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Boris Johnson’s opposition to Indyref2 might be as Herculean as his opposition to a border in the Ir

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  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    edited April 2021
    malcolmg said:

    Who was invited to join from Scotland then, or who would have been impacted.
    It would have devalued the Champions League and Europa League which Rangers and Celtic qualify for most years and the television sponsorship of a diminished Champions League would have been severely curtailed reducing income to clubs

    If the ESL had been a success UEFA competitions would have been downgraded to a side show and of course Rangers and Celtic would not have been part of the ESL
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    If Dyson employees were unwilling to come back to the UK to help the nation during a pandemic, I'm sure there were plenty of companies and employees in the UK who would have been wiling to do the work.

    Why does the work have to come from Boris's mates?
    Because "his mates" are experts in their field who were offering to help the country not for profit. 🤦‍♂️

    During a pandemic it isn't wise to turn down offers to help from those who know what they're talking about. Especially when they're doing so not for profit.

    Of all the things to whinge about, this is scraping the barrel.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,078
    edited April 2021
    I understand No 11 was uneasy about what Dyson was asking for, and it's suggested they had quite deliberately not responded to his firm's requests before Sir James himself then texted Johnson directly about the tax issue
    https://twitter.com/bbclaurak/status/1384807616367452160

    I'm told Sunak did not and has never had any personal contact with Sir James Dyson
    https://twitter.com/bbclaurak/status/1384807814795829249
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,505
    MattW said:

    2nd AZ Jab successful.

    This time it was a leisure centre manager and a lifeguard.

    Both of whom said it was more interesting than their normal jobs as they get to meet more interesting people.

    Centre still running at 1000 people per day.

    It took 2 people to hold the syringe; that must have been one hell of a jab.
  • Realistically there's not a huge amount more that we can do to protect ourselves after we've all been double-dosed. And, the vaccines work so well that the worst-case scenario for Covid will then be a lot less severe than a bad flu season.

    So there's no justification for any (domestic) restrictions at that point. We get vaccinated and then the Emergency (at least domestically) is over - though of course the public health professionals will keep working on reducing the risks further with boosters against variants, etc.

    I'd keep travel restrictions until other countries are also vaccinated. Apart from anything else it would provide more motivation to us to help that happen as quickly as possible.
    I agree with you up to a point - though blocking people from travelling abroad on holiday will be seen as a domestic restriction!
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163
    Scott_xP said:

    I understand No 11 was uneasy about what Dyson was asking for, and it's suggested they had quite deliberately not responded to his firm's requests before Sir James himself then texted Johnson directly about the tax issue
    https://twitter.com/bbclaurak/status/1384807616367452160

    I'm told Sunak did not and has never had any personal contact with Sir James Dyson

    Sunak is clearly a naive angry youngster, or something.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,078
    And of course, Treasury set precedent a few weeks ago when they published Sunak's texts to David Cameron about Greensill - we have asked No 10 if they will do the same with Johnson's texts to Dyson
    https://twitter.com/bbclaurak/status/1384808261669507073


    That may well answer the question of who is leaking this stuff
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,177
    Endillion said:

    Weren't we pursuing all avenues as it was? There's not exactly a glut of similar companies with the right sort of expertise, even in this country.
    A variety of avenues were tried. The main issue was that standard ventilators are not produced in massive assembly line, so trying to get an existing manufacturer to make 10,000 was simply not possible.

    The existing designs weren't amenable to mass production, so this is where efforts such as Dyson's came in - a design that would be mass produceable.

    I think that at one point, there were something like a dozen efforts in parallel - produce more of the traditional ventilators, create a mass produceable one, create new devices to do a similar job etc.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822


    They would have been paid had their ventilator design been fit for purpose and been ordered. As Faisal Islam reports, there seemed to be an odd leaning towards non-competent JCB and Dyson (Brexit supporting Tory donors) over the others which seems inextricable...

    [I presume you mean 'inexplicable'.]

    Yes, that is the valid criticism. There was absolutely nothing wrong with a temporary dispensation on the tax rules to prevent those who were trying to help being penalised with a whopping personal tax charge; after all, there were lots of temporary amendments to the rules because of the peculiar circumstances of the pandemic.

    However, there does seem to have been a rather naive belief that JCB and Dyson were in a better position to design and produce medical-grade equipment in a hurry than companies with actual experience in the field. (And indeed they weren't, as it turned out).

    So, nothing dodgy about this, just mismanagement.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976
    edited April 2021
    MaxPB said:

    That's a lot closer than I expected it to be and who the fuck is Omilana?
    All I know about Omilana is that she's the only candidate who couldn't or wouldn't stump up £10k to get her profile into the info booklet that gets sent to all voters. So either she's super hard up for cash, or has zero expectations of winning and isn't really trying, or assumes none of her likely voters can read so needs to reach them in other ways.

    Either way, 5% sounds... high.
  • Time_to_LeaveTime_to_Leave Posts: 2,547
    Scott_xP said:

    I understand No 11 was uneasy about what Dyson was asking for, and it's suggested they had quite deliberately not responded to his firm's requests before Sir James himself then texted Johnson directly about the tax issue
    https://twitter.com/bbclaurak/status/1384807616367452160

    I'm told Sunak did not and has never had any personal contact with Sir James Dyson

    Sorry, but nobody who is remotely fair minded has an issue with this one.
  • MaxPB said:

    That's a lot closer than I expected it to be and who the fuck is Omilana?
    I do not follow the London Mayoral contest as I assumed Khan would walk it on the first vote

    This poll seems to indicate his support has dropped or am I mistaken
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Endillion said:

    Weren't we pursuing all avenues as it was? There's not exactly a glut of similar companies with the right sort of expertise, even in this country.
    There is not a glut, but there were companies that actually have the expertise that were ignored so they could pretend a vacuum cleaner company could make a ventilator that was not proven it wouldn't kill people -devices need to go through regulatory processes to demonstrate efficacy in a similar way to a drug. It was fucking ignorant.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155

    We'll see.

    The Prem is the prem chiefly because it has a good share of the world's best players.

    Watch them take a hike when the money runs out.

    And watch the same loudmouths protesting about how its their club wailing about that when the time comes.
    It seems to be the Spanish and Italian clubs that are in more serious financial difficulties, while English clubs are more profitable, because of the greater global appeal of the Premier League.

    Where is the money that will take players out of the Premier League?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,600

    If Dyson employees were unwilling to come back to the UK to help the nation during a pandemic, I'm sure there were plenty of companies and employees in the UK who would have been wiling to do the work.

    Why does the work have to come from Boris's mates?
    You have an army of experienced electrical equipment designers familiar with Dyson's technology and the rest in your Cornflake packet? Impressive :smile: .

    In the end it went nowhere, and the demand for wotsit-machines was reduced ... so they were not needed.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    The most effective devices - which ended up invalidating the idea of mass producing traditional ventilators - were produced by an F1 engineering team.
    One of the best videos to come out of the pandemic last year:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ij3g8kscdeA

    10,000 CPAP machines manufactured and delivered, from backwards-engineering an existing single old device, in less than a month.

    Then they open-sourced the whole project, down to the program files for the CNC machines, and there's now several dozen countries where they are being produced. Well done Mercedes :+1:
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,078

    Sorry, but nobody who is remotely fair minded has an issue with this one.

    The Treasury clearly did
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    [I presume you mean 'inexplicable'.]

    Yes, that is the valid criticism. There was absolutely nothing wrong with a temporary dispensation on the tax rules to prevent those who were trying to help being penalised with a whopping personal tax charge; after all, there were lots of temporary amendments to the rules because of the peculiar circumstances of the pandemic.

    However, there does seem to have been a rather naive belief that JCB and Dyson were in a better position to design and produce medical-grade equipment in a hurry than companies with actual experience in the field. (And indeed they weren't, as it turned out).

    So, nothing dodgy about this, just mismanagement.
    No mismanagement since they did this scheme in parallel with other schemes. The one that worked and made this one redundant was from a Formula 1 company.

    Its like the vaccine project all over again. Don't pick one horse and run with it - back them all and see which works.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163
    Sandpit said:

    One of the best videos to come out of the pandemic last year:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ij3g8kscdeA

    10,000 CPAP machines manufactured and delivered, from backwards-engineering an existing single old device, in less than a month.

    Then they open-sourced the whole project, down to the program files for the CNC machines, and there's now several dozen countries where they are being produced. Well done Mercedes :+1:
    I wonder if Mercedes billed the government to compensate them for their employees' lost time?

    They clearly should have done.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    MaxPB said:

    That's a lot closer than I expected it to be and who the fuck is Omilana?
    If it is accurate it suggests the shine is fially coming off Khan and revealing the vacuum beneath. I think the tories may actually be up a little and now that boris has saved football whoi knows what is to come....... :smiley:
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,076

    You what?

    If employees working in and based in Singapore had stayed in Singapore, rather than coming to the UK and working not-for-profit to save lives in the UK, then how would that have put deaths on his head?
    Philip , stop digging and just accept they are greedy grasping Fcukwits and had no interest in doing good, they wanted to make more money and avoid tax. How anyone can try to justify it is unbelievable.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,078

    I wonder if Mercedes billed the government to compensate them for their employees' lost time?

    They clearly should have done.

    Since they were not big Brexit supporters they did not have BoZo's private number to text and ask for it
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,246

    Dunno, I read that as meaning that by the final round, any Tory candidate would really struggle unless they are at more or less 50% up front. Presumably Boris used to get LibDem transfers.
    The Khan vote is pretty soft. I will probably vote Poritt or Berry 1st pref and Khan 2nd pref but Stewart would have been a clear 1st pref. Stewart is a good campaigner and would allow Tories to get both remain and leave voters here.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Because "his mates" are experts in their field who were offering to help the country not for profit. 🤦‍♂️

    During a pandemic it isn't wise to turn down offers to help from those who know what they're talking about. Especially when they're doing so not for profit.

    Of all the things to whinge about, this is scraping the barrel.
    Oh for fucks sake Philip. I have suggested you try commenting on things you have knowledge of before, but I can not think of any time it has been more applicable. They might be experts in "their" field, but a vacuum cleaner or a digger is not a fucking ventilator. This was pure and simple cronyism or incompetence on a grand scale or both. Take your pick.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,177

    [I presume you mean 'inexplicable'.]

    Yes, that is the valid criticism. There was absolutely nothing wrong with a temporary dispensation on the tax rules to prevent those who were trying to help being penalised with a whopping personal tax charge; after all, there were lots of temporary amendments to the rules because of the peculiar circumstances of the pandemic.

    However, there does seem to have been a rather naive belief that JCB and Dyson were in a better position to design and produce medical-grade equipment in a hurry than companies with actual experience in the field. (And indeed they weren't, as it turned out).

    So, nothing dodgy about this, just mismanagement.
    The issue was creating a mass production capable design. The existing manufacturers don't do mass production - the demand is too low.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    edited April 2021

    No mismanagement since they did this scheme in parallel with other schemes. The one that worked and made this one redundant was from a Formula 1 company.

    Its like the vaccine project all over again. Don't pick one horse and run with it - back them all and see which works.
    To an extent, yes, and to be fair I'd cut the government quite a lot of slack on this. At the time, getting enough ventilators looked like a critical and extremely urgent requirement, although in the end it wasn't. Nonetheless, it does seem that insufficient attention was given to the existing, experienced manufacturers.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,076
    Endillion said:

    Weren't we pursuing all avenues as it was? There's not exactly a glut of similar companies with the right sort of expertise, even in this country.
    They had no experience and as proved came up with square root of F all, Patients did not need the floors cleaned. Greedy barstewards.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163
    Scott_xP said:

    Since they were not big Brexit supporters they did not have BoZo's private number to text and ask for it
    Hard luck that
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,815
    Endillion said:

    All I know about Omilana is that she's the only candidate who couldn't or wouldn't stump up £10k to get her profile into the info booklet that gets sent to all voters. So either she's super hard up for cash, or has zero expectations of winning and isn't really trying, or assumes none of her likely voters can read so needs to reach them in other ways.

    Either way, 5% sounds... high.
    Omalina is a he, as it turns out. Some YouTube meme candidate.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,559
    tlg86 said:

    That's the point. West Ham! In the Champions League!

    Can't be having that...
    I'm forever blowing bubbles........
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    There is not a glut, but there were companies that actually have the expertise that were ignored so they could pretend a vacuum cleaner company could make a ventilator that was not proven it wouldn't kill people -devices need to go through regulatory processes to demonstrate efficacy in a similar way to a drug. It was fucking ignorant.
    Yes because what could an engineering company with knowledge of engineering possibly know about engineering eh?

    A challenge was set to all who could try and do it and many rose to the challenge. It was open to everyone and yes some companies not normally associated with medicine and more associated with vaccuums or Formula 1 took part.

    If it was up to you then I suppose Formula 1 companies wouldn't have been able to take part in the challenge either?
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,246
    Endillion said:

    All I know about Omilana is that she's the only candidate who couldn't or wouldn't stump up £10k to get her profile into the info booklet that gets sent to all voters. So either she's super hard up for cash, or has zero expectations of winning and isn't really trying, or assumes none of her likely voters can read so needs to reach them in other ways.

    Either way, 5% sounds... high.
    I know these things are more confusing now but surely she is a he? Reaches them through youtube.

    Its a PR stunt not a serious campaign.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,559
    edited April 2021
    kjh said:

    It took 2 people to hold the syringe; that must have been one hell of a jab.
    One to load, one to inject? Not unusual. Or standby.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163

    Yes because what could an engineering company with knowledge of engineering possibly know about engineering eh?

    A challenge was set to all who could try and do it and many rose to the challenge. It was open to everyone and yes some companies not normally associated with medicine and more associated with vaccuums or Formula 1 took part.

    If it was up to you then I suppose Formula 1 companies wouldn't have been able to take part in the challenge either?
    Did the Formula 1 companies expect favourable treatment from their mates in the government as a result?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited April 2021

    To an extent, yes, and to be fair I'd cut the government quite a lot of slack on this. At the time, getting enough ventilators looked like a critical requirement, although in the end it wasn't. Nonetheless, it does seem that insufficient attention was given to the existing, experienced manufacturers.
    The existing experienced manufacturers couldn't manufacture 10,000 of them in the time available.

    That's why the challenge was offered to all manufacturers anywhere to get in touch. Skills in manufacturing are transferable, as Mercedes showed.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    [I presume you mean 'inexplicable'.]

    Yes, that is the valid criticism. There was absolutely nothing wrong with a temporary dispensation on the tax rules to prevent those who were trying to help being penalised with a whopping personal tax charge; after all, there were lots of temporary amendments to the rules because of the peculiar circumstances of the pandemic.

    However, there does seem to have been a rather naive belief that JCB and Dyson were in a better position to design and produce medical-grade equipment in a hurry than companies with actual experience in the field. (And indeed they weren't, as it turned out).

    So, nothing dodgy about this, just mismanagement.
    Only that it was a dodgy way to give massive publicity to Dyson and JCB perhaps. You are absolutely right about their ability to produce medical products though. Absolutely ridiculous, and I suspect even Bozo knew that.
  • What did May do that was unnecessarily "harder"?

    What should she have done that stopped freedom of movement if that is your red line (and it was May's) that May didn't do?

    Having that as the starting point, May's deal and the backstop left us with an flaccid Brexit.
    Once FOM was to be stopped there was no alternative to a very hard brexit. It was a mistake to halt FOM, it could have been possible to introduce some of the bureaucracy and modify benefit system like other member states to enforce free movement of labour and not free movement of pickpockets and tax credits slurpers.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,076
    kjh said:

    Don't often disagree with you Malcolm but I do here. It is his employees who would have suffered. I guess he could have made it up, but I think it is a reasonable request. The unusual circumstances meant they would be breaking the time limits for staying in the UK potentially and not for their own benefit.
    KJH, why did we need to import vacuum cleaner sellers to make medical aids. Instead of feeding cash to their chums the Tories should have funded existing medical suppliers to increase production or design new kit. We saw lots of existing suppliers who were totally ignored and yet all the money was funneled to companies like Dyson and JCB. Mechanical diggers and vacuum cleaners, WTF did they know about medical devices.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Did the Formula 1 companies expect favourable treatment from their mates in the government as a result?
    Not since Bernie bunged Blair's Labour a million in 1997.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    The existing experienced manufacturers couldn't manufacture 10,000 of them in the time available.

    That's why the challenge was offered to all manufacturers anywhere to get in touch. Skills in manufacturing are transferable, as Mercedes showed.
    Again, Philip stop talking out of your backside. If you are referring to Mercedes McLaren, they already had a significant medical device arm to their business
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Oh for fucks sake Philip. I have suggested you try commenting on things you have knowledge of before, but I can not think of any time it has been more applicable. They might be experts in "their" field, but a vacuum cleaner or a digger is not a fucking ventilator. This was pure and simple cronyism or incompetence on a grand scale or both. Take your pick.
    No fucking shit Sherlock. A vacuum cleaner is not a fucking ventilator, nobody said otherwise.

    Guess what you fucking idiot, a fucking Formula 1 race car isn't a fucking venilator either.

    Get a fucking grip you fucking fuckity fucky fool.

    Do we really need such strong fucking language too?
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,304
    Foss said:

    London Comres out:

    London Mayoral Voting Intention:

    Khan (LAB): 41%
    Bailey (CON): 28%
    Porritt (LDM): 8%
    Berry (GRN): 6%
    Omilana (IND): 5%

    Via
    @SavantaComRes
    , 13-19 Apr.

    Still a firm Khan win on the second round.

    L is for Lozza and what else?
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155
    Pulpstar said:

    Thinking the owners have "learnt their lesson" over this is as naive as I was thinking noone would ever take drugs in sport again when Ben Johnson was caught in 1988.

    If any lessons have been learnt it will be in how not to bungle it. Things they might have done differently to get away with it would be:

    Get FIFA's support - make it a world club competition at the outset, perhaps - so that the player's wouldn't be banned from World Cups.

    Plan it as an all-in breakaway, not depending on domestic leagues keeping them in. If you're undermining other organisations then you have to go all the way. Half measures won't do.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163
    Sandpit said:

    Not since Bernie bunged Blair's Labour a million in 1997.
    I'm not sure what your point is? This isn't a party political point.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976

    Oh for fucks sake Philip. I have suggested you try commenting on things you have knowledge of before, but I can not think of any time it has been more applicable. They might be experts in "their" field, but a vacuum cleaner or a digger is not a fucking ventilator. This was pure and simple cronyism or incompetence on a grand scale or both. Take your pick.
    A Mercedes F1 car is also not a ventilator, but that didn't seem to matter.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163
    Endillion said:

    A Mercedes F1 car is also not a ventilator, but that didn't seem to matter.
    Did Mercedes F1 seek special favours from the government to ensure that they made no loss whatsoever from the "help"?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    malcolmg said:

    KJH, why did we need to import vacuum cleaner sellers to make medical aids. Instead of feeding cash to their chums the Tories should have funded existing medical suppliers to increase production or design new kit. We saw lots of existing suppliers who were totally ignored and yet all the money was funneled to companies like Dyson and JCB. Mechanical diggers and vacuum cleaners, WTF did they know about medical devices.
    Err, because every available medical supplier was already working flat out and couldn't keep up with demand?

    The early stages of the pandemic needed huge resources in complex design and manufacturing thrown at the problem, and dozens of engineering companies stepped up, in many cases at their own expense. Well done to all of them.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976
    MaxPB said:

    Omalina is a he, as it turns out. Some YouTube meme candidate.
    So he is. 3.4m subs. Probably not enough by a factor of at least 10.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Yes because what could an engineering company with knowledge of engineering possibly know about engineering eh?

    A challenge was set to all who could try and do it and many rose to the challenge. It was open to everyone and yes some companies not normally associated with medicine and more associated with vaccuums or Formula 1 took part.

    If it was up to you then I suppose Formula 1 companies wouldn't have been able to take part in the challenge either?
    I refer to the answer I have just now given on your other post. You are even more ignorant in this area than most other areas you post on, and that really is saying something.

    McLaren have a significant medical device consultancy business that long predated Covid. They were an obvious choice because they knew about highly regulated medical grade products. They are not a vacuum cleaner company.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    If any lessons have been learnt it will be in how not to bungle it. Things they might have done differently to get away with it would be:

    Get FIFA's support - make it a world club competition at the outset, perhaps - so that the player's wouldn't be banned from World Cups.

    Plan it as an all-in breakaway, not depending on domestic leagues keeping them in. If you're undermining other organisations then you have to go all the way. Half measures won't do.
    Opposite of the latter one. Keep the pyramid.

    Do a breakaway but with the top clubs qualifying each year still. So that money and who controls the competition is the difference, not qualification.

    So West Ham etc can still qualify for it. That was the mistake.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Endillion said:

    A Mercedes F1 car is also not a ventilator, but that didn't seem to matter.
    Wrong. Please see my answer to Philip Thompson
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163
    edited April 2021
    Sandpit said:

    Err, because every available medical supplier was already working flat out and couldn't keep up with demand?

    The early stages of the pandemic needed huge resources in complex design and manufacturing thrown at the problem, and dozens of engineering companies stepped up, in many cases at their own expense. Well done to all of them.
    This is exactly my point. Those who stepped up without promise of award or indemnity should be commended. That is patriotism and that is caring for your community.

    Those who seemingly were only willing to help if their tax exemption status was protected, well I have nothing but contempt.

    Especially considering the monster tax payer bill we all have to pay. You have to pay a bit more tax? Tough sh*t, welcome to the future.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976

    Again, Philip stop talking out of your backside. If you are referring to Mercedes McLaren, they already had a significant medical device arm to their business
    It wasn't the medical team that produced the ventilator, though; it was the F1 team. I saw a talk by the team responsible last year - amazing stuff. I suggest - your knowledge of the pharma industry notwithstanding - it may be you who is talking out of turn here.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,133
    Scott_xP said:

    And of course, Treasury set precedent a few weeks ago when they published Sunak's texts to David Cameron about Greensill - we have asked No 10 if they will do the same with Johnson's texts to Dyson
    https://twitter.com/bbclaurak/status/1384808261669507073


    That may well answer the question of who is leaking this stuff

    It will also answer the question as to why the £2.9 million briefing centre was kiboshed by politicians who like to leak stuff off-the-record, once they'd got rid of an over-promoted SpAd who watched The West Wing and thought democracy would be best served by the free flow of (government approved) information. In the immortal words of Sir Humphrey, this is a British democracy.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,246
    Endillion said:

    So he is. 3.4m subs. Probably not enough by a factor of at least 10.
    Credible as a protest vote for the young, especially with the preference voting system. Can imagine 5th place 2-3%ish beating the other indies if there is betting on that.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712

    This is exactly my point. Those who stepped up without promise of award or indemnity should be commended. That is patriotism and that is caring for your community.

    Those who seemingly were only willing to help if their tax exemption status was protected, well I have nothing but contempt.

    Especially considering the monster tax payer bill we all have to pay. You have to pay a bit more tax? Tough sh*t, welcome to the future.
    They were bring extra resources into the UK - in which case it's give us the exemption or those people aren't willing to come.
  • Because "his mates" are experts in their field who were offering to help the country not for profit. 🤦‍♂️

    During a pandemic it isn't wise to turn down offers to help from those who know what they're talking about. Especially when they're doing so not for profit.

    Of all the things to whinge about, this is scraping the barrel.
    They aren't experts in this particular field according to the actual experts who reportedly couldn't understand why Brexit supporting Tory donors got prioritised over them.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163
    eek said:

    They were bring extra resources into the UK - in which case it's give us the exemption or those people aren't willing to come.
    Exactly. Nothing but contempt. Dyson could clearly have grossed up their salaries to account for the tax but no, it's the British tax payer who has to fund his patriotism. It's ME who has to fund his patriotism.

    Pull the other one. Dyson is supposed to believe in Britain.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,559
    Endillion said:

    So he is. 3.4m subs. Probably not enough by a factor of at least 10.
    He's above 'lost deposit' point though. If he does well, might well 'incite' others to use You Tube. Somehow, probably deviously.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712

    Opposite of the latter one. Keep the pyramid.

    Do a breakaway but with the top clubs qualifying each year still. So that money and who controls the competition is the difference, not qualification.

    So West Ham etc can still qualify for it. That was the mistake.
    That was the screw up - the founding members should have got shares / guaranteed cash (would have been unfair but meh) but no guaranteed right to play.

  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    This is exactly my point. Those who stepped up without promise of award or indemnity should be commended. That is patriotism and that is caring for your community.

    Those who seemingly were only willing to help if their tax exemption status was protected, well I have nothing but contempt.

    Especially considering the monster tax payer bill we all have to pay. You have to pay a bit more tax? Tough sh*t, welcome to the future.
    So the world's best and brightest stay in Singapore or go to the USA or help any of many other nations instead. And we don't get the help we need and we don't get a single penny in extra tax either.

    Great job there! Way to cut off your nose to spite your face. No wonder you voted for Corbyn, I thought you'd learnt some lessons but nothing has changed. 🤦🏻‍♂️
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    No fucking shit Sherlock. A vacuum cleaner is not a fucking ventilator, nobody said otherwise.

    Guess what you fucking idiot, a fucking Formula 1 race car isn't a fucking venilator either.

    Get a fucking grip you fucking fuckity fucky fool.

    Do we really need such strong fucking language too?
    It is the only way to get through to someone as ignorant as you, you saddo. Stop talking crap about matters you have no knowledge on. Oh, dear that will be pretty limiting for you
  • NemtynakhtNemtynakht Posts: 2,329

    "I refuse to come to my own country and save lives of my compatriots unless you change the law to protect my tax arrangements, Boris".

    Imagine someone actually saying that.

    Then imagine defending someone who said that.

    Christ on a bike, there's no morals left whatsoever.

    I thought these people were supposed to believe in Britain and the British people?
    Who said those helping were British? You are not helping compatriots if not and being sent by your boss at great financial detriment. Help a comrade out and support him against this injustice
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163

    So the world's best and brightest stay in Singapore or go to the USA or help any of many other nations instead. And we don't get the help we need and we don't get a single penny in extra tax either.

    Great job there! Way to cut off your nose to spite your face. No wonder you voted for Corbyn, I thought you'd learnt some lessons but nothing has changed. 🤦🏻‍♂️
    If Dyson was willing to abandon his country in a time of need then that says a lot about him.

    So much for patriotism or believing in Britain.
  • No fucking shit Sherlock. A vacuum cleaner is not a fucking ventilator, nobody said otherwise.

    Guess what you fucking idiot, a fucking Formula 1 race car isn't a fucking venilator either.

    Get a fucking grip you fucking fuckity fucky fool.

    Do we really need such strong fucking language too?
    Fucking right we do. We're talking - again - about preferential mates deals for Tory donors. Fuck the fucking fuckers.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited April 2021
    eek said:

    That was the screw up - the founding members should have got shares / guaranteed cash (would have been unfair but meh) but no guaranteed right to play.

    I wouldn't even go as far as shares/guaranteed cash. No guarantees at all but the money raised goes to the clubs who qualify instead of UEFA.

    The clubs would have no guarantees then but would still be tens if not hundreds of millions better off per annum.

    Possibly follow the Premier League model of parachute payments too.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,648
    Sandpit said:

    The situation was as follows, the numbers may of course be slightly different:

    1. British engineer living abroad gets paid £1m a year by Dyson in salary and bonuses.
    2. Dyson volunteers engineer to come to UK for £300 a day, to work on an emergency government project.
    3. Engineer exposes himself to personal tax liability of £440k (income tax on the £1m) if he stays in UK for more than 90 days.
    4. Government agrees to relax the 90 day rule because global pandemic.
    Answer: engineers do as much of the work as possible remotely and / or ensure that they do not work in the U.K. for more than 90 days. Result: no additional tax liability.

    Two genuine questions:-

    1. Were Dyson offering to do the work for free or at very reduced rates?
    2. Was it actually necessary for the engineers to base themselves in the U.K. for more than 90 days for this project?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,815

    I refer to the answer I have just now given on your other post. You are even more ignorant in this area than most other areas you post on, and that really is saying something.

    McLaren have a significant medical device consultancy business that long predated Covid. They were an obvious choice because they knew about highly regulated medical grade products. They are not a vacuum cleaner company.
    It wasn't McLaren that did it, it was Mercedes who have no medical division.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163

    Who said those helping were British? You are not helping compatriots if not and being sent by your boss at great financial detriment. Help a comrade out and support him against this injustice
    Dyson is British! He controls his employees. He has the power to ensure no financial detriment ensures. The British Government has no need to get involved.

    If Dyson doesn't believe helping his country is worth the expense well then what kind of patriot is he?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,775
    Strong betting move to the Cons on Hartlepool. 1.5 now.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    If Dyson was willing to abandon his country in a time of need then that says a lot about him.

    So much for patriotism or believing in Britain.
    Dyson is not his employees.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Dyson is British! He controls his employees. He has the power to ensure no financial detriment ensures. The British Government has no need to get involved.

    If Dyson doesn't believe helping his country is worth the expense well then what kind of patriot is he?
    "He controls his employees"

    You would not make a very good manager with that attitude.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163

    Dyson is not his employees.
    I'm not sure which part of "Dyson could have grossed up his employees' salaries to account for any additional tax liability" you do not understand.
  • NemtynakhtNemtynakht Posts: 2,329

    [I presume you mean 'inexplicable'.]

    Yes, that is the valid criticism. There was absolutely nothing wrong with a temporary dispensation on the tax rules to prevent those who were trying to help being penalised with a whopping personal tax charge; after all, there were lots of temporary amendments to the rules because of the peculiar circumstances of the pandemic.

    However, there does seem to have been a rather naive belief that JCB and Dyson were in a better position to design and produce medical-grade equipment in a hurry than companies with actual experience in the field. (And indeed they weren't, as it turned out).

    So, nothing dodgy about this, just mismanagement.
    Or like the vaccines in a time of emergency all reasonable avenues were pursued.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712

    I wouldn't even go as far as shares/guaranteed cash. No guarantees at all but the money raised goes to the clubs who qualify instead of UEFA.

    The clubs would have no guarantees then but would still be tens if not hundreds of millions better off per annum.
    I was talking about the original ESL plan which had founding members getting shares / cash. You could (almost) justify that but you couldn't justify the guaranteed entry bit.

    Now having screwed things up so badly UEFA will keep control of the Champions league money pot for the next 10 years for won't of complete misunderstanding of what European football supporters expect.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Endillion said:

    It wasn't the medical team that produced the ventilator, though; it was the F1 team. I saw a talk by the team responsible last year - amazing stuff. I suggest - your knowledge of the pharma industry notwithstanding - it may be you who is talking out of turn here.
    Sorry, my main area is not pharma it is devices. McLaren was able to do it because it had the ability to manufacture to the quality systems required by ISO 13485 and knew the regulatory and safety requirements. That would be due to their medical affliiate knowledge
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited April 2021
    Cyclefree said:

    Answer: engineers do as much of the work as possible remotely and / or ensure that they do not work in the U.K. for more than 90 days. Result: no additional tax liability.

    Two genuine questions:-

    1. Were Dyson offering to do the work for free or at very reduced rates?
    2. Was it actually necessary for the engineers to base themselves in the U.K. for more than 90 days for this project?
    []deleted]
  • FossFoss Posts: 1,394
    kinabalu said:

    Strong betting move to the Cons on Hartlepool. 1.5 now.

    I could cash out for 36% of my Tory win profit... which is tempting. OTOH, if its insider betting due to a good poll then it might be worth hanging on…
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155

    I think there is an issue with an employer trying to pay an employees personal tax - it becomes a benefit in kind, and itself is taxable? Creates a problematic loop, IIRC?

    Any tax experts?
    Bonuses are grossed up all the time so that the amount received net of tax is the amount intended, regardless of the tax rate paid by the employee.

    The Maths is not hard.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163
    Foss said:

    I could cash out for 36% of my Tory win profit... which is tempting. OTOH, if its insider betting due to a good poll then it might be worth hanging on…
    The Tories are going to win Hartlepool absolutely no problem.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    I'm not sure which part of "Dyson could have grossed up his employees' salaries to account for any additional tax liability" you do not understand.
    That it's not true.

    If they'd hit the 90 day threshold then it's not only income from Dyson that could be taxed.

    If the UK state is asking for something it seems entirely reasonable that the UK state sorts out the difficulties.
  • Or like the vaccines in a time of emergency all reasonable avenues were pursued.
    Absolutely. This is a classic attempt to throw loads of manure and hope some of it sticks. Such a strategy is very high risk though. Because you lump in things like this which are very easily explained and its hard not to be cynical of the motives of those trying to exploit it and other maybe more serious things.

    The throw heaps and heaps approach eventually brought down Corbyn, so i can see it working, but it can go the other way and it is all trivial.

    The 'slow burn' narrative is what some in Labour are keen to push, but to push the metaphor their over enthusiasm having set something off they're now piling on lots of things that just wont set alight and are smothering it.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,302

    Again, Philip stop talking out of your backside. If you are referring to Mercedes McLaren, they already had a significant medical device arm to their business
    They haven't been Mercedes-McLaren since 2014. I fucking hate F1 (motorsport for people who don't like motorsport) and even I know that.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    An interesting study by the Resolution Foundation on income disparities in the UK compared with other European countries, and on the impact of the pandemic on those disparities:

    https://twitter.com/TorstenBell/status/1384793865983512576

    As Torsten Bell says, we don't get nearly enough (well-researched) data on international comparisons when discussing UK government policies.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712
    edited April 2021
    Cyclefree said:

    Answer: engineers do as much of the work as possible remotely and / or ensure that they do not work in the U.K. for more than 90 days. Result: no additional tax liability.

    Two genuine questions:-

    1. Were Dyson offering to do the work for free or at very reduced rates?
    2. Was it actually necessary for the engineers to base themselves in the U.K. for more than 90 days for this project?
    2 - I suspect it was - I used to fly round Europe because face to face is the only way you can see what is really happening. It's clear that James Dyson (who really should know what was required thought it was essential)
    1 - I'm not aware that Dyson asked or received a penny - as I stated earlier.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163
    For what it is worth, bending the rules during a pandemic is justifiable, what I am angry at is Dyson's hypocrisy.

    He is supposed to be the biggest believer in patriotism and Britain and yet he delegates his charity to the British treasury.

    That is deserving of contempt regardless.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    edited April 2021
    kinabalu said:

    Strong betting move to the Cons on Hartlepool. 1.5 now.

    I was wondering why we here so little on the ground from there. As I've said from day 1 a close labour hold until I hear convincing on the ground rumbles that say otherwise wirth due respect to Gallowgate and RP who've taken the opposite view to me from the start.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,177
    Cyclefree said:

    Answer: engineers do as much of the work as possible remotely and / or ensure that they do not work in the U.K. for more than 90 days. Result: no additional tax liability.

    Two genuine questions:-

    1. Were Dyson offering to do the work for free or at very reduced rates?
    2. Was it actually necessary for the engineers to base themselves in the U.K. for more than 90 days for this project?
    IIRC Dyson (the company) bore all the costs of the development/prototype themselves. I *believe* that they weren't paid anything.

    When doing rapid development, it is very useful to get everyone in the same location.

    See SpaceX - engineers, designers, fabricators sitting in the same open plan factory/office. I've seen estimates that this decreased the cycle time for changes by *multiple orders of magnitude* - that things that would take conventional, multiple location, aerospace manufacturers months, took hours.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,246

    I wouldn't even go as far as shares/guaranteed cash. No guarantees at all but the money raised goes to the clubs who qualify instead of UEFA.

    The clubs would have no guarantees then but would still be tens if not hundreds of millions better off per annum.

    Possibly follow the Premier League model of parachute payments too.
    Who on earth pays the referees, match officials, marketing staff, logistics people if UEFA dont get any of the income?
  • Fucking right we do. We're talking - again - about preferential mates deals for Tory donors. Fuck the fucking fuckers.
    Things that aren't true, over and over. If this was the case, Plod would be knocking doors down.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    eek said:

    I was talking about the original ESL plan which had founding members getting shares / cash. You could (almost) justify that but you couldn't justify the guaranteed entry bit.

    Now having screwed things up so badly UEFA will keep control of the Champions league money pot for the next 10 years for won't of complete misunderstanding of what European football supporters expect.
    I don't think you could justify either personally. Do the founding Premier League clubs get guaranteed cash?

    I agree on the latter. If this changes it will have to be due to a meritocratic design fitting in with European football.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,163
    Furthermore if Dyson hadn't abandoned Britain and British workers and moved their HQ to Singapore, this wouldn't even be an issue.

    Believe in Britain my arse.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,915
    Carnyx said:

    Do meteorites really decelerate at that level without going poot?
    Quick back of the envelope calculation - you can have a length of carbon fibre about 2.5km long before 150G will tear it apart (in tension).
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712

    Who on earth pays the referees, match officials, marketing staff, logistics people if UEFA dont get any of the income?
    The club hosting the match is how it usually works.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,530
    And then there were four...

    Real Madrid
    Barcelona
    Milan
    Juventus

    Serie A and La Liga really ought to kick them out now.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,474
    Mr. Ace, *cough*

    https://www.formula1.com/en/teams/McLaren.html

    Power Unit Mercedes
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Who on earth pays the referees, match officials, marketing staff, logistics people if UEFA dont get any of the income?
    The newly created League would. Just as the PL does. It's not a new concept.

    UEFA make a big profit on the CL. Net of all that.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712
    Dura_Ace said:

    They haven't been Mercedes-McLaren since 2014. I fucking hate F1 (motorsport for people who don't like motorsport) and even I know that.
    Um - there wasn't a Mercedes powered McLaren between 2014 and March 2021...
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    MaxPB said:

    It wasn't McLaren that did it, it was Mercedes who have no medical division.
    OK, last post on this as it is getting boring. McLaren, Mercedes and a number of others did not produce a new ventilator (as was proposed by the very arrogant Mr. Dyson) they essentially adapted and manufactured (under licence I believe) the Penlon ventilator which is a robust but quite old fashioned British ventilator. All of these organisations had manufacturing standards that would meet the exacting standards of ISO 13485.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,648
    eek said:

    Did Dyson bill the Government for the work they did?

    I don't think any of the firms working on ventilator systems did.
    They didn't provide any ventilators. So why would they have been paid.

    I have yet to understand why it was necessary for these people to be physically in the country for more than 90 days to design a ventilator. Does anyone know?
This discussion has been closed.