Howdy, Stranger!

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

LOST IN THE WOODS: Labour’s Challenge for the 2020s – politicalbetting.com

1234579

Comments

  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905

    I will be voting Lab in local elections

    In spite of SKS.

    After that who knows

    I hope there will be a successful leadership challenge or 2019 will look like a fantastic result

    2017 will be the last time LAB gets 40% for a long time or maybe ever
    A lot of people were writing off the Tories in like fashion around the turn of the century, and their predicament seemed even worse. Look at them now.

    One lesson, however, from the Conservative rebuild: they didn't claw their way back to power by retreating further and further into the membership's comfort zone.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    edited March 2021

    Sadly, he has zero charisma. Some level of charisma is key these days.
    See Starmer even makes U KIP when he speaks
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    edited March 2021

    I will be voting Lab in local elections

    In spite of SKS.

    After that who knows

    I hope there will be a successful leadership challenge or 2019 will look like a fantastic result

    2017 will be the last time LAB gets 40% for a long time or maybe ever
    You're far too pessimistic. This time next year when we are in deep economic shit (and actually feeling the pain) and the pandemic is a memory, even as Brexit is still an annoyance... Boris could seem a lot less appealing

    Boring Sir Kir "Royale" Starmer could come into his own. Boring could be good. Give the other lot a go, etc
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    kamski said:

    And yet there are (and were up to Brexit) more Czechs living in Germany than in the UK
    Don’t think you are allowed to count the Sudetenland as Germany these days...
  • A sobering thought for all those in Labour

    https://twitter.com/GoodwinMJ/status/1367594785377300483?s=19
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,329

    How's that a "how it started, how its going"?

    He never said anything antivax, just anticoercion. Him going for a vaccine and publishing a photo to encourage others to do the same is not something to be mocked anymore than it should be for anyone else.
    I think you’ll find that this is still free enough a country that anyone can mercilessly mock someone else as much as they want. Tory fanbois are equally entitled to leapt sanctimoniously to the mocked’s defence.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,918
    Foxy said:
    Liverpool is a city and not eligible. Last time I looked there were two cathedrals.

    The docks, however, are being reinstated as a freeport.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383

    Look at it like this.

    GPT-3 understands nothing. It reads enormous amounts of material on the internet and regurgitates it in semi-coherent form, but does not maintain any train of thought. Its creative writing is uninspired but workmanlike; it can sound passionate, but its passion is fickle and indiscriminate. It produces clever-sounding snippets but they lack foundation. It is capable of skimming through technical material and turning out a precis, but it is equally likely to spout nonsense because it cannot comprehend the very concepts it is trying to summarize.

    Would it be unkind of me to say that I understand why you feel an affinity for it?

    More seriously, take heed of experts. With the possible exception of those who are hawking funding proposals, they (we) do not think that models like GPT-3 are going to lead to intelligence, or even a simulation that will withstand more than surface scrutiny. That is not to say that they won't be useful within restricted domains.

    Also bear in mind that AI and ML research have suffered from over-hype for about five decades now. It is prudent to discount the sensational pop-sci articles about these topics, and see what is actually delivered. I'm hopeful that AlphaFold may be a properly useful product of the DeepMind research lines, but up to now it's been mostly fluff.

    --AS
    I know Demis from when he ran a video company, and I funded them, and he would be very much in agreement with you.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    edited March 2021

    See Starmer even makes U KIP when he speaks
    I just think you'd do better to focus your frustrations and energy on the Tories.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    Liverpool lose 5 in a row.

    Like Lab in 2024 methinks unfortunately
  • eekeek Posts: 29,734
    edited March 2021

    No, it's not that. I'm far from against these ideas. I spent half my childhood in the North and went to Northern university.

    But I am suspicious of the exact location choice of this norther treasury. Was the CoE involved in the decision? As Darlington was on the list he should have excused himself from the final selection imho.
    You would also need to remove half the cabinet based on who I've heard was for Darlington rather than the other options (Gove and Truss are 2 others)
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    I think you’ll find that this is still free enough a country that anyone can mercilessly mock someone else as much as they want. Tory fanbois are equally entitled to leapt sanctimoniously to the mocked’s defence.
    I'm not a fan of Swayne. He's a pretentious prick that embodies the worst of the Tories in my eyes. I'd imagine HYUFD might like him?

    But mocking people for taking a vaccine, who have never been antivax? The fact he's a Tory isn't here nor there, nobody should be mocked for taking a vaccine during a pandemic.

    It could have been Corbyn or Sturgeon you wrote it about, it would still be wrong.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,834
    It looks like Moderna is not the vaccine to get if you have had dermal fillers.

    https://twitter.com/nypost/status/1367534715528507395
    https://twitter.com/nypost/status/1342341511158128641
  • TheJezziahTheJezziah Posts: 3,840

    Like Lab in 2024 methinks unfortunately
    Unlike Starmer though Klopp is very good at what he does and has achieved great success. Liverpool are failing in spite of Klopp, the same can not be said of Starmer who is largely the architect of his own failure.
  • If you look at the votes in red wall constituencies then 2017 was the first time the downward trend had been reversed in decades across the board. Now you may hate the left and all they stand for but lets not pretend that those places were leaking away from Labour for not being right wing enough, the evidence suggests the complete opposite.
    Having co-authored the successful strategy to win Stockton South in 2017 I do know something about this. The claim that the left had a successful campaign in most red wall seats is a joke. Go take a look at the Conservative vote change in 2017 in those seats they win in 2019. In almost every case they surged in 2017.

    Elections are simple. You need to win more votes than the other candidates. That means that if you win more votes than last time, you also need your opponent to win less votes. The Tories have been surging in most of the seats won in 2019 in the last few elections.

    Only you would consider that to be a success.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,813
    //

    It looks like Moderna is not the vaccine to get if you have had dermal fillers.

    https://twitter.com/nypost/status/1367534715528507395
    https://twitter.com/nypost/status/1342341511158128641

    Isn't that the one Dolly Parton got? :open_mouth:
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,521
    eek said:

    You would also need to remove half the cabinet based on who I've heard was for Darlington rather than the other options (Gove and Truss are 2 others)
    But they don't have a personal interest in the result.
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905

    A sobering thought for all those in Labour

    https://twitter.com/GoodwinMJ/status/1367594785377300483?s=19

    Or, to put it another way, the last Labour leader not called Tony Blair to have won a General Election left office in 1976 and died a quarter of a century ago.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,236

    Having co-authored the successful strategy to win Stockton South in 2017 I do know something about this. The claim that the left had a successful campaign in most red wall seats is a joke. Go take a look at the Conservative vote change in 2017 in those seats they win in 2019. In almost every case they surged in 2017.

    Elections are simple. You need to win more votes than the other candidates. That means that if you win more votes than last time, you also need your opponent to win less votes. The Tories have been surging in most of the seats won in 2019 in the last few elections.

    Only you would consider that to be a success.
    Do you think Starmer is going to win more votes in marginal seats? Really, in your heart of hearts?

    I cannot see it myself.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,316

    Sadly, he has zero charisma. Some level of charisma is key these days.
    If they regularly trail by double digits, they might as well get someone with a bit of life in them to take over don't you think? Has to be a woman I'd say.

    Look past the net satisfaction smoke and mirrors, and it is clear that he hasn't captured the public's imagination. He gets the same positives as Ed Miliband at this stage of his Leadership; the fact that loads of people don't have any opinion of him a year in is a bad thing for someone wanting to become PM, but net satisfaction disguises it as a positive.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    A lot of people were writing off the Tories in like fashion around the turn of the century, and their predicament seemed even worse. Look at them now.

    One lesson, however, from the Conservative rebuild: they didn't claw their way back to power by retreating further and further into the membership's comfort zone.
    They did at first. That's why I voted Labour in 2001, then they went for IDS, then they went for something in the night saying "are you thinking what I'm thinking?"

    It wasn't until Cameron was elected they left the comfort zone.

    I joined the party while Howard was leader in order to get a vote in the next election to choose someone not mad like IDS. Very glad to be able to vote for Cameron at that point and the party has gone from strength to strength since (ignoring the May mistake).
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    rcs1000 said:

    I know Demis from when he ran a video company, and I funded them, and he would be very much in agreement with you.
    The *experts* told me not to wear a mask in March. Howlingly wrong. I wore a mask anyway. I was right

    But, due diligence is required so I've just checked ALL the experts, as requested.

    "In 2019, 32 AI experts participated in a survey on AGI timing: [when true AGI will arrive]

    "45% of respondents predict a date before 2060
    34% of all participants predicted a date after 2060
    21% of participants predicted that singularity will never occur.

    AI entrepreneurs are also making estimates on when we will reach singularity and they are a bit more optimistic than researchers:

    "Louis Rosenberg, computer scientist, entrepreneur and writer: 2030
    Patrick Winston, MIT professor and director of the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory from 1972 to 1997: 2040
    Ray Kuzweil, computer scientist, entrepreneur and writer of 5 national best sellers including The Singularity Is Near : 2045
    Jürgen Schmidhuber, co-founder at AI company NNAISENSE and director of the Swiss AI lab IDSIA: ~2050"

    So half of them believe it WILL happen within the lifetime of our children. Just a fifth think it will never happen, Some think much sooner, perhaps just 10 years.

    The article points out that AI researchers have been over-optimistic before, but, of course, these surveys were done before GPT3. The deeply uncanny quality of that machine makes it obvious, to me, that we are Getting There Quicker

    Lots more info here:

    https://research.aimultiple.com/artificial-general-intelligence-singularity-timing/


  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,800
    Pagan2 said:

    Sadly while I enjoy a good whisky I abdjure it. One of those drinks that has a very adverse effect on me and turns me from my normal mellow self to physically aggressive
    Hats off. Self knowledge is wisdom.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    But they don't have a personal interest in the result.
    We have constituency MPs for a reason.

    It is a strength not a weakness in the system.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976

    Didn’t eadric bang on about normalcy bias last year?
    The logic seems to be that anyone who doesn't massively overreact to anything new, is de facto wrong.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    rcs1000 said:

    For all the hate going SKS's way today, it is worth remembering that the government is (rightly) getting an awful lot of credit for its handling of CV19 vaccine purchases.

    This is a war, we know we're going to win, and it was the government who led us to victory.

    If Labour was led by the lovechild of Evita, Jesus Christ, and Clement Attlee they would still be lagging the Conservatives right now.

    Churchill was voted out.
  • TheJezziahTheJezziah Posts: 3,840
    edited March 2021

    Having co-authored the successful strategy to win Stockton South in 2017 I do know something about this. The claim that the left had a successful campaign in most red wall seats is a joke. Go take a look at the Conservative vote change in 2017 in those seats they win in 2019. In almost every case they surged in 2017.

    Elections are simple. You need to win more votes than the other candidates. That means that if you win more votes than last time, you also need your opponent to win less votes. The Tories have been surging in most of the seats won in 2019 in the last few elections.

    Only you would consider that to be a success.
    Okay you got me, I am just an idiot who thinks that giving people a reason to vote for you (and then them doing it) is a good thing. Clearly you are right that the winning strategy is actually to keep not winning many votes but hope that sheer apathy or a big split in the right wing vote helps you just about scrape through.

    Also clearly 2017 was such a good result (compared to any centrist result any time recently) because of individual Blairites in constituencies like you who individually won 1000's of votes to the party in those constituencies....

    But for some reason didn't do that for Labour in all the other elections around it.

    I get it, for you left wing votes are bad votes and don't count but you do have to actually get people to vote for you to have a chance at winning, Only you would consider not getting people to vote for you a success!

    Edit: We can see the result of the strategy you want in the polls, Conservative vote holding up whilst Labour vote collapses.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383

    It looks like Moderna is not the vaccine to get if you have had dermal fillers.

    https://twitter.com/nypost/status/1367534715528507395
    https://twitter.com/nypost/status/1342341511158128641

    My wife had the delayed rash with her second dose. It lasted 48 hours, and wasn't really a big deal.
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 3,416
    edited March 2021

    I think you’ll find that this is still free enough a country that anyone can mercilessly mock someone else as much as they want. Tory fanbois are equally entitled to leapt sanctimoniously to the mocked’s defence.

    I think you’ll find that this is still free enough a country that anyone can mercilessly mock someone else as much as they want. Tory fanbois are equally entitled to leapt sanctimoniously to the mocked’s defence.
    That's an interesting face shield, nnot seen one like it before. Propped around lower jaw and the perspex covering mouth & nose. Could be very useful for those of us who wear glasses.
  • NemtynakhtNemtynakht Posts: 2,329

    It's not even a real tweet is it?
    Well I did say you wouldn't trail resigning in advance and I still think splitting labour across the devolved nations makes sense
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    isam said:

    If they regularly trail by double digits, they might as well get someone with a bit of life in them to take over don't you think? Has to be a woman I'd say.

    Look past the net satisfaction smoke and mirrors, and it is clear that he hasn't captured the public's imagination. He gets the same positives as Ed Miliband at this stage of his Leadership; the fact that loads of people don't have any opinion of him a year in is a bad thing for someone wanting to become PM, but net satisfaction disguises it as a positive.
    Jess Phillips
  • Foxy said:

    Do you think Starmer is going to win more votes in marginal seats? Really, in your heart of hearts?

    I cannot see it myself.
    I think he will win more seats than Corbyn would have done had he stayed on, yes. Labour clung on with wafer thin margins in a lot of seats in 2019. Labour have been declining and the Tories ascending in another stack of seats. If Starmer stops that trend and those seats become more secure, that is success.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,348
    Leon said:

    You're far too pessimistic. This time next year when we are in deep economic shit (and actually feeling the pain) and the pandemic is a memory, even as Brexit is still an annoyance... Boris could seem a lot less appealing

    Boring Sir Kir "Royale" Starmer could come into his own. Boring could be good. Give the other lot a go, etc
    Exactamundo.

    I get the frustration, the wish for someone to climb the barricades and bring down this government by pure passion. Whilst they have got a big thing right, one big thing in 18 months doesn't- in the long term- counteract the many almost-as-big things they have got wrong in that time.

    But I really don't see the GBP putting a passionate barricade type into Number 10. Not even Jess Phillips or Lisa Nandy. Like it or not, there's a reason that Labour's election winners have either been lawyers or dons.

    And at some point, "Make Britain Boring Again" is going to appeal a lot.
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    AnneJGP said:

    That's an interesting face shield, nnot seen one like it before. Propped around lower jaw and the perspex covering mouth & nose. Could be very useful for those of us who wear glasses.
    I've seen something like that used by staff in a restaurant I used to go to.

    Does anybody else remember restaurants? They were these places where, for a modest charge, you could sit down to dinner, have it all cooked and brought to you *and* they took all the washing up away afterwards! A remarkable concept. Shame it never caught on.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,329

    A sobering thought for all those in Labour

    https://twitter.com/GoodwinMJ/status/1367594785377300483?s=19

    If the Tories win the next election and stay in power they’ll have dominated 54 of the 84 postwar years in the UK without winning in Scotland for the last 74. A sobering thought for Scots.
  • Okay you got me, I am just an idiot who thinks that giving people a reason to vote for you (and then them doing it) is a good thing. Clearly you are right that the winning strategy is actually to keep not winning many votes but hope that sheer apathy or a big split in the right wing vote helps you just about scrape through.

    Also clearly 2017 was such a good result (compared to any centrist result any time recently) because of individual Blairites in constituencies like you who individually won 1000's of votes to the party in those constituencies....

    But for some reason didn't do that for Labour in all the other elections around it.

    I get it, for you left wing votes are bad votes and don't count but you do have to actually get people to vote for you to have a chance at winning, Only you would consider not getting people to vote for you a success!

    Edit: We can see the result of the strategy you want in the polls, Conservative vote holding up whilst Labour vote collapses.
    All of which is fine. Except I was a Brownite, not a Blairite.

    Aside from that teensy mistake you are spot on in your fabulous analysis.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    Foxy said:

    Something to look forward to. Interesting to see if the fracas has impacted on the SNP vote.

    https://twitter.com/BritainElects/status/1367587367918264326?s=19

    Glory days!
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,236

    I think he will win more seats than Corbyn would have done had he stayed on, yes. Labour clung on with wafer thin margins in a lot of seats in 2019. Labour have been declining and the Tories ascending in another stack of seats. If Starmer stops that trend and those seats become more secure, that is success.
    I am not suggesting Corbyn back, but a smaller Tory majority is not an electoral success.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    Or at least it was, 7 hours ago.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,785
    Gosh, I do hope Keir Starmer doesn't read PB; he'd be so depressed.

    He's got the left, the far left, the right, the far right, the Blairites, and the Liberals all ganging up on him. Probably the Nats as well. Does he have any fans left?

    (Though he did win the Labour Party leadership election rather comfortably, less than a year ago).
  • TheJezziahTheJezziah Posts: 3,840

    I think he will win more seats than Corbyn would have done had he stayed on, yes. Labour clung on with wafer thin margins in a lot of seats in 2019. Labour have been declining and the Tories ascending in another stack of seats. If Starmer stops that trend and those seats become more secure, that is success.
    So the best you are prepared to say about Starmer is he can do better than some negative hypothetical you are imagining?

    You and other centrists were full of that any other leader being easily ahead nonsense now you struggle to even commit to the idea Starmer can match Corbyn's terrible 2019 result let alone his good 2017 one.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    Thanks for the interesting article @RochdalePioneers.

    You might be interested in this recent programme which covers much of the same ground - https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sgt1.
  • It is genuinely good to see Jezbollahiah and BJO on here insistent that One More Heave for the left would have done it. I know that Labour voters ran off in their droves repelled by not just Corbyn but the sneering patronising ethos that I wrote about. But another few years of it, perhaps with Wrong-Daily or better still Laura Pillock as leader, and not only would they all have come back, but so would the people now giving the Tories and the SNP 5 figure majorities.

    You guys don't get it and you never will. I'm sorry for you. But it really is best for the Labour Party - if as you claim you actually care about the people who need a Labour government - if you scab off back to your various Trot Unity splinter groups and let the Labour Party reconnect with normal people.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    I think he will win more seats than Corbyn would have done had he stayed on, yes. Labour clung on with wafer thin margins in a lot of seats in 2019. Labour have been declining and the Tories ascending in another stack of seats. If Starmer stops that trend and those seats become more secure, that is success.
    So you dont even think he will match Corbyn in 2017?

    Even my Corbyn hating MP gave him credit for the massive increase in Party popularity between start of May and GE2017.

    Fantastic Radical Manifesto
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,236

    Gosh, I do hope Keir Starmer doesn't read PB; he'd be so depressed.

    He's got the left, the far left, the right, the far right, the Blairites, and the Liberals all ganging up on him. Probably the Nats as well. Does he have any fans left?

    (Though he did win the Labour Party leadership election rather comfortably, less than a year ago).

    Do you think he would win if there was a re-run of that election? I don't think so.
  • So you dont even think he will match Corbyn in 2017?

    Even my Corbyn hating MP gave him credit for the massive increase in Party popularity between start of May and GE2017.

    Fantastic Radical Manifesto
    Do let me know when you figure out what happened in the 2017 General Election. The one where the Tories added 2.3m more votes to their 2015 majority.
  • TheJezziahTheJezziah Posts: 3,840

    All of which is fine. Except I was a Brownite, not a Blairite.

    Aside from that teensy mistake you are spot on in your fabulous analysis.
    Ohh, you are from the political philosophy that led Labour to 29% in a GE (before the Blairites had lost Scotland) silly me, I should show more respect, I'm from one that got (around) 40% and 32% in a GE, clearly you are much more plugged in with the votes than I am...

    The world has moved on from 1997. I know it is tough for a lot of centrists to hear but it really has, what might have worked then will not necessarily work now, you really need to wake up to the modern world.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383

    Churchill was voted out.
    But I'll bet he would have been riding high in the polls in the aftermath of a successful D Day.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564

    I think you’ll find that this is still free enough a country that anyone can mercilessly mock someone else as much as they want. Tory fanbois are equally entitled to leapt sanctimoniously to the mocked’s defence.
    The great thing about sanctimony is that everyone can play and it's fun for all ages. I heartily recommend it.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    It is genuinely good to see Jezbollahiah and BJO on here insistent that One More Heave for the left would have done it. I know that Labour voters ran off in their droves repelled by not just Corbyn but the sneering patronising ethos that I wrote about. But another few years of it, perhaps with Wrong-Daily or better still Laura Pillock as leader, and not only would they all have come back, but so would the people now giving the Tories and the SNP 5 figure majorities.

    You guys don't get it and you never will. I'm sorry for you. But it really is best for the Labour Party - if as you claim you actually care about the people who need a Labour government - if you scab off back to your various Trot Unity splinter groups and let the Labour Party reconnect with normal people.

    No mate you have scabbed off to your Centrist Party and you think Starmer is reconnecting with normal people.

    I feel sorry for you too.

    Only Party have been in a lifetime is Labour unlike you who have tried 3 in a year.

    Your a Nut Job
  • Foxy said:

    I am not suggesting Corbyn back, but a smaller Tory majority is not an electoral success.
    It certainly isn't victory. But what is happening to Labour is Very Bad. It is a long term multi-election decline where not only is their seat tally declining, the seats where they are competitive is declining.

    This happens to political parties. The Tories had their big bang in 1997, no improvement in 2001, then recovery in 2005 and 2010. Where is the Labour recovery? The risk is a long term decline and slide into irrelevance as happened to the Liberals. You can't recover unless you can analyse the symptoms of your decline - and Labour activists even now are on here trying to insist that defeat was success.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,785
    Foxy said:

    Do you think he would win if there was a re-run of that election? I don't think so.
    It depends on who he was up against, but he would struggle at the moment.

    But the point really is that Labour members wanted a winner when they voted last year. Most members are on the left, and most of them voted for Starmer rather than Long-Bailey (admittedly a weak opponent), or Nandy (a strong opponent). Having made the decision, I'm of the view that members/supporters should be a bit more patient. The government is riding a wave at the moment; it won't last. I've always said Starmer should be judged after two years, not one. I'm sticking to that, although like many I'm a bit disappointed with him currently.
  • No mate you have scabbed off to your Centrist Party and you think Starmer is reconnecting with normal people.

    I feel sorry for you too.

    Only Party have been in a lifetime is Labour unlike you who have tried 3 in a year.

    Your a Nut Job
    If I thought Starmer was reconnecting with people, why would I write a header stating that he isn't?
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,168

    Liverpool and Leicester are indeed fading. It’s quite possible neither end up in the top four.
    At least they're not going down like Newcastle. :(
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556

    Gosh, I do hope Keir Starmer doesn't read PB; he'd be so depressed.

    He's got the left, the far left, the right, the far right, the Blairites, and the Liberals all ganging up on him. Probably the Nats as well. Does he have any fans left?

    (Though he did win the Labour Party leadership election rather comfortably, less than a year ago).

    He's still got his loyal fan base: hardcore aboulomaniacs with allergies to excitement...
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,236

    It is genuinely good to see Jezbollahiah and BJO on here insistent that One More Heave for the left would have done it. I know that Labour voters ran off in their droves repelled by not just Corbyn but the sneering patronising ethos that I wrote about. But another few years of it, perhaps with Wrong-Daily or better still Laura Pillock as leader, and not only would they all have come back, but so would the people now giving the Tories and the SNP 5 figure majorities.

    You guys don't get it and you never will. I'm sorry for you. But it really is best for the Labour Party - if as you claim you actually care about the people who need a Labour government - if you scab off back to your various Trot Unity splinter groups and let the Labour Party reconnect with normal people.

    I am not on the left, I just think that Starmer is a loser, as much as Corbyn was. He may be able to sort out some of the back office craziness of Corbyns Labour, but he cannot win. I think he knows it too.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    rcs1000 said:

    My wife had the delayed rash with her second dose. It lasted 48 hours, and wasn't really a big deal.
    Weirdly some of the younger people I know who are shortly due for jabs seem to be more worried about the possibility of side effects, even mild ones, than the oldies.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    Endillion said:

    The logic seems to be that anyone who doesn't massively overreact to anything new, is de facto wrong.
    Credit where it is due, it is a step above 'Wake up, Sheeple', which even former Supreme Court Justices seem to indulge in now.
  • TheJezziahTheJezziah Posts: 3,840

    Do let me know when you figure out what happened in the 2017 General Election. The one where the Tories added 2.3m more votes to their 2015 majority.
    If you look at the reasons given for voting then Brexit is pretty much the answer there.

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2017/07/11/why-people-voted-labour-or-conservative-2017-gener

    Why do you think the Conservatives are still polling so high despite Labour having some right wing Blairite in charge who is committed to war with the left?

    The main difference between 2017 and now is Labour has a leader who very few people actually want to vote for.
  • I always thought that Carrie would end up hurting Boris more than Dom. When your partner becomes your adviser, it is virtually impossible to say no to her.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564

    Gosh, I do hope Keir Starmer doesn't read PB; he'd be so depressed.

    He's got the left, the far left, the right, the far right, the Blairites, and the Liberals all ganging up on him. Probably the Nats as well. Does he have any fans left?

    (Though he did win the Labour Party leadership election rather comfortably, less than a year ago).

    He's not had a great time of it lately. But he's at least not offputting, so there's hope for him.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    isam said:

    How far behind would he have to be before they got rid? It would be unprecedented I think, but if he starts regularly trailing by 12-15 points why bother waiting til he loses the next GE?
    isam said:

    How far behind would he have to be before they got rid? It would be unprecedented I think, but if he starts regularly trailing by 12-15 points why bother waiting til he loses the next GE?
    Look at last April's polls. Also would the Greens really poll 7% in a GE? 3% is more likely to be their ceiling.
  • AlwaysSingingAlwaysSinging Posts: 176
    edited March 2021
    Leon said:

    The *experts* told me not to wear a mask in March. Howlingly wrong. I wore a mask anyway. I was right

    But, due diligence is required so I've just checked ALL the experts, as requested.

    "In 2019, 32 AI experts participated in a survey on AGI timing: [when true AGI will arrive]

    "45% of respondents predict a date before 2060
    34% of all participants predicted a date after 2060
    21% of participants predicted that singularity will never occur.

    AI entrepreneurs are also making estimates on when we will reach singularity and they are a bit more optimistic than researchers:

    "Louis Rosenberg, computer scientist, entrepreneur and writer: 2030
    Patrick Winston, MIT professor and director of the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory from 1972 to 1997: 2040
    Ray Kuzweil, computer scientist, entrepreneur and writer of 5 national best sellers including The Singularity Is Near : 2045
    Jürgen Schmidhuber, co-founder at AI company NNAISENSE and director of the Swiss AI lab IDSIA: ~2050"

    So half of them believe it WILL happen within the lifetime of our children. Just a fifth think it will never happen, Some think much sooner, perhaps just 10 years.

    The article points out that AI researchers have been over-optimistic before, but, of course, these surveys were done before GPT3. The deeply uncanny quality of that machine makes it obvious, to me, that we are Getting There Quicker

    Lots more info here:

    https://research.aimultiple.com/artificial-general-intelligence-singularity-timing/
    If you knew more about AI research you would, for example, be able to contextualize those "surveys". But you keep reading your pop-sci hype articles and forming your own opinion: if it's obvious to you that we are Getting There Quicker, based on playing with GPT-3 while not understanding what it is, well who am I to contradict you?

    --AS
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,168
    edited March 2021
    Foxy said:

    I am not on the left, I just think that Starmer is a loser, as much as Corbyn was. He may be able to sort out some of the back office craziness of Corbyns Labour, but he cannot win. I think he knows it too.
    He got the crazies away from the levers of power in the Labour Party. That's a success in my view.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Foxy said:

    Do you think he would win if there was a re-run of that election? I don't think so.
    I voted Nandy.

    Always suspected SKS would be less successful than her

    Is there a "Trot splinter group" for Nandy supporters
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564

    Like Lab in 2024 methinks unfortunately
    Now that's pessimistic - the plan might be for an early GE again, so maybe it'll be like them in 2023?
  • Ohh, you are from the political philosophy that led Labour to 29% in a GE (before the Blairites had lost Scotland) silly me, I should show more respect, I'm from one that got (around) 40% and 32% in a GE, clearly you are much more plugged in with the votes than I am...

    The world has moved on from 1997. I know it is tough for a lot of centrists to hear but it really has, what might have worked then will not necessarily work now, you really need to wake up to the modern world.
    Erm, do you understand how elections work? I couldn't give a rat fuck about national vote shares because - and it may be a shock to you - we don't elect anyone on national votes or shares.

    To win a General Election you need to win one more vote than the next candidate in at least 326 seats. How many votes that tallies, what percentage it is simply doesn't matter. Its votes, and votes concentrated into seats. Labour got 40% in 2017. Fab! Thats 5 more percents than Blair got so it was a better performance, yeah? Erm, it was 262 seats. Not fab.

    I no longer have skin in the game. I moved to Scotland, where Labour have got even less chance of connecting with voters than they have in England. You endlessly bang on about left vs right but the damage up here has nothing to do with that - Scottish Labour stopped knocking doors. Stopped listening. Stopped talking to people. Assumed they knew their issues and concerns and then one day people had enough and voted for someone else. Not about left and right, its about arrogance.

    Look in a mirror if you want to see what that looks like.
  • TheJezziahTheJezziah Posts: 3,840

    No mate you have scabbed off to your Centrist Party and you think Starmer is reconnecting with normal people.

    I feel sorry for you too.

    Only Party have been in a lifetime is Labour unlike you who have tried 3 in a year.

    Your a Nut Job
    He's a purist, he would rather Labour had millions less votes pursuing Blairism than actually challenge the Conservatives and give ordinary working people something to vote for, because it doesn't suit his political preferences.

    Also much like BJO the only political party I've ever joined is Labour*, I think extremist 3rd party sects is more your thing Rochdale.

    *Also the only one I've left!
  • RattersRatters Posts: 1,300
    The vaccination rollout is a roaring success compared to almost all other nations and people can see the end in sight.

    Even better, the general public have been told they won't have to pay for all the spending, at least not directly in a way they'd notice (primarily via an increase in corporation tax). Because this is fundamentally a left wing response, it is harder for Labour to criticise, while the Tory right has agreed to stay quiet for at least a few months after their dream Brexit was delivered.

    If that didn't result in a government bounce, I'm not sure what would.

    Labour needs to be patient, reshuffle the front bench, and develop genuine policy ideas with mass appeal, not aimed at Lib Dems like myself.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    He got the crazies away from the levers of power in the Labour Party. That's a success in my view.
    Voters are flocking back arent they.

    Why didnt you vote for Nandy?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    With all the books and public speaking fees when he was not in office, and all the rest of it, why isn't Boris rich enough to fork up for his own refurbishments anyway? What kind of out of touch elitist can't even spruce things up for the future wife no.3?
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,168

    Voters are flocking back arent they.

    Why didnt you vote for Nandy?
    I did vote for Nandy.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976
    kle4 said:

    Weirdly some of the younger people I know who are shortly due for jabs seem to be more worried about the possibility of side effects, even mild ones, than the oldies.
    Younger people are much more likely to get side effects - it's an immune response, and younger people have better immune systems.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,168

    He's a purist, he would rather Labour had millions less votes pursuing Blairism than actually challenge the Conservatives and give ordinary working people something to vote for, because it doesn't suit his political preferences.

    Also much like BJO the only political party I've ever joined is Labour*, I think extremist 3rd party sects is more your thing Rochdale.

    *Also the only one I've left!
    Ordinary working people now vote Tory...
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    kle4 said:

    He's not had a great time of it lately. But he's at least not offputting, so there's hope for him.
    You should join our next telephone canvassing session then see if you think he is not off putting to Labour voters

    I can assure you he is
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    This isn't a breaking news website.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    Endillion said:

    Younger people are much more likely to get side effects - it's an immune response, and younger people have better immune systems.
    So I gather, but what I meant was they are worried as though a more severe reaction speaks in some way to the vaccine not being good.
  • He got the crazies away from the levers of power in the Labour Party. That's a success in my view.
    If Labour want to win, they have to convince Tory-leaning voters to try them. Starmer won't do that. IMO the only person in the shadow cabinet who might is Jess Phillips.
  • TheJezziahTheJezziah Posts: 3,840

    He got the crazies away from the levers of power in the Labour Party. That's a success in my view.
    This is the answer to @isam's bit about why wouldn't they replace Starmer if he is doing so badly.

    For the centrists it is about purity not actually winning over voters or winning elections, if you take that view Starmer is doing a great job, why would you replace him?

    If you actually want to win elections then you would replace Starmer.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Andy_JS said:

    This isn't a breaking news website.
    No but we have been talking about it for hours before you posted it thats all
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564

    You should join our next telephone canvassing session then see if you think he is not off putting to Labour voters

    I can assure you he is
    I'll take your word for it, though he might say you're not putting your back into the task :)
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,652
    Leon said:

    You're far too pessimistic. This time next year when we are in deep economic shit (and actually feeling the pain) and the pandemic is a memory, even as Brexit is still an annoyance... Boris could seem a lot less appealing

    Boring Sir Kir "Royale" Starmer could come into his own. Boring could be good. Give the other lot a go, etc
    Keep calmer!

    image
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    edited March 2021

    If you knew more about AI research you would, for example, be able to contextualize those "surveys". But you keep reading your pop-sci hype articles and forming your own opinion: if it's obvious to you that we are Getting There Quicker, based on playing with GPT-3 while not understanding what it is, well whom am I to contradict you?

    --AS
    I know what it is. I can see it. Perhaps you suffer from a deformation professionelle, and cannot step back and simply see

    Here, some reading from NATURE, from.... yesterday


    "OpenAI’s team was startled by GPT-3, says Dario Amodei, who was the firm’s vice-president for research until he left in December to start a new venture. The team knew it would be better than GPT-2, because it had a larger training data set of words and greater ‘compute’ — the number of computing operations executed during training. The improvement “was unsurprising intellectually, but very, very surprising viscerally and emotionally”, Amodei says."


    https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-00530-0


    The key word there is *visceral*. That's exactly the reaction many have to GTP3 (I know this, because you can see it time and again online, in recent months). It is visceral because we are astonished by it, but also scared. Because it is in the Uncanny Valley.

    Which means AI is getting very close to resembling humans, but is not there YET
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    Ratters said:

    The vaccination rollout is a roaring success compared to almost all other nations and people can see the end in sight.

    Even better, the general public have been told they won't have to pay for all the spending, at least not directly in a way they'd notice (primarily via an increase in corporation tax). Because this is fundamentally a left wing response, it is harder for Labour to criticise, while the Tory right has agreed to stay quiet for at least a few months after their dream Brexit was delivered.

    If that didn't result in a government bounce, I'm not sure what would.

    Labour needs to be patient, reshuffle the front bench, and develop genuine policy ideas with mass appeal, not aimed at Lib Dems like myself.

    Get some traction generally and not be a repellant and I'd assume the LD backing, where it counts, would flow naturally without having to specifically pitch for them.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,236

    He got the crazies away from the levers of power in the Labour Party. That's a success in my view.
    It is indeed, and perhaps he needs another year sorting out the party structures to be match fit.

    I was never a Corbynite, but Labour needs a leader who enjoys campaigning, who can be witty, who can be inspirational, who is not afraid of appointing strong personalities to the front bench, but most of all, someone who has a vision of what the Labour Party is for, not just what it is against.

  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    I did vote for Nandy.
    So did I why on earth did people rate SKS above her
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564

    No mate you have scabbed off to your Centrist Party and you think Starmer is reconnecting with normal people.

    I feel sorry for you too.

    Only Party have been in a lifetime is Labour unlike you who have tried 3 in a year.

    Your a Nut Job
    Wow.

    We have a centrist party?
  • If you look at the reasons given for voting then Brexit is pretty much the answer there.

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2017/07/11/why-people-voted-labour-or-conservative-2017-gener

    Why do you think the Conservatives are still polling so high despite Labour having some right wing Blairite in charge who is committed to war with the left?

    The main difference between 2017 and now is Labour has a leader who very few people actually want to vote for.
    Yep. If only they had stuck with Him. Out of interest, where in the country are you? For me, it was clear in the 2015 campaign that unless we gave people their brexit vote they wouldn't start listening to us again. Far too many doorstep conversations in those two years to ignore. Then in the 2016 referendum they turned out in their masses to vote to leave. That turnout only beaten in 2019, when people in what had been solid labour wards turned out in record numbers to vote Tory.

    So yes, I do know about Brexit. But why do I still think the Tories are polling so high?
    They delivered Brexit
    They gave people furlough
    Boris is a lad isn't he
    Europe turned out to be twats like we told you
    My gran's had the vaccine

    I think the Tories are polling so high - and its a radical concept - because they are popular. Same as why they won so many more votes in 2017. Corbyn was so fantastically popular in 2017 that 20% more people voted Tory than gave them their majority 2 years earlier. As we know vote tallies don't count and the Tories piled up dead votes in seats won - but so did Labour...
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,785

    I voted Nandy.

    Always suspected SKS would be less successful than her

    Is there a "Trot splinter group" for Nandy supporters
    Well, I voted Nandy as well. But she lost. Had she won, I'm fairly confident that many would have been as disappointed as they are with Starmer, in that she would have used similar techniques (patriotism etc.) to appeal to the lost w/c voters. Though she does know them better than Starmer. But Nandy is no radical leftie, and would have abandoned 'Corbynism' wholesale.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564

    So did I why on earth did people rate SKS above her
    Y chromosome.

    In all seriousness, I don't know. After Corbyn perhaps the man just looks and sounds like a traditional PM and that's what the members wanted at that moment.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180

    Liverpool lose 5 in a row at Anfield for the first time ever.

    Its not Anfield without the fans though.

    3 results tonight all 0-1. I very much doubt that away teams have ever done as well in the league as this season, it is sometimes looking like a disadvantage to play at home.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,168

    This is the answer to @isam's bit about why wouldn't they replace Starmer if he is doing so badly.

    For the centrists it is about purity not actually winning over voters or winning elections, if you take that view Starmer is doing a great job, why would you replace him?

    If you actually want to win elections then you would replace Starmer.
    Bit rich.

    Corbyn lost the confidence of almost all of his colleagues and lost 2 general elections and a referendum and yet you thought he was doing a great job...
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,652

    So you dont even think he will match Corbyn in 2017?

    Even my Corbyn hating MP gave him credit for the massive increase in Party popularity between start of May and GE2017.

    Fantastic Radical Manifesto
    Corbyn only won 262 seats in 2017, just four more than Gordon did in 2010.
  • TheJezziahTheJezziah Posts: 3,840

    Erm, do you understand how elections work? I couldn't give a rat fuck about national vote shares because - and it may be a shock to you - we don't elect anyone on national votes or shares.

    To win a General Election you need to win one more vote than the next candidate in at least 326 seats. How many votes that tallies, what percentage it is simply doesn't matter. Its votes, and votes concentrated into seats. Labour got 40% in 2017. Fab! Thats 5 more percents than Blair got so it was a better performance, yeah? Erm, it was 262 seats. Not fab.

    I no longer have skin in the game. I moved to Scotland, where Labour have got even less chance of connecting with voters than they have in England. You endlessly bang on about left vs right but the damage up here has nothing to do with that - Scottish Labour stopped knocking doors. Stopped listening. Stopped talking to people. Assumed they knew their issues and concerns and then one day people had enough and voted for someone else. Not about left and right, its about arrogance.

    Look in a mirror if you want to see what that looks like.
    Mate the first part to winning elections is actually winning some damn votes, you can sing and dance all day about what Blair managed to do with a low percentage and widespread apathy but unless you can actually manage to achieve that then you are going to need to win some damn votes!

    Also, I really really really, don't care any more about what happened a few decades ago than what happened loads of decades ago. So what about Atlee?

    Also Atlee wasn't up against some limping along struggling Conservative party, he actually beat them after they had (somewhat) won WW2, Blair fought the Black Wednesday Conservatives whilst Atlee fought a Churchill WW2 winning Conservative party.

    But both these events are in the past now, Labour isn't going to win by appealing to some bitter old Blairites like yourself we need to appeal to the vast millions of voters out there that you hate, because winning is more important than your purity crusade.

    Also Scottish Labour was Blairite, that is why they disappeared, you want the same to happen to English and Welsh Labour I want them to come back to the voters.
  • Ordinary working people now vote Tory...
    Why is that? Aren't the Tories the evil people taking away their rights and slashing their services? Why are these idiots voting against their own best interests is the question from the left. Because - as I wrote in the header - how "ordinary working people" see their interests, and how @TheJezziah see their interests are far apart.
This discussion has been closed.