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With a week to go Scottish LAB and its leader edge up in latest Savanta ComRes poll – politicalbetti

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Comments

  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,563
    Cookie said:

    Instinctively, emotionally, I'm with Philip. I am slightly cross when I see someone wearing a mask outside where there is no requirement to do so (nor any conceivable benefit). My emotional reaction is that these people are why we have been pushed into these excessive, illiberal restrictions in the first place.
    And yet, rationally - and rational wins, in the end - I know I am not them, and they may have 101 things going on in their heads which have lead them to the decision they have, from horrible personal experiences of losing loved ones down to the level of not actually finding masks that physically uncomfortable. Indeed, some of these people are my friends (albeit friends whom in pre-pandemic times we laughed about for being hilariously over-cautious.)

    As long as post Jun 21 there is no law requiring me to wear a mask, I will be happy. And I can reenter the world and get a new pair of glasses and a mobile phone and all the other things I have been putting off doing for the best part of a year until I can do it maskless.

    On another note, I plan to go to a pub tomorrow. I look forward to seeing how much or little they care about who I am. If they insist on QR codes or the NHS app, I won't be going; quite aside from any libertarian arguments, I need a new phone.
    Afternoon all.
    Escorted wife to out-patient appointment this morning; routine treatment of macular degeneration. However, every iOS professing well and they don't want to see her until;l July. And she can still drive; overall eyesight is excellent.

    Everyone in out-patients was masked..... staff and patients, including the team outside directing people to the nearby vaccination clinic.
    However, went home and wandered along the Main Street of our little town and almost no-one was masked, except me and the staff in the pharmacy.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    edited April 2021
    Someone earlier suggested that Hartlepool may already be done and dusted because of the high proportion of postals in these elections - will that pretty much apply to everywhere else I wonder?
  • JPJ2JPJ2 Posts: 380
    HYUFD.

    I will be amazed if the SNP fail to hold Moray or fail to gain Edinburgh Central. The bookies (who I fully accept are not infallible) have the SNP at 1/4 to gain Edinburgh Central (Ladbrokes) and to hold Moray at 1.29 (smarkets). I am on at appreciably better odds ;-)
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,675
    Cookie said:



    Well yes - but for me they fall into the category of the very scared. If they're vulnerable, presumably they've been jabbed. And more to the point, out in the street, masks benefit you just about not at all. If they won't demask now, when will they?

    Well, it's up to them. We haven't heard from Johnson lately on the subject of letterboxes and bank-robbers, but nijab-wearers who choose them from personal preference must be chuckling over the turn of fate that has turned the entire country including him into similar attire. Karma, innit.
  • Selebian said:

    There's a place not far outside the York ring road where I was astounded to get charged £3.20 for two pints a couple of years back. I'm in North Yorkshire, so definitely not a southern jessie.

    Not sure I'd describe Knottingley as beautiful :wink: Some nice villages thereabouts though and houses as cheap as the beer. We seriously thought about buying a house in Beal...
    Ha ha no it’s definitely not beautiful! Aye Beal’s nice.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804

    You'd better hope Labour hold Hartlepool, because if they don't, the abject humiliation of the Opposition losing seats in midterm to a Boris Johnson under full assault by the media will kill Wallpapergate stone dead.
    Here speaks somebody who is plainly not getting his weekly copy of "newpunditry-newpolitics".

    I can do you a deal. Subscribe FREE at this point. It will cost a fiver once every man and his dog are clambering to get onboard in a few weeks.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    Can we have Brextenders (other PBers might suggest a neater portmanteau) – those who are unhappy winners, the sorts of tiresome culture warriors who keep referring back to Brexit having WON, by way of a social wedge?

    Actually not many of them on PB these days – my old Brexit adversaries such as Philip and Mortimer seem rather gracious in victory.

    But the Brextenders are OUT THERE. Goodwin is their poster boy.


    That’s definitely a type, but ‘brextenders’ is not good. Sounds like ‘eastenders’ which is simply confusing

    The genius of ‘remoaners’ (I wonder who first coined it?) is the way it exactly captures a type with one clever punning easy-to-say, easy-to-understand word. Because, boy, they really do MOAN. Mr Meeks moaned like a Yokohama hooker for two loooong years.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,815

    As a child in Scotland whose neighbours went to the outlandish extravagance of going all the way South to Whitley Bay - which as any fule no is practically on the Equator....or in the tropics, at least....
    A true northerner thinks the north ends roughly twelve miles south of where he was born.
    Which for me is the Cheshire/Staffordshire border just south of Macclesfield.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,094

    How is your therapy for psychological projection going? I guess it is proving as effective as Alex Salmond's diversity training.
    Keep jogging loser
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,787
    FF43 said:

    It's Brexshit (an amorphous pile of crap) Which has a ring, just as Remoaner has.

    I don't use either.
    I noticed a classic bit of Brexshit from "Leon" further up this post. Quite funny really. About as ridiculous as one of the plots in one of the so-called "novels" from SeanT.

    I don't moan about Brexit, @Leon I actually find it all quite funny. I admit I didn't find it amusing at first (it was pretty damaging for my business as it has and is for many), but the more I think about it the more I realise that gradually even people with slow political analysis like "Leon" will slowly and eventually grasp that they were sold a pup.

    That realisation will be proportional to how much they want to believe, just like Trump supporters with whom they share a lot of mentality. Let's face it, Brexit is now a boring subject that only people like Leon bang on about, even though they won their pyric victory. I find sniggering at Brexit believers far more satisfying than moaning about something I can't change.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    felix said:

    Someone earlier suggested that Hartlepool may already be done and dusted because of the high proportion of postals in these elections - will that pretty much apply to everywhere else I wonder?

    Yep I said at the start of the week most had been posted before the let the bodies pile high.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279

    Well, it's up to them. We haven't heard from Johnson lately on the subject of letterboxes and bank-robbers, but nijab-wearers who choose them from personal preference must be chuckling over the turn of fate that has turned the entire country including him into similar attire. Karma, innit.
    Nice post, but if Johnson said that nijab-wearers look like virus scared medical mask wearers you'd criticism him wouldn't you.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Cookie said:

    A true northerner thinks the north ends roughly twelve miles south of where he was born.
    Which for me is the Cheshire/Staffordshire border just south of Macclesfield.
    Three Shires Head?

    (P.S. I once met a guy from Southsea Island who only considered Portsmouth and more southerly latitudes as the 'True South')
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,094
    JPJ2 said:

    Interesting to see how the EU member state Malta (described by the British press as totally incapable financially of being an independent state shortly before their independence), has the highest vaccination rate by at least one measure (see Carlota Vance table earlier).

    I find this ironic, as I think the pull back from Yes to No seems mainly due to the vaccination achievement of the UK, and the false claim that an independent Scotland could not have achieved this on its own.

    I ceased to worry about whether or not Scotland would become independent a while back, as the demographics are utterly crushing for unionism. The end of the Union can be delayed but not prevented.

    A couple of points rebutting nonsense comments on the election by some PBers:- Sturgeon is not going to lose her constituency seat to the privately educated millionaire Sarwar, and the SNP are not going to lose Moray, a seat that Ross was afraid to stand in at this election.

    It will be interesting to see if Labour can hold any of their 3 constituency seats currently held on tiny or small majorities, Dumbarton, East Lothian and Edinburgh Southern. The last named seems their best bet to me due to tactical voting for Labour by Tory supporters.

    Nearly forgot-Angus Robertson will gain Edinburgh Central from the Conservatives. Baroness Davidson has fled that scene having employed her usual tactic of dodging her constituents :-)

    No point expecting any sensible comments from the diehard unionists on here. Though I suspect a Scotch expert will be along soon to correct you.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Leon said:


    That’s definitely a type, but ‘brextenders’ is not good. Sounds like ‘eastenders’ which is simply confusing

    The genius of ‘remoaners’ (I wonder who first coined it?) is the way it exactly captures a type with one clever punning easy-to-say, easy-to-understand word. Because, boy, they really do MOAN. Mr Meeks moaned like a Yokohama hooker for two loooong years.

    Yes, the portmanteau needs work. I'll have a rethink!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804
    edited April 2021
    Cookie said:

    Instinctively, emotionally, I'm with Philip. I am slightly cross when I see someone wearing a mask outside where there is no requirement to do so (nor any conceivable benefit). My emotional reaction is that these people are why we have been pushed into these excessive, illiberal restrictions in the first place.
    And yet, rationally - and rational wins, in the end - I know I am not them, and they may have 101 things going on in their heads which have lead them to the decision they have, from horrible personal experiences of losing loved ones down to the level of not actually finding masks that physically uncomfortable. Indeed, some of these people are my friends (albeit friends whom in pre-pandemic times we laughed about for being hilariously over-cautious.)

    As long as post Jun 21 there is no law requiring me to wear a mask, I will be happy. And I can reenter the world and get a new pair of glasses and a mobile phone and all the other things I have been putting off doing for the best part of a year until I can do it maskless.

    On another note, I plan to go to a pub tomorrow. I look forward to seeing how much or little they care about who I am. If they insist on QR codes or the NHS app, I won't be going; quite aside from any libertarian arguments, I need a new phone.
    I've been talking about masks in crowded indoor spaces. This is what I postulate will carry on to a significant extent and is most certainly not "weird". Wearing a mask all of the time when out of the house is something else. That's imo a bit wei ... odd. But, you know, each to his own, live and let live, bla bla.

    So that's the good news. You're not with Philip, you're in a much better place - with me. :smile:
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,815
    Pulpstar said:

    Some people will slip through the net and present symptons later, but the virus is being dropped into a vaccinated population; it can't proliferate because it can't find hosts.
    New Zealand has an issue because it has a ~ zero antibody population.
    Yes, fair point.
    I think I am taking 'zero covid' too literally.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180

    Well, it's up to them. We haven't heard from Johnson lately on the subject of letterboxes and bank-robbers, but nijab-wearers who choose them from personal preference must be chuckling over the turn of fate that has turned the entire country including him into similar attire. Karma, innit.
    The face mask is not comparable - stop being a burka!
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,787
    malcolmg said:

    Keep jogging loser
    Wow, that took a while for your braincell to come up with that one! Slow even by your standards. I have been off here, done a bit of work, had lunch and come back to find that was the sum of a couple of hours of a nationalist's mental anguish over how to respond. Freud would have a field day. I guess a lot of your thought process must be consumed with how you can be more like Alex: a man's man and a real loser's loser.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    kinabalu said:

    I've been talking about masks in crowded indoor spaces. This is what I postulate will carry on to a significant extent and is most certainly not "weird". Wearing a mask all of the time when out of the house is something else. That's imo a bit wei ... odd. But, you know, each to his own, live and let live, bla bla.

    So that's the good news. You're not with Philip, you're in a much better place - with me. :smile:
    We have no choice here in Socialist Spain! :smiley:
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296
    MattW said:

    Gloria de Piero has...
    Corbyn read her right then.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    kinabalu said:

    I've been talking about masks in crowded indoor spaces. This is what I postulate will carry on to a significant extent and is most certainly not "weird". Wearing a mask all of the time when out of the house is something else. That's imo a bit wei ... odd. But, you know, each to his own, live and let live, bla bla.

    So that's the good news. You're not with Philip, you're in a much better place - with me. :smile:
    You're trying to make an argument out of nothing. 🙄

    There's no difference between saying "odd" or "weird". Same thing. They're synonyms.

    I'm "live and let live" too, even with those I find weirdos. Like you and your intention to make everything an argument for some reason.
  • NemtynakhtNemtynakht Posts: 2,329
    Cookie said:

    A true northerner thinks the north ends roughly twelve miles south of where he was born.
    Which for me is the Cheshire/Staffordshire border just south of Macclesfield.
    Don't get me started on Barmcakes (Where I grew up) and teacakes in Yorkshire. When I pointed out teacakes has raisins in them - I was shouted down - Ther froot teecakes!
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,227
    edited April 2021
    Pulpstar said:

    Some people will slip through the net and present symptons later, but the virus is being dropped into a vaccinated population; it can't proliferate because it can't find hosts.
    New Zealand has an issue because it has a ~ zero antibody population.
    To expand a bit further, each person with Covid entering the country ends up with

    1/(1 - r(V)) being infected on average eventually, where r(V) is the reproductive rate of the virus amongst your broadly vaccinated population, and crucially r(V) is < 1 {The meaning of herd immunity}.

    So if the vaccines and takeup push the r(V) to be 0.8, each person that slips through the net ends up with 5 infections (0.5;2). Which is why you still want it as a condition of entry but it's not the end of days if someone slips through.
    NZ's issue is that with no vaccinations or infections r(t) > 1
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,106
    JPJ2 said:

    Interesting to see how the EU member state Malta (described by the British press as totally incapable financially of being an independent state shortly before their independence), has the highest vaccination rate by at least one measure (see Carlota Vance table earlier).

    I find this ironic, as I think the pull back from Yes to No seems mainly due to the vaccination achievement of the UK, and the false claim that an independent Scotland could not have achieved this on its own.

    I ceased to worry about whether or not Scotland would become independent a while back, as the demographics are utterly crushing for unionism. The end of the Union can be delayed but not prevented.

    A couple of points rebutting nonsense comments on the election by some PBers:- Sturgeon is not going to lose her constituency seat to the privately educated millionaire Sarwar, and the SNP are not going to lose Moray, a seat that Ross was afraid to stand in at this election.

    It will be interesting to see if Labour can hold any of their 3 constituency seats currently held on tiny or small majorities, Dumbarton, East Lothian and Edinburgh Southern. The last named seems their best bet to me due to tactical voting for Labour by Tory supporters.

    Nearly forgot-Angus Robertson will gain Edinburgh Central from the Conservatives. Baroness Davidson has fled that scene having employed her usual tactic of dodging her constituents :-)

    Just to pick up on this - to think opinion doesn’t change as you get older is a bit of a mis-calculation.

    People aren’t generally stupid..
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    I noticed a classic bit of Brexshit from "Leon" further up this post. Quite funny really. About as ridiculous as one of the plots in one of the so-called "novels" from SeanT.

    I don't moan about Brexit, @Leon I actually find it all quite funny. I admit I didn't find it amusing at first (it was pretty damaging for my business as it has and is for many), but the more I think about it the more I realise that gradually even people with slow political analysis like "Leon" will slowly and eventually grasp that they were sold a pup.

    That realisation will be proportional to how much they want to believe, just like Trump supporters with whom they share a lot of mentality. Let's face it, Brexit is now a boring subject that only people like Leon bang on about, even though they won their pyric victory. I find sniggering at Brexit believers far more satisfying than moaning about something I can't change.
    You do realise that is one long classic Remoaner rant? Case closed, m’lud
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,094
    Cicero said:

    This is a bit like those Lefties who contantly claim that only the keepers of the true Socialist flame have any right to govern from the left. Truth is that the SNP is all you´ve got and if they fail, then that is the end of Indy, not just for now, but forever. What Alba is doing is unleashing the inner Judean Peoples Front of the Nationalist movement. Right now Scotland is split 50-50 about Indy as it is. As the Nats start tearing chunks off each other as to who is the true keeper of the nationalist flame, support for Indy itself is falling. Sturgeon won´t be pushed out because she is insufficiently nationalist, she will go because the supporters of separatism start a civil war amongst themselves. So you and Wings and the various other enemies of Sturgeon are totally wrong headed if you think removing her will help your cause. In fact I judge that she is the only one who can now deliver a separate Scotland and the numbers are not breaking her or your way. Across Scotland we are hearing that on the ground the Nat vote is soft. The Tories are down too of course so there is a deal of uncertainty, but Salmond´s party is just reminding a lot of folk what they most dislike about the Nats in general and that is not helping the SNP either.
    Sturgeon is not interested in Independence, Scotland is not interested in London Tory, labour and Lib Dem parties. ALBA have more members already than Lib Dems who are an irrelevance completely in Scotland , they will be lucky to be 5th party this time.
    The direction is all one way , it is only a matter of time till independence for sure and it will be a long long long time till SNP are not in power, likely after independence before that happens.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    Seen those new Senedd numbers?


    Starmer. Get the f*ck off wallpaper. Now. Before its too late.

    Scott. Stop it mate. You are making it worse.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,815
    kinabalu said:

    I've been talking about masks in crowded indoor spaces. This is what I postulate will carry on to a significant extent and is most certainly not "weird". Wearing a mask all of the time when out of the house is something else. That's imo a bit wei ... odd. But, you know, each to his own, live and let live, bla bla.

    So that's the good news. You're not with Philip, you're in a much better place - with me. :smile:
    But as you've already established, you and Philip are largely agreeing with each other :smile:

    So post Jun 21
    - we're hoping there will be no legal requirement to wear masks. (You are more optimistic than me, but we'll see).
    - some businesses may continue to enforce mask requirements. Up to them if they do, but not likely to be good for business - though who knows?
    - public sector bodies are a bit of an unknown. My view is that they probably will continue to require mask wearing indoors. (Boo!) We'll wait and see.
    - people who wear masks outside all the time - perhaps a bit odd and frankly I'd rather they didn't, but we don't know people's circumstances or what is going on in their heads.
    - voluntary wearing of masks indoors - up to individuals, and there will very likely be a legacy effect. Can't get too exercised about that, in the short term.

    Social distancing is an altogether different kettle of fish, and I suspect it will wither naturally, though we may be spacing oursleves out a bit more for some time to come. It's a much less binary issue - it's largely obvious whether someone is wearing a mask or not, much less so whether two people are social distancing.

  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,330
    Fck me, bumper crop of election literature the morn - Reform UK, Communist, Scottish Family Party, STUC Coalition, Green, Alba and G. Galloway comedy vehicle. No one got the one party state memo obviously.

    I offer Galloway's effort for entertainment. Remember Unionists, this is your guy.


  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,530

    Fck me, bumper crop of election literature the morn - Reform UK, Communist, Scottish Family Party, STUC Coalition, Green, Alba and G. Galloway comedy vehicle. No one got the one party state memo obviously.

    I offer Galloway's effort for entertainment. Remember Unionists, this is your guy.


    LOL. Reading his list of "the team" it seems more like a conspiracy of the professions than a party.
  • NemtynakhtNemtynakht Posts: 2,329
    Interesting that the Westminster bubble decorating and he said / she said not showing up in polling.

    I had a terrifying thought for Labour when reading the last thread. What if Boris is like a gateway drug Tory - they get rid of him and the red wall carry on voting Tory even with Boris gone! Imagine the howls of pain on in the Guardian as PM Sunak crushes Starmer.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804
    Stocky said:

    What about in the public sector?

    Re wierdos, agree that this is not helpful. But if people continue to drag their heels in helping get us out of this awfulness by continuing on a voluntary basis with certain virus mitigation practices then they are part of the problem. Logic and science please, not irrational maths-illiterate fear.
    I suppose public sector might be slower dropping all the restrictions. Not sure. Hopefully not. Re continuing mitigation behaviours, I think most of it will be sensible stuff, (eg) continuing to pop a mask on in a crowded indoor space, say a packed tube or bus. Or not shoving your face right next to somebody else's over the broccoli counter at Tescos. This sort of thing. This, for me, is not pulling us back into the mire, it's just the expected heightened risk awareness that tbh if it didn't happen would be surprising. I might myself choose to go back to exactly how I was (not 100% sure yet) but I don't view others not doing so as a problem or as a negative trait in them. Indeed it might lead to less colds and flu etc.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Fck me, bumper crop of election literature the morn - Reform UK, Communist, Scottish Family Party, STUC Coalition, Green, Alba and G. Galloway comedy vehicle. No one got the one party state memo obviously.

    I offer Galloway's effort for entertainment. Remember Unionists, this is your guy.


    What polls have shown that those clowns are going to win seats?

    I've not seen any polls with these muppets getting 6% or more.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,530

    Corbyn read her right then.
    i.e. not a Marxist revolutionary like himself then?
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,787
    Leon said:

    You do realise that is one long classic Remoaner rant? Case closed, m’lud
    I expect you would see it that way through your warped Brexshitter perspective. Did you like the bit about SeanT's novels? He used to be of these parts, and used to rant on about the EU all the time too. Too much time sitting at a keyboard with no real life experience other than writing travel guides and novels that make Jeffrey Archer's poorest work look like high art. I am guessing you do something of similar pointlessness?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,815

    Three Shires Head?

    (P.S. I once met a guy from Southsea Island who only considered Portsmouth and more southerly latitudes as the 'True South')
    Yes indeed! Have you ever been there? I have. Only memory is that it was very wet. I don't suppose it always is.

    There was a wonderful line from 'People Like Us', in the episode set in a lawyer's office in Cheshire - 'often called the Surrey of the North - except for by people from Sussex - for whom the Surry of the North is Surrey.'
  • JPJ2JPJ2 Posts: 380
    Razedabode.

    My submission is that what is happening is a generational change primarily based-unsurprisingly-on identity politics. Those who are inclined to favour their "Britishness" are older people. Those who are inclined to favour their "Scottishness" (and identity as Europeans) are younger people.

    If PBers wish to believe that is the sort of attitude that will change in the way that younger Labour voters often trend towards becoming Conservative voters as they age, go right ahead.

    I expect you to be very wrong.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    I remember when people on here took Cadwalladr seriously

    https://twitter.com/Arron_banks/status/1387732587251179523

    "Added to which with costs running at a £1m by the time it goes to trial , she will end up losing her flat and savings when all she has to do is apologise say she got it wrong and pay costs. Sad."
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    On Scottish politics & demographics

    Net delighted with SNP Majority:
    16-24: +13
    25-49: +14
    50-64: -11
    65+: -30

    Net delighted SNP coalition with Greens:
    16-24: +25
    25-49: +8
    50-64: -22
    65+: -37

    Net delighted SNP coalition with Alba:
    16-24: -56
    25-49: -42
    50-64: -60
    65+: -80

    https://docs.cdn.yougov.com/unfra6xw2j/YouGov - Scotland coalition.pdf
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    The interesting thing about that new Senedd poll is how much of the residual UKIP vote is going back to labour.

    The answer looks like not much.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,094
    MaxPB said:

    "Could" doing a lot of heavy lifting there. Would PM Nicola have ignored the EU scheme and bought externally to it? A yes or no will suffice.
    What a pathetic question. No-one can answer that as it is purely hypothetical and stupid and only an absolute numpty fool would ask such crap.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,735
    Floater said:

    I remember when people on here took Cadwalladr seriously

    https://twitter.com/Arron_banks/status/1387732587251179523

    "Added to which with costs running at a £1m by the time it goes to trial , she will end up losing her flat and savings when all she has to do is apologise say she got it wrong and pay costs. Sad."

    So with costs already at the level where she goes bankrupt if she loses she may as well go all in.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804

    You're trying to make an argument out of nothing. 🙄

    There's no difference between saying "odd" or "weird". Same thing. They're synonyms.

    I'm "live and let live" too, even with those I find weirdos. Like you and your intention to make everything an argument for some reason.
    lol. Blatant trolling.

    Warning. Keep it up and I'll start asking about your pole again.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,094

    Wow, that took a while for your braincell to come up with that one! Slow even by your standards. I have been off here, done a bit of work, had lunch and come back to find that was the sum of a couple of hours of a nationalist's mental anguish over how to respond. Freud would have a field day. I guess a lot of your thought process must be consumed with how you can be more like Alex: a man's man and a real loser's loser.
    One brain cell more than a cretin like you then, keep jogging loser.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    felix said:

    The face mask is not comparable - stop being a burka!
    Really ridiculous to compare them.

    A facemask is a small piece of cloth, covering a small part of the face, to prevent others from getting sick and save lives.

    A burqa covers the almost the entire face and body, is a misogynistic obscenity, designed to oppress women, dehumanise women and keep women segregated from the rest of society.

    Anyone who thinks that medicine and misogyny are comparable needs their heads examining.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,530
    eek said:

    So with costs already at the level where she goes bankrupt if she loses she may as well go all in.
    I have to say I am very uncomfortable with journalists being personally sued for libel rather than their publications.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Cookie said:

    Yes indeed! Have you ever been there? I have. Only memory is that it was very wet. I don't suppose it always is.

    There was a wonderful line from 'People Like Us', in the episode set in a lawyer's office in Cheshire - 'often called the Surrey of the North - except for by people from Sussex - for whom the Surry of the North is Surrey.'
    A long, long time ago. Beautiful part of the world. We were hosteling over to Gradbach Mill aged 14, sun was blazing down, is how I remember it.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    kinabalu said:

    lol. Blatant trolling.

    Warning. Keep it up and I'll start asking about your pole again.
    Can I request instead that we revive the scales? In the last episode, I think we left our antihero pushing 17st 7lbs??
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,257
    kinabalu said:

    I suppose public sector might be slower dropping all the restrictions. Not sure. Hopefully not. Re continuing mitigation behaviours, I think most of it will be sensible stuff, (eg) continuing to pop a mask on in a crowded indoor space, say a packed tube or bus. Or not shoving your face right next to somebody else's over the broccoli counter at Tescos. This sort of thing. This, for me, is not pulling us back into the mire, it's just the expected heightened risk awareness that tbh if it didn't happen would be surprising. I might myself choose to go back to exactly how I was (not 100% sure yet) but I don't view others not doing so as a problem or as a negative trait in them. Indeed it might lead to less colds and flu etc.
    Hugging/kissing when we meet friends/family outside of household - I haven't hugged or kissed anyone outside my household for months. That'll take a while I think, with a slightly awkward do we/don't we phase before it all gets back to normal.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,815

    Seen those new Senedd numbers?


    Starmer. Get the f*ck off wallpaper. Now. Before its too late.

    Scott. Stop it mate. You are making it worse.

    What new senedd poll is this?
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,400
    malcolmg said:

    Sturgeon is not interested in Independence, Scotland is not interested in London Tory, labour and Lib Dem parties. ALBA have more members already than Lib Dems who are an irrelevance completely in Scotland , they will be lucky to be 5th party this time.
    The direction is all one way , it is only a matter of time till independence for sure and it will be a long long long time till SNP are not in power, likely after independence before that happens.
    Malc, Are you listening to the scores on the doors? I guess we will see next weekend, but I reckon you are in for a very nasty surprise if you really beleive any of that.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296

    Seen those new Senedd numbers?


    Starmer. Get the f*ck off wallpaper. Now. Before its too late.

    Scott. Stop it mate. You are making it worse.

    When you write new, do you mean yesterday's poll or has there been a massive swing to RT in another poll today?

    I have been saying for months, Johnson vaccinated Wales while Drakeford closed the pubs.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    kinabalu said:

    Here speaks somebody who is plainly not getting his weekly copy of "newpunditry-newpolitics".

    I can do you a deal. Subscribe FREE at this point. It will cost a fiver once every man and his dog are clambering to get onboard in a few weeks.
    Be that as it may, the British media is an environment in which the speed of reporting is breakneck and the evolution of thought is glacial, so one can be confident that they'll analyse it in terms of the 'old politics'. I'll happily give you credit if you're right about the result, but I still don't expect us to win the seat under these conditions.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296
    Cookie said:

    What new senedd poll is this?
    I don't know, but it does sound like RTIFM.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    The Euro it is then....

    NEW. SNP Foreign Aff @AlynSmith tells me on an independent #Scotland joining the EURO

    “We would want to participate an economic & monetary union for the macroeconomic stability. The adoption of the € should be put to the people in a REFERENDUM”.


    https://twitter.com/antoguerrera/status/1387761243541413889?s=20

    Two words...convergence criteria......
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    When you write new, do you mean yesterday's poll or has there been a massive swing to RT in another poll today?

    I have been saying for months, Johnson vaccinated Wales while Drakeford closed the pubs.
    Well it was only posted on Britain elects half an hour ago if that's a guide. Pollster is Savanta.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    If Iw as the gambling type I'd definitely be looking at SLab 2nd place bets.

    Fck me, bumper crop of election literature the morn - Reform UK, Communist, Scottish Family Party, STUC Coalition, Green, Alba and G. Galloway comedy vehicle. No one got the one party state memo obviously.

    I offer Galloway's effort for entertainment. Remember Unionists, this is your guy.


    You tube keeps advertising me the Scottish Family Party's "Don't vote for the woke SNP song"

    I'm sure it would go down a storm with many on here.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,735

    The Euro it is then....

    NEW. SNP Foreign Aff @AlynSmith tells me on an independent #Scotland joining the EURO

    “We would want to participate an economic & monetary union for the macroeconomic stability. The adoption of the € should be put to the people in a REFERENDUM”.


    https://twitter.com/antoguerrera/status/1387761243541413889?s=20

    Two words...convergence criteria......

    Do they have a clue what they are talking about and the steps that would be involved in joining the Euro?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038

    When you write new, do you mean yesterday's poll or has there been a massive swing to RT in another poll today?

    I have been saying for months, Johnson vaccinated Wales while Drakeford closed the pubs.
    Tories up 6% on the constituency vote and up 5% on the list vote in new Senedd poll, here comes the RT surge.....
    https://twitter.com/BritainElects/status/1387768444859437069?s=20
  • eekeek Posts: 29,735
    edited April 2021
    Cicero said:

    Malc, Are you listening to the scores on the doors? I guess we will see next weekend, but I reckon you are in for a very nasty surprise if you really beleive any of that.
    Malc believes in unicorns (that rUK will continue to give Scotland money if they vote to leave) - so yep he believes that..
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    AstraZeneca has displayed the patience of a saint....meanwhile:

    #BREAKING Russia Sputnik V vaccine developer says to sue Brazil regulator for defamation

    https://twitter.com/AFP/status/1387775302047252483?s=20
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804

    Can I request instead that we revive the scales? In the last episode, I think we left our antihero pushing 17st 7lbs??
    Yes. A considerable weight for a shortish man. Takes a bit of believing even if muscle does weigh more than fat and the man in question is "mainly muscle".

    Colour me skeptical.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,530
    eek said:

    Do they have a clue what they are talking about and the steps that would be involved in joining the Euro?
    QTWTAIN
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180

    Seen those new Senedd numbers?


    Starmer. Get the f*ck off wallpaper. Now. Before its too late.

    Scott. Stop it mate. You are making it worse.

    TBF - Welsh polls have been all over the place.
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362
    kinabalu said:

    Here speaks somebody who is plainly not getting his weekly copy of "newpunditry-newpolitics".

    I can do you a deal. Subscribe FREE at this point. It will cost a fiver once every man and his dog are clambering to get onboard in a few weeks.
    Bluest is right here. The Tories will win Hartlepool and the pressure on Starmer becomes the big political story for this summer now.

    The main reason it’s going Tory is voters there think if their constituency is Tory the government will want to keep it so by pouring money in, and a Tory MP is the best lobbiest to secure that investment. It’s completely sound thinking, and there’s absolutely nothing Labour can do about it, except sit it out for goodness knows how many years, till the voters feel let down and time for a change.

    The pressure is not just on Starmer, his successor is likely to be destroyed by the Tories owning the levelling up idea whilst Labour own the stagnation and rape by globalisation of the 90’s and 00’s, the New Labour years predominantly.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    HYUFD said:

    Tories up 6% on the constituency vote and up 5% on the list vote in new Senedd poll, here comes the RT surge.....
    https://twitter.com/BritainElects/status/1387768444859437069?s=20
    What was interesting for me was where the old UKIP vote is going, and whether that plays into Hartlepool.

  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    eek said:

    Do they have a clue what they are talking about and the steps that would be involved in joining the Euro?
    Not that they want to tell voters, no.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939


    Yes, the portmanteau needs work. I'll have a rethink!
    Since raising the topic seems to validate their very reason for living, how about "Brexitentialists"?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296

    What was interesting for me was where the old UKIP vote is going, and whether that plays into Hartlepool.

    Cons. Always was going there.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    Keir Starmer trolling Boris Johnson by looking at wallpaper in John Lewis

    (Christopher Furlong/Getty Images) https://twitter.com/NatashaC/status/1387778043268243458/photo/1
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    Keir Starmer has turned up at John Lewis... https://twitter.com/MrHarryCole/status/1387778062008397841/photo/1
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    Cookie said:

    What new senedd poll is this?
    Britain Elects
    @BritainElects
    ·
    39m
    Welsh parl' voting intention(s):

    Constituency:
    LAB: 36% (+1)
    CON: 27% (+6)
    PC: 19% (-2)
    LDEM: 5% (-2)
    ABOL: 4% (+4)
    REFUK: 4% (+4)

    List:
    LAB: 31% (-1)
    CON: 24% (+5)
    PC: 21% (-)
    ABOL: 8% (+8)
    LDEM: 5% (-2)
    GRN: 3% (-)
    REFUK: 3% (+3)

    via @SavantaComRes
    , 23-28 Apr
    Chgs. w/ 2016
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    New - I understand complaints have also been made by Labour about Boris Johnson's flat to parliament's commissioner for standards.

    This is serious in itself because she has the power to suspend MPs.

    https://twitter.com/jessicaelgot/status/1387778274877755398
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    Cons. Always was going there.
    Some but Abol and Reform gaining a bit too.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Starmer still going on about Johnson's wallpaper. Most boring subject of all time.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    I've seen Prime Ministers dodge. I've seen them dissemble. I've seen them tell outright lies. But Cash for Curtains is the first time I've ever seen a sitting Prime Minister just refuse to answer a perfectly straight forward question about an issue of legitimate public interest.
    https://twitter.com/DPJHodges/status/1387778450585423882
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,330
    JPJ2 said:

    Razedabode.

    My submission is that what is happening is a generational change primarily based-unsurprisingly-on identity politics. Those who are inclined to favour their "Britishness" are older people. Those who are inclined to favour their "Scottishness" (and identity as Europeans) are younger people.

    If PBers wish to believe that is the sort of attitude that will change in the way that younger Labour voters often trend towards becoming Conservative voters as they age, go right ahead.

    I expect you to be very wrong.

    Lifelong Conservatives saying folk become more right wing as they get older is definitely one of the most convincing theories going on PB.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296
    HYUFD said:

    Tories up 6% on the constituency vote and up 5% on the list vote in new Senedd poll, here comes the RT surge.....
    https://twitter.com/BritainElects/status/1387768444859437069?s=20
    I have not dismissed RT as FM. I don't like him, and I think he looks like Roger Melly, the man on the telly, from Viz comic, but the former Labour blue collar voters love him.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    Scott_xP said:

    I've seen Prime Ministers dodge. I've seen them dissemble. I've seen them tell outright lies. But Cash for Curtains is the first time I've ever seen a sitting Prime Minister just refuse to answer a perfectly straight forward question about an issue of legitimate public interest.
    https://twitter.com/DPJHodges/status/1387778450585423882

    Another one who has seen the polls and realises he is Roger Irrelevant
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,820
    malcolmg said:

    What a pathetic question. No-one can answer that as it is purely hypothetical and stupid and only an absolute numpty fool would ask such crap.
    Come on Malc. PM Nicola would have taken pleasure in snubbing the UK government and publicly choosing the EU scheme. Be realistic.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    gealbhan said:

    Bluest is right here. The Tories will win Hartlepool and the pressure on Starmer becomes the big political story for this summer now.

    The main reason it’s going Tory is voters there think if their constituency is Tory the government will want to keep it so by pouring money in, and a Tory MP is the best lobbiest to secure that investment. It’s completely sound thinking, and there’s absolutely nothing Labour can do about it, except sit it out for goodness knows how many years, till the voters feel let down and time for a change.

    The pressure is not just on Starmer, his successor is likely to be destroyed by the Tories owning the levelling up idea whilst Labour own the stagnation and rape by globalisation of the 90’s and 00’s, the New Labour years predominantly.
    The irony is that Boris is going on almost as big a spending splurge as Biden announced for the US last night, this is basically a social democratic government with a blue rosette for the foreseeable future after Covid
  • JohnLilburneJohnLilburne Posts: 6,592

    You're trying to make an argument out of nothing. 🙄

    There's no difference between saying "odd" or "weird". Same thing. They're synonyms.

    I'm "live and let live" too, even with those I find weirdos. Like you and your intention to make everything an argument for some reason.
    I don't think they're synonyms. Weird is stranger than odd, which is just a bit unusual.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,530
    Scott_xP said:

    Keir Starmer has turned up at John Lewis... https://twitter.com/MrHarryCole/status/1387778062008397841/photo/1

    That's f*cking brilliant. :lol:
  • Even I am surprised by this new Welsh poll

    https://twitter.com/BritainElects/status/1387768444859437069?s=19
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,624
    eek said:

    Do they have a clue what they are talking about and the steps that would be involved in joining the Euro?
    No, they haven’t.

    The SNP has a lack of any proper thinkers. It’s just lightweights.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    Scott_xP said:

    Keir Starmer has turned up at John Lewis... https://twitter.com/MrHarryCole/status/1387778062008397841/photo/1

    Strong 'Ed Miliband and Ed Balls in Greggs' energy

    https://twitter.com/hzeffman/status/1387778729544458247?s=20
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804
    edited April 2021
    gealbhan said:

    Bluest is right here. The Tories will win Hartlepool and the pressure on Starmer becomes the big political story for this summer now.

    The main reason it’s going Tory is voters there think if their constituency is Tory the government will want to keep it so by pouring money in, and a Tory MP is the best lobbiest to secure that investment. It’s completely sound thinking, and there’s absolutely nothing Labour can do about it, except sit it out for goodness knows how many years, till the voters feel let down and time for a change.

    The pressure is not just on Starmer, his successor is likely to be destroyed by the Tories owning the levelling up idea whilst Labour own the stagnation and rape by globalisation of the 90’s and 00’s, the New Labour years predominantly.
    He's saying he expects Labour to win it. I'm the one calling it for the Cons.

    Hope I'm wrong of course (betting and blog kudos aside) but 'new punditry' has this as a Tory seat under our 'new politics'. They'd have likely won it at the GE were it not for the big BXP vote. That was not long ago and since then? - Brexit delivered and the vaccines beating the pandemic, no room for Labour to speak, and (your point) pork barrel promised. Starmer will be on the end of some attacks but imo will ride it out. And if Labour win he'll get a boost. For me it's too early to judge him or Labour's longer term GE prospects. Let's see how it looks in a years time.

    Your 'helicopter' view in last para of where it's all going? Bleak but possible.
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362
    HYUFD said:

    The irony is that Boris is going on almost as big a spending splurge as Biden announced for the US last night, this is basically a social democratic government with a blue rosette for the foreseeable future after Covid
    If you were advising Labour, what should they do, if anything can be done to help them in next 5 - 10 years?
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    This is impressive. When the new UK ambassador @MennaRawlings takes up her post in Paris soon, Britain will have female ambassadors in Beijing, Berlin, Moscow, Paris, Rome, Washington DC and Tokyo (among many others)

    https://twitter.com/PedderSophie/status/1387779434271358976?s=20
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    TOPPING said:

    What about Brxtrs?
    Ooh those sound nice. Is it a new brand of chocolate biscuits?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296
    Andy_JS said:

    Starmer still going on about Johnson's wallpaper. Most boring subject of all time.

    It isn't so much the gold paint on the wallpaper but the wider picture that is being painted.

    Starmer has every right to be on this. Don't forget Major's Government died from a thousand (wallpaper?) cuts.
  • NemtynakhtNemtynakht Posts: 2,329

    I have to say I am very uncomfortable with journalists being personally sued for libel rather than their publications.
    I am in general but Cadwalladr seems to have a personal vendetta
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    Hear there is a bit of a narrative busting poll coming down the tracks conducted in last couple of days from a proper pollster.
    https://twitter.com/MrHarryCole/status/1387781134046703623
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    The Euro it is then....

    NEW. SNP Foreign Aff @AlynSmith tells me on an independent #Scotland joining the EURO

    “We would want to participate an economic & monetary union for the macroeconomic stability. The adoption of the € should be put to the people in a REFERENDUM”.


    https://twitter.com/antoguerrera/status/1387761243541413889?s=20

    Two words...convergence criteria......

    It’s also saying: Vote SNP for ten more years of chaos, instability and endless divisive referendums

    I’m not sure if that’s a good pitch to voters, who are looking to the end of an historic plague, and who just want a pint and a quieter life
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    If turnout is low? anything could happen.

    And the tories have to be careful too. Abol +4 from nowhere. Reform +4 from nowhere.

  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,029
    edited April 2021

    I have not dismissed RT as FM. I don't like him, and I think he looks like Roger Melly, the man on the telly, from Viz comic, but the former Labour blue collar voters love him.
    I just do not see RT as FM but this poll has come as a surprise

    Also conservatives and abolish the Senedd 32% on list

    and 23rd to 28th April
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,106
    JPJ2 said:

    Razedabode.

    My submission is that what is happening is a generational change primarily based-unsurprisingly-on identity politics. Those who are inclined to favour their "Britishness" are older people. Those who are inclined to favour their "Scottishness" (and identity as Europeans) are younger people.

    If PBers wish to believe that is the sort of attitude that will change in the way that younger Labour voters often trend towards becoming Conservative voters as they age, go right ahead.

    I expect you to be very wrong.

    Interesting - I may well be very wrong and good to hear your view of it. However I’d still be minded to err on the side of caution when making the assumption that going forward, that will remain consistent through the age ranges.
This discussion has been closed.