans, it would have lasted years longer.
  • Russia routinely sends its subs and planes into “Western European” seas and airspace.
    Just as we sent ours to Asia.

    As I said, they're like us. Still relevant but shades of their former selves.
  • HYUFD said:

    Realistically now Hong Kong is no longer a British colony we will not do anything about China, even if they invade Taiwan, unless the US has done something first
    That's the whole point of the alliance. We're working with Biden, with the USA. We're not acting unilaterally.
  • The argument at the moment seems to be several people violently agreeing with each other for the most part...
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,716

    PB Brexiters love to talk about deploying their divisions (how many do they have?) into the Far East because it fits their ideology that Europe - ie the continent we live in - can be ignored.

    It’s sheer fantasy, and does not bode well for the U.K.’s future prosperity which has to be based on the world as it is.
    That might well be true, but your insouciance about the strategic threat is equally silly.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    ydoethur said:

    We do have professional standards, set by the DfE, which amount to the same thing as an oath. Although they are written by non-teachers and the profession is regulated by civil servants, unlike the GMC. That has drawbacks and advantages which I won’t bother going into as it’s a long essay.

    I think however your last but one sentence is spot on.
    The GTC regulated teachers from 2000 to 2012 I believe, now its functions handled by the Teaching Regulation Agency within the Department for Education
  • Nigelb said:

    It's a nice piece of alternate history, but given contemporary British attitudes, none of that was remotely possible.
    I think much of it is, and there was certainly debate on it at the time - just as Home Rule for Ireland was first proposed by Gladstone in the 1880s, but never happened, by which time it was too late - here's a debate on it in 1929:

    https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/lords/1929/nov/05/india-the-viceroys-statement

    I wouldn't land it all at the door of unenlightened British attitudes, either - I think that's too simplistic: we are all products of our times, with a only a visionary few able to see how things can be different, and why, and you need to factor in the geopolitical context, and broader realpolitik constraints of the times too, which aren't the same as our constraints and context today.
  • IanB2 said:

    A fair point on communism. If you broaden my point to encompass the threat from totalitarianism, I think it stands.

    As an aside, he once sent a destroyer to deal with a strike in Liverpool, I believe.

    As a further aside, had WWII been fought as he wanted rather than as the Americans, it would have lasted years longer.
    Yes, he was a bit too "imaginative" on the military front, and sometimes a bit too keen on it too.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    IanB2 said:

    A fair point on communism. If you broaden my point to encompass the threat from totalitarianism, I think it stands.

    As an aside, he once sent a destroyer to deal with a strike in Liverpool, I believe.

    As a further aside, had WWII been fought as he wanted rather than as the Americans, it would have lasted years longer.
    Churchill also introduced National Insurance for healthcare and unemployment benefit.

    Had Britain fallen in 1940 of course then Moscow would likely have fallen to the Nazis by winter 1940
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    Dura_Ace said:


    What do you think the UK would do if China did invade Taiwan? I'd guess at absolutely nothing.
    Sanctions, resolutions in UN (vetoed of course), very probably nothing else unless the US was involved in the defence.

    Oh, and pray that the Queen Elizabeth is not in range of missiles yet.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,563

    Just as we sent ours to Asia.

    As I said, they're like us. Still relevant but shades of their former selves.
    Lot further to Asia for us though. And what is Russia to do if it wants to strengthen..... or weaken .... it's fleet in Black Sea? Send it's warships up the Volga?

    And yes I know the Russian ships are probably not 'just passing'!
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    Nigelb said:

    That might well be true, but your insouciance about the strategic threat is equally silly.
    I didn’t have you down as a Brexity idiot, but I guess you must be.

    I’m not insouciant.

    I am reminding the PB Brexit incel group-thinkers that obsessing over China and military deployments to the Far East is not a substitute for a defence strategy.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,626
    HYUFD said:

    Churchill also introduced National Insurance for healthcare and unemployment benefit.

    Had Britain fallen in 1940 of course then Moscow would likely have fallen to the Nazis by winter 1940
    Maybe by 1941, there was never going to be a Russian front in 1940.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180

    Reciprocity should be key.
    I agree with that but we should approach the matter constructively rather than in a mercantilist fashion looking for some small advantage. There will be enough of that from the French to be going on with.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    DavidL said:

    Sanctions, resolutions in UN (vetoed of course), very probably nothing else unless the US was involved in the defence.

    Oh, and pray that the Queen Elizabeth is not in range of missiles yet.
    China if it invaded Taiwan and the US had not already taken military action in response would not target a UK aircraft carrier as that would be an attack on a NATO member which would guarantee a US response as well as from the UK
  • The UK is not at risk of strategically losing food, energy, trade or anything else. You think Russia are going to be able to cut our food and energy off? How?

    We're not at the front of the queue in avoiding a Chinese invasion of Taiwan. We are a part of an alliance doing that though and working together with our allies to prevent it. If China invaded Taiwan and said they were refusing to supply chips to the western world then we would be devastated economically far more than anything that could happen from Brexit, Sindy or any other petty trivial distracitons like that.
    I think we'll largely be liberated on energy security issues in the next 10-20 years, and our food is assured with our web of trade deals and domestic production.

    It's international and global stability that we depend upon as a services-based trading nation (that's where we earn our money to pay for everything) so we absolutely do have an interest in maintaining global institutions like the WTO and freedom of navigation of the seas everywhere.
  • I didn’t have you down as a Brexity idiot, but I guess you must be.

    I’m not insouciant.

    I am reminding the PB Brexit incel group-thinkers that obsessing over China and military deployments to the Far East is not a substitute for a defence strategy.
    Turning your back on global alliances and pretending the world ends at the borders of Europe is not a substitute for a defence strategy either.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    HYUFD said:

    China if it invaded Taiwan and the US had not already taken military action in response would not target a UK aircraft carrier as that would be an attack on a NATO member which would guarantee a US response as well as from the UK
    Mistakes happen in war, especially if people are being silly and it does not appear to me that the Queen Elizabeth has adequate protection to be deployed in such a scenario.

    But I personally think that the US would act to protect Taiwan and that it does have the navy assets to do it. Any invasion force could rapidly find itself as isolated and as helpless as the Argentinians found themselves in the Falklands.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    edited February 2021

    Turning your back on global alliances and pretending the world ends at the borders of Europe is not a substitute for a defence strategy either.
    But I’ve never said that.

    This is your demented characterisation because you have utterly lost the argument.

    As I noted a few days ago, I’ve been concerned about the Chinese threat a lot longer than many on this Board who have only got interested since Trump told them to.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,716

    I think much of it is, and there was certainly debate on it at the time - just as Home Rule for Ireland was first proposed by Gladstone in the 1880s, but never happened, by which time it was too late - here's a debate on it in 1929:

    https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/lords/1929/nov/05/india-the-viceroys-statement

    I wouldn't land it all at the door of unenlightened British attitudes, either - I think that's too simplistic: we are all products of our times, with a only a visionary few able to see how things can be different, and why, and you need to factor in the geopolitical context, and broader realpolitik constraints of the times too, which aren't the same as our constraints and context today.
    The contemporary politician most sympathetic to you views about the trajectory of Indian independence was probably Attlee, thanks to his experiences as a member of the Simon Commission. He was in power a couple of decades too late, of course.

    It's not as though 'enlightened' attitudes weren't fairly widespread; simply that they were in a minority.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,563
    Are these first vaccinations or completed courses. I've seen suggestions that other countries
    have completed more courses.
    Although, of course, that may well mean that in those places fewer people have some degree of protection.
  • But I’ve never said that.

    This is your demented characterisation because you have utterly lost the argument.

    As I noted a few days ago, I’ve been concerned about the Chinese threat a lot longer than many on this Board who have only got interested since Trump told them to.
    You're the one who has utterly lost the argument which is why you are throwing around petulant insults like "incels" and "demented".

    You're "concerned" about the Chinese threat but think the UK should abandon its plans to work with US and other allies to address that threat? 🤔
  • Are these first vaccinations or completed courses. I've seen suggestions that other countries
    have completed more courses.
    Although, of course, that may well mean that in those places fewer people have some degree of protection.
    Neither, it is total vaccinations, which allows like-for-like comparisons.

    So eg 5% could be anywhere in the range from 5% first, to 2.5% first and 2.5% second.
  • HYUFD said:

    The GTC regulated teachers from 2000 to 2012 I believe, now its functions handled by the Teaching Regulation Agency within the Department for Education
    My memory of the GTC was that it was largely ignored or even disliked by teachers: we were forced to pay a subscription for something which was of no perceived benefit to us. It was supposed to be an equivalent to the GMC but that acts as a de-facto union for doctors while the GTC was a government imposed disciplinary body only, not something that was ever seen to stand up for teachers in terms of pay or conditions. Gove's abolition of it was one of his popular moves amongst teachers.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    I think that 31.2% for the UK is probably the lowest to date.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    You're "concerned" about the Chinese threat but think the UK should abandon its plans to work with US and other allies to address that threat? 🤔
    Please show me the post where I suggests that?

    There isn’t one.

    You literally made it up.
  • HYUFD said:

    Realistically now Hong Kong is no longer a British colony we will not do anything about China, even if they invade Taiwan, unless the US has done something first
    Thompson showing he knows as much about geopolitics and history as he does about vaccine development! China is a political and trade threat to the West, by the nature of their size and their disregard for fundamental principles of international law. They are a military threat to Taiwan, but very unlikely to invade. To equate them with cold war USSR is utter hyperbole that shows no understanding of history. There is virtually no comparison.
  • DavidL said:

    I think that 31.2% for the UK is probably the lowest to date.
    What would be our per capita share?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,563

    Neither, it is total vaccinations, which allows like-for-like comparisons.

    So eg 5% could be anywhere in the range from 5% first, to 2.5% first and 2.5% second.
    Always a problem, crude figures. Don't tell the whole story.
    But I'm sure you are right on the numbers
  • What would be our per capita share?
    Apparently about 13%.

    Ergo we are still outperforming them by a substantial margin; they are not (yet) catching up.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,319
    HYUFD said:



    China if it invaded Taiwan and the US had not already taken military action in response would not target a UK aircraft carrier as that would be an attack on a NATO member which would guarantee a US response as well as from the UK

    NATO membership is irrelevant once you're south of the Tropic of Cancer. Article 6 exists to prevent the US from being obliged to defend British and French colonial possessions.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180

    What would be our per capita share?
    13%.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,563

    My memory of the GTC was that it was largely ignored or even disliked by teachers: we were forced to pay a subscription for something which was of no perceived benefit to us. It was supposed to be an equivalent to the GMC but that acts as a de-facto union for doctors while the GTC was a government imposed disciplinary body only, not something that was ever seen to stand up for teachers in terms of pay or conditions. Gove's abolition of it was one of his popular moves amongst teachers.
    I don't think the GMC acts as a union for doctors, and I would be surprised if any of our resident medics think it does. It used to, at one time, but now it is simply a regulatory and licensing body.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,629

    I don't think the GMC acts as a union for doctors, and I would be surprised if any of our resident medics think it does. It used to, at one time, but now it is simply a regulatory and licensing body.
    Yes - the Trade Union for Doctors is the BMA.

    It's even registered with the Certification Officer as such.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    edited February 2021
    Dura_Ace said:

    NATO membership is irrelevant once you're south of the Tropic of Cancer. Article 6 exists to prevent the US from being obliged to defend British and French colonial possessions.
    There are no British colonial possessions anywhere near China now Hong Kong has been returned to Beijing, any British involvement in Taiwan would only come after a US military response to a Chinese invasion, probably alongside Japan and S Korea
  • I didn’t have you down as a Brexity idiot, but I guess you must be.

    I’m not insouciant.

    I am reminding the PB Brexit incel group-thinkers that obsessing over China and military deployments to the Far East is not a substitute for a defence strategy.
    This is bad Gardenwalker. Idiot? Incel? Really?

    You're better than this.
  • Sir Keith is up.
  • Dura_Ace said:

    NATO membership is irrelevant once you're south of the Tropic of Cancer. Article 6 exists to prevent the US from being obliged to defend British and French colonial possessions.
    He is right though, for the wrong reasons. A U.K. carrier group East of Suez on present arrangements is likely to have US Marine Corps embarked and a multinational escort group. Hence an attack on one is very literally an attack on all.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,814
    You deal with a threat by having the power to overcome it, not by collywobbling all the time. It is rather silly to see portentous warnings about 'global threats' on PB, but any suggestion of what we can do amounting to little more than - nothing unless America is doing it and tells us to help.

    The lesson of history tells us we need to build up the Navy. I am not experienced in defence matters, but I would suggest that small carriers and crafts capable of moving fast and mounting effective, quick operations would be better than vast carriers that we can't afford the aircraft for. A truly independent and usable nuclear capability would also be a plus.
  • DavidL said:

    I don't even see Russia as a serious threat to be honest. They are too far away, their economy is far too small and largely based upon the export of raw materials and they have a declining population. They can be a damn nuisance, particularly in cyberspace and occasionally with toxic chemicals but a serious threat? Not really.

    China on the other hand have immense economic and manufacturing capability, more capital than they know what to do with, a huge population and a complete indifference to any principles that we hold dear. They are thankfully a long way away from us but they have a strategic reach that Russia has not had since the collapse of the USSR.
    I sympathise with that, and I'd just say Russia has used nuclear (radioactive) and chemical weapons on our soil before, regularly probes our air defences, it tries to hack into our government nets regularly and subvert our democratic process, and would march into the Baltic States tomorrow if it could. It also is a threat to the stability of Europe's eastern border more broadly, and its geopolitical independence through energy leverage more broadly.

    But, I agree. It's can't pwn us and make us a whipping boy forevermore like China could. It has the economics, size, reach, power and influence to domino-flip most of the free world, and bully the rest with force, if not checked.
  • Nigelb said:

    The contemporary politician most sympathetic to you views about the trajectory of Indian independence was probably Attlee, thanks to his experiences as a member of the Simon Commission. He was in power a couple of decades too late, of course.

    It's not as though 'enlightened' attitudes weren't fairly widespread; simply that they were in a minority.
    Attlee favoured a "new colonialism" - of a benevolent and enlightened type, as an extension of municipal socialism - in Africa, even into the early 1950s.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,550

    PB Brexiters love to talk about deploying their divisions (how many do they have?) into the Far East because it fits their ideology that Europe - ie the continent we live in - can be ignored.

    It’s sheer fantasy, and does not bode well for the U.K.’s future prosperity which has to be based on the world as it is.
    The "world as it is " is one where the EU accounts for a declining portion of world trade. How does that align with future prosperity?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180

    You deal with a threat by having the power to overcome it, not by collywobbling all the time. It is rather silly to see portentous warnings about 'global threats' on PB, but any suggestion of what we can do amounting to little more than - nothing unless America is doing it and tells us to help.

    The lesson of history tells us we need to build up the Navy. I am not experienced in defence matters, but I would suggest that small carriers and crafts capable of moving fast and mounting effective, quick operations would be better than vast carriers that we can't afford the aircraft for. A truly independent and usable nuclear capability would also be a plus.

    IANAE either but I think all militaries should be reviewing the Azerbaijan conflict very carefully. Cheap unmanned drones turned out to be key. I suspect that is the future of warfare with on the ground human involvement rapidly becoming less significant and less effective. We should probably be investing accordingly.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180

    Sir Keith is up.

    He'd better hurry. He's got a speech shortly.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038

    He is right though, for the wrong reasons. A U.K. carrier group East of Suez on present arrangements is likely to have US Marine Corps embarked and a multinational escort group. Hence an attack on one is very literally an attack on all.
    Indeed, when it goes to the South China Sea the Queen Elizabeth will have a US destroyer alongside

    https://www.portsmouth.co.uk/news/defence/royal-navy-aircraft-carrier-hms-queen-elizabeth-will-have-american-destroyer-bodyguard-south-china-sea-mission-3109662
  • I sympathise with that, and I'd just say Russia has used nuclear (radioactive) and chemical weapons on our soil before, regularly probes our air defences, it tries to hack into our government nets regularly and subvert our democratic process, and would march into the Baltic States tomorrow if it could. It also is a threat to the stability of Europe's eastern border more broadly, and its geopolitical independence through energy leverage more broadly.

    But, I agree. It's can't pwn us and make us a whipping boy forevermore like China could. It has the economics, size, reach, power and influence to domino-flip most of the free world, and bully the rest with force, if not checked.
    Playing devil’s advocate, one could argue that a sensible British policy would be to align with Russia against the EU. If only Prussia was available it would be just like the old days.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804
    edited February 2021

    My view is simple: I see Russia as a serious but containable threat and China as a potentially uncontainable threat, unless we take additional concerted action now.

    For me the "Chinese threat" routinely conflates 2 things and the difference between them is greater than all the tea in ... China.

    That they become the biggest and most successful economy on earth - closing and possibly even reversing the wealth gap with the West.

    That they subjugate other nations and minorities within their own borders - e.g. Hong Kong, the Uighurs, parts of Africa.

    I'm more concerned about the second. Indeed I'm not sure I'm bothered at all about the first. We have no god-given right to remain many times richer than the developing world. We've had a good run and much of it was based on exploitation of those now seeking to catch up.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,227
    edited February 2021
    British Recovery bond. Aren't those known as gilts ?
  • I wish Anneliese was speaking instead. She's much more fun! :lol:
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,820
    Pulpstar said:

    British Recovery bond. Aren't those known as gilts ?

    Yes. It's something that has been mooted on here a few times. Depending on the terms I'd expect a massive oversubscription.

    However, given that we simply sell our gilts to the BoE right now and pay ourselves the interest I'm not sure what mileage the idea actually had. We'd be better off getting people to spend their new found savings in the wider economy than on government bonds.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    edited February 2021
    Pulpstar said:

    British Recovery bond. Aren't those known as gilts ?

    Maybe, but sold directly to the public as war bonds were, I believe, during the World Wars.

    I wondered whether they would be a good idea, but the problem is that it puts the government in competition with the banks for capital from personal savings.
  • Mr. kinabalu, China has concentration camps of slave labour.

    If you want to argue against exploitative nations being the wealthiest, that's a cause to oppose China achieving economic leadership.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    edited February 2021
    kinabalu said:

    For me the "Chinese threat" routinely conflates 2 things and the difference between them is greater than all the tea in ... China.

    That they become the biggest and most successful economy on earth - closing and possibly even reversing the wealth gap with the West.

    That they subjugate other nations and minorities within their own borders - e.g. Hong Kong, the Uighurs, parts of Africa.

    I'm more concerned about the second. Indeed I'm not sure I'm bothered at all about the first. We have no god-given right to remain many times richer than the developing world. We've had a good run and much of it was based on exploitation of those now seeking to catch up.
    You're not concerned that a power who think genocide is a perfectly satisfactory tool of state, who has no regard whatsoever for the rule of law, human rights or freedom of expression and an arrogant disregard for our IP property rights might become the most powerful economy on the planet?

    I mean, wow. I would respectfully direct you towards @ydoethur's summer school.
  • Sounds like Starmer wants a lot more... oh what do you call them 'Public Private Partnerships?'
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,550
    edited February 2021
    HYUFD said:
    A New Chapter - has he become a Hell's Angel?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    He doesn't seem the type. Way too interesting.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    The "world as it is " is one where the EU accounts for a declining portion of world trade. How does that align with future prosperity?
    The world as it is for U.K. trade is very roughly as follows:

    Europe (inc EU) 50%
    USA 15%
    APAC 15% (China about half)
    Middle East 5%
    ROW 15%

    In terms of Europe’s share, it’s no different to 2010 as far as I can tell from some quick eyeballing.

    China has grown from around 5% to 7.5% though.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    Thompson showing he knows as much about geopolitics and history as he does about vaccine development! China is a political and trade threat to the West, by the nature of their size and their disregard for fundamental principles of international law. They are a military threat to Taiwan, but very unlikely to invade. To equate them with cold war USSR is utter hyperbole that shows no understanding of history. There is virtually no comparison.
    Indeed. The Chinese deeply studied the collapse of the USSR and learned the lessons not to repeat.
    Meanwhile the West did several laps of honour punching the air. Before greedily lusting over the vast profits to be made in China and turning a total blind eye to the nature of the regime.
    We learned next to nowt from the Soviet failure. Other than we were right all along.
    Maybe we weren't.
  • Maybe, but sold directly to the public as war bonds were, I believe, during the World Wars.

    I wondered whether they would be a good idea, but the problem is that it puts the government in competition with the banks for capital from personal savings.
    That’s why I might be in favour. Not because I want a “war bond” but because banks might have to sharpen their pencils on savings rates.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804
    DavidL said:

    Your not concerned that a power who think genocide is a perfectly satisfactory tool of state, who has no regard whatsoever for the rule of law, human rights or freedom of expression and an arrogant disregard for our IP property rights might become the most powerful economy on the planet?

    I mean, wow. I would respectfully direct you towards @ydoethur's summer school.
    I'm saying that's the aspect I am concerned about.
  • Sounds like Starmer wants a lot more... oh what do you call them 'Public Private Partnerships?'

    I'm impressed you can pull that out of his speech. I hear a lot of what he's against, not a lot of what he's for.
  • Jesus, thats the worst relaunch speech since Corbyn's in 2016
This discussion has been closed.