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May 5th – the 16th anniversary of the last time Labour won a general election – politicalbetting.com

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  • CursingStoneCursingStone Posts: 421

    Pardon my ignorance but what on earth is a 'park keeper' that used to exist but doesn't now?

    I live with a park on my road, and a children's playground. Its part of what attracted us to this home given we have young kids. It is clean, well-kept, has zero graffiti and is well maintained. I feel comfortable taking my girls to it whenever we want to and letting them run free playing in the park. I see presumably Council staff come to it and cut the grass etc about once a week or so and then go, I've never seen a trash problem or graffiti.

    What more should be expected that isn't happening at the minute?

    It was like police houses etc. The job was pretty poorly paid that to attract people you provide attached housing. The park keeper, like a school caretaker would live within the site.

    A time long gone.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,164
    DavidL said:

    Don't forget economics. no longer taught in state schools. You have to recognise the strategic genius of that.
    I don't think economics is taught in English state schools either. I was never taught economics growing up in the 2000s.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,314
    I sense a head of EssEnnPeebad steam building up, usually not a bad signifier of them about to do well in an election. Fcuk polls...
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,104

    One thing that has happened under the SNP is the eradication of British history from the curriculum. My 3 children did not choose history for Standard / Nat 5 grade (GCSE equivalent) and so only did topics through primary and junior school and the first 2 years of senior school. Those topics were the Ancient Egyptians, the Scottish Wars of Independence (against the English), the Jacobites (again, against the English), WW2 (the experience in Edinburgh, no British common thread), Slavery (how bad it was, not Wilberforce and the role of the Royal Navy in ending the trade and no hint of Scottish profit from the trade), and finally US Civil Rights. My kids only have an understanding of wider British history because I have bored them with it.

    In a generation, the SNP will have succeeded in separating a generation of kids from any understanding of, or involvement in, a British identity.
    Which is damning to be honest, as the Scots played a vital role in the UK (for all its positives and negatives)

    Basically erased to turn into a weird history of apparently being a colony of the UK etc. I think that’s a UK govt failure of letting it happen tbh
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited May 2021

    One thing that has happened under the SNP is the eradication of British history from the curriculum. My 3 children did not choose history for Standard / Nat 5 grade (GCSE equivalent) and so only did topics through primary and junior school and the first 2 years of senior school. Those topics were the Ancient Egyptians, the Scottish Wars of Independence (against the English), the Jacobites (again, against the English), WW2 (the experience in Edinburgh, no British common thread), Slavery (how the bad it was, not Wilberforce and the role of the Royal Navy in ending the trade and no hint of Scottish profit from the trade), and finally US Civil Rights. My kids only have an understanding of wider British history because I have bored them with it.

    In a generation, the SNP will have succeeded in separating a generation of kids from any understanding of, or involvement in, a British identity.
    No guarantee that will see them win a referendum though.

    I did my high schooling in the 1990s in Victoria, Australia and the education there is rather similar. Anything negative in history is assigned to "the British" while anything positive to "Australians" when typically they're both the same people. We studied things like Captain Cook and the early settlements (and how the British wiped out Tasmania's aboriginal population); the 1850s Gold Rush with trips to the Sovereign Hill Museum (and how the British taxed and shot at miners); the Stolen Generation (awful); Gallipoli, Gallipoli, Gallipoli and Gallipoli (how brave Aussies were sent to die by the British). Only the latter one were the negatives really justifiably British rather than Australian when drawing a difference.

    Still the Referendum went against cutting ties to the old country in 1999.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,817
    Pulpstar said:

    Blimey.
    2nd vaccine booked 3 weeks and 1 day after my first - on Pfizer.

    Yup, looks like the gap is going to be massively reduced for phase 2. We have the supply to do it as well I think.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674
    Cookie said:


    I'm the same sort of age as you - 46 - and my memory of the seventies is that it was scruffy, dusty, unfinished, and covered in litter and graffiti. There is too much public squalor today and I would happily introduce the death penalty for graffiti, but I think the level of public squalor has declined since I was very small.
    Park keepers are an odd one - it's hard to believe they ever really existed outside the pages of Saturday morning comics. But are parks nowadays any less well-kept than in the 70s? My memory may be playing tricks on me but I don't think so.
    Social housing today is much, much better than that delivered at any point in the last 60 years.
    I've never had a problem ringing the doctor and getting an appointment the same day. In fact, again, GPs provide a far better level of customer service nowadays than I can remember at any time in the past. (Doctors are also much friendlier than the aloof and supercilious one I remember from my youth, though I may just have been unlucky back then!)
    What else is better today? Schools, public transport*, waste disposal, roads - the list goes on. There are few things you can convincingly make a case that the state does that it did better at any point in my 46 years on the planet.
    In short, I'd like the country to have better public services - but in my limited experience the state provides a better lot for its citizens than pretty much at any time in the past.

    *granted I was born at something of a nadir for public transport - I think PT probably was better before mass car ownership.

    Interesting discussion. I broadly agree, though my past experience is limited as I was only around as a small child in the 50s and then for a few years in the 80s, before coming back as an MP in 1997. In the 80s, my recollection was that doctors and vets did house calls much more readily than they do now, and public services are clearly struggling, but in other respects I also think Britain looks a good deal better than in the 80s - much cleaner streets (maybe better tech has helped there) and a more diverse culture, more obviously seen through diverse food options but also in less obvious ways. Britain used to be quite narrow-minded on all kinds of things - sex, foreigners, food, travel - and is much less so now, ast least in the big cities. The sense of general disgruntlement is much the same, though, and seems a permanent feature of British culture which I didn't encounter as much in other countries.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,537
    edited May 2021

    LDs 4

    PleaseletitbeCole-HamiltonpleaseletitbeCole-HamiltonpleaseletitbeCole-Hamilton
    What is the issue with him
    specifically, out of interest?
  • ExiledInScotlandExiledInScotland Posts: 1,535

    No guarantee that will see them win a referendum though.

    I did my high schooling in the 1990s in Victoria, Australia and the education there is rather similar. Anything negative in history is assigned to "the British" while anything positive to "Australians" when typically they're both the same people. We studied things like Captain Cook and the early settlements (and how the British wiped out Tasmania's aboriginal population); the 1850s Gold Rush with trips to the Sovereign Hill Museum (and how the British taxed and shot at miners); the Stolen Generation (awful); Gallipoli, Gallipoli, Gallipoli and Gallipoli (how brave Aussies were sent to die by the British). Only the latter one were the negatives really justifiably British rather than Australian when drawing a difference.

    Still the Referendum went against cutting ties to the old country in 1999.
    You may well be right. The dynamic is complex though - the overlapping Venn diagrams of Scottish, British, English and European identity overlaid with another of strong anti-Toryism / Brexit is a heady mix. In discussion with friends, the pro-Union ones see British identity as their key driver. The pro-SNP ones see anti-Toryism as their key driver.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,792
    Leon said:

    Probably because you are older. Young men attack other young men - out of sexual rivalry, ultimately. Darwinian, innit. Despite the odd horror headline young men very rarely attack much older men, unless they have the express purpose of robbery, or revenge

    Also, there is no kudos in beating up a pensioner. So you ARE safer
    I think there's more to it than that. I think it is genuinely a less violent society.
    I was put in mind of this re-watching 'Chance in a Million' - the sort of pre-watershed sitcom we don't really get any more but which used to be ubiquitous - and the theme of 'having a fight' cropped up far more often than you would expect in a way which looks very jarring now. And it occurred to me this was generally true of popular culture: the idea of having a fight used to be crop up in the 70s and 80s far more often than it does nowadays. (I'm still thinking of sitcoms here - but sitcoms give a much better picture, I think, of what life was actually like than dramas or films).
    Now this is all what it feels like, rather than based on anything objective: granted, I am middle aged now and also of a size that might discourage the casually violent, so I neither see nor perceive the threat of violence. But I think today's society is genuinely less violent than that of the previous generation. (Above a level of post-last-orders drunken violence, which has always existed.)
    I have heard it suggested that this has been due to the move to unleaded fuel (i.e. the particular form of air pollution resulting from leaded fuels made people violent.)
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,844
    Debates about an independent Scotland and currency and debt are exactly the kind of "arguments" that only help Yes win. Anyway, the counter argument is that so many other states manage to become independent without the kind of project fear disaster being suggested.

    Slovakia being a case in point. Dissolves the union and splits from its richer neighbour. Initially both use the same currency, then quickly national versions of the same currency, and later the Euro. Slovakia started as the poor neighbour with GDP per capita 20% lower than the Czechs, but after years of faster growth is now drawing level.

    Besides which, I expect* Scotland to adopt Bitcoin as its national currency :)
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,219
    MaxPB said:

    Yup, looks like the gap is going to be massively reduced for phase 2. We have the supply to do it as well I think.
    I'd have prefferred my other half to be invited for her first, but I'll "trust the system"...
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,394
    Second day in a row the UK posts less than its population share:

    https://www.politico.eu/coronavirus-in-europe/


  • ExiledInScotlandExiledInScotland Posts: 1,535

    Debates about an independent Scotland and currency and debt are exactly the kind of "arguments" that only help Yes win. Anyway, the counter argument is that so many other states manage to become independent without the kind of project fear disaster being suggested.

    Slovakia being a case in point. Dissolves the union and splits from its richer neighbour. Initially both use the same currency, then quickly national versions of the same currency, and later the Euro. Slovakia started as the poor neighbour with GDP per capita 20% lower than the Czechs, but after years of faster growth is now drawing level.

    Besides which, I expect* Scotland to adopt Bitcoin as its national currency :)

    You are right. The thing you don't say is that salaries in Slovakia are now about 10% lower than in the Czech republic.

    If Scotland votes for Independence then I have a vested interest in it being successful - I live in Edinburgh. What worries me is that the SNP have not used their existing powers to implement policies to really grow our economy so that we can cope with losing the £2k/head subsidy from the UK government. I dread the tax and spend decisions that a newly independent Scotland must make otherwise. Could we overcome that period - absolutely. But it would be hell for a generation at least.
  • ridaligoridaligo Posts: 174

    You're relying on the young becoming less "woke" as they grow older. They probably will not. The Overton window will simply shift, as it has done over the past 100 years. Believing in gay marriage used to be woke af.
    I'm not relying on anything; I'm just musing about what I see around me.

    I don't see this as a young versus old debate, actually, in the way that in the past many people (myself included) went from left-of-centre to right-of-centre politically as they grew older, mostly to do with economics (when you've got nothing to lose financially it's easy to vote Labour) and less to do with social issues.

    The divide we are seeing today is more about values, a sense of fair play and common sense. People of all ages, who maybe didn't take much notice of politics unless it affected them personally, are starting to notice now that they need to be careful what they say, that they need to take mandatory "training" in the workplace to re-educate them, that the BBC can't make a decent comedy any more, and so on.

    When freedom of speech / expression is curtailed, when your job is threatened, when there is no such thing as a joke any more (because all jokes have a butt, right?) people start to notice and they notice which politicians stand where on these issues.

    When the Overton Window shifts gradually then most people just shuffle along with it (your gay marriage example) ... but when it shifts quickly and dramatically (the "woke" phenomenon), and ordinary, decent people find themselves on the wrong side of it, guess what? They push back.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,273
    edited May 2021
    This is a very interesting read:

    "There is a grand deal to be done with Brussels to keep Scotland in the union. European leaders are no fans of separatism. From Catalonia to Flanders and Transylvania to the Basques, most have separatist movements of their own they are keen to quash. As they did during the 2014 independence campaign, senior EU figures have quietly suggested to our ministers that they are prepared to be very helpful on an independent Scotland’s ambitions to rejoin the EU: a rejection that would kill Sturgeon’s project dead.

    But the EU has a price: an agreement to heal the festering sore that is the Northern Ireland Protocol once and for all. It wants the UK to align to a thinned-down book of EU standards on food and agriculture, a move that would slash the need for the lion’s share of disruptive and costly border checks on imports into the province from the British mainland in a stroke. Some ministers in Johnson’s Cabinet also want closer alignment on sanitary and phytosanitary measures (as they’re technically known), and have pressed Brexit negotiator Lord Frost on it. And I understand this is now happening.

    Frost and his opposite number in the EU, Commission vice president Maroš Šefčovič, are inching towards agreeing a set of common standards on agri-food. It won’t be called alignment (No10 prefers the terms “equivalence”). It may even involve the option to diverge if the UK feels it must, to avoid the incandescent rage of hardline Brexiteers who insist the UK must never again be beholden to Brussels on anything. But it amounts to the same thing."


    https://www.standard.co.uk/comment/no10-scottish-independence-boris-johnson-nicola-sturgeon-b933342.html
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    eek said:

    The mystery is - how come inflation has disappeared as in theory it shouldn't have done given the amount of printing within the economy..
    Asset price inflation
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,098
    Endillion said:

    The thing is that the public sector never really had a proper DB scheme. The Government never funded it properly; the benefits were just paid out of taxation receipts as and when they fell due. Which is bad (because effectively it's a Ponzi scheme that starts to fall apart if demographics change sharply), but workable as long as you never change it.

    The issue with moving to a DC scheme is that they would then have to put actual money into actual accounts with each employee's name on it, as opposed to the current system of just adding it to a notional liability to be paid at some point in the future. This would mean they suddenly had to find money each year for two groups of individuals: retired workers, whose pensions were never funded properly so now have to be paid out of taxation, and current workers, whose pensions need to be funded now, and so Government would need to borrow (lots) to meet the extra commitments.

    In short, it would be a huge win in the long term, because it solves the Ponzi issue and transfers a lot of the current risks onto individuals from the Government (read: the rest of us), but looks catastrophic for public finances in the short term.
    That’s generalising too far - local government always had a funded scheme (covering teachers as well as local council staff) as did the Post Office/BT. Both very big schemes indeed.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    ridaligo said:

    I'm not relying on anything; I'm just musing about what I see around me.

    I don't see this as a young versus old debate, actually, in the way that in the past many people (myself included) went from left-of-centre to right-of-centre politically as they grew older, mostly to do with economics (when you've got nothing to lose financially it's easy to vote Labour) and less to do with social issues.

    The divide we are seeing today is more about values, a sense of fair play and common sense. People of all ages, who maybe didn't take much notice of politics unless it affected them personally, are starting to notice now that they need to be careful what they say, that they need to take mandatory "training" in the workplace to re-educate them, that the BBC can't make a decent comedy any more, and so on.

    When freedom of speech / expression is curtailed, when your job is threatened, when there is no such thing as a joke any more (because all jokes have a butt, right?) people start to notice and they notice which politicians stand where on these issues.

    When the Overton Window shifts gradually then most people just shuffle along with it (your gay marriage example) ... but when it shifts quickly and dramatically (the "woke" phenomenon), and ordinary, decent people find themselves on the wrong side of it, guess what? They push back.
    Yes, famously absolutely no push back against repealing Section 28 or Gay Marriage.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,098

    Pardon my ignorance but what on earth is a 'park keeper' that used to exist but doesn't now?

    I live with a park on my road, and a children's playground. Its part of what attracted us to this home given we have young kids. It is clean, well-kept, has zero graffiti and is well maintained. I feel comfortable taking my girls to it whenever we want to and letting them run free playing in the park. I see presumably Council staff come to it and cut the grass etc about once a week or so and then go, I've never seen a trash problem or graffiti.

    What more should be expected that isn't happening at the minute?

    The difference is that most councils moved away from static staff based in the park, to mobile teams who travel round in a van and deal with jobs in different locations during a day. The latter is more financially efficient, but it’s a debate similar to that you get with the police and bobbies on the beat - people prefer park keepers because they can get to know the person, and they’re almost always around. Often a static park keeper will show a lot of ownership of ‘their’ park and do all sorts of other ‘extra mile’ stuff, like looking after lost property, that mobile teams cannot do.
  • ridaligoridaligo Posts: 174
    Alistair said:

    Yes, famously absolutely no push back against repealing Section 28 or Gay Marriage.
    No doubt there was, but not really by the vast majority of people? Did those issues really affect the vote of the "ordinary man in the street"?
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,085
    Charles said:

    No… just because the UK doesn’t sue doesn’t make it legal “ipso facto” or anything else.

    Uk government just ignores it.
    It becomes law if they don't challenge it doh!
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,085

    No guarantee that will see them win a referendum though.

    I did my high schooling in the 1990s in Victoria, Australia and the education there is rather similar. Anything negative in history is assigned to "the British" while anything positive to "Australians" when typically they're both the same people. We studied things like Captain Cook and the early settlements (and how the British wiped out Tasmania's aboriginal population); the 1850s Gold Rush with trips to the Sovereign Hill Museum (and how the British taxed and shot at miners); the Stolen Generation (awful); Gallipoli, Gallipoli, Gallipoli and Gallipoli (how brave Aussies were sent to die by the British). Only the latter one were the negatives really justifiably British rather than Australian when drawing a difference.

    Still the Referendum went against cutting ties to the old country in 1999.
    It is a welcome improvement , when I was a boy we were taught ZERO on Scottish history , it was England and Empire only
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,085

    This is a very interesting read:

    "There is a grand deal to be done with Brussels to keep Scotland in the union. European leaders are no fans of separatism. From Catalonia to Flanders and Transylvania to the Basques, most have separatist movements of their own they are keen to quash. As they did during the 2014 independence campaign, senior EU figures have quietly suggested to our ministers that they are prepared to be very helpful on an independent Scotland’s ambitions to rejoin the EU: a rejection that would kill Sturgeon’s project dead.

    But the EU has a price: an agreement to heal the festering sore that is the Northern Ireland Protocol once and for all. It wants the UK to align to a thinned-down book of EU standards on food and agriculture, a move that would slash the need for the lion’s share of disruptive and costly border checks on imports into the province from the British mainland in a stroke. Some ministers in Johnson’s Cabinet also want closer alignment on sanitary and phytosanitary measures (as they’re technically known), and have pressed Brexit negotiator Lord Frost on it. And I understand this is now happening.

    Frost and his opposite number in the EU, Commission vice president Maroš Šefčovič, are inching towards agreeing a set of common standards on agri-food. It won’t be called alignment (No10 prefers the terms “equivalence”). It may even involve the option to diverge if the UK feels it must, to avoid the incandescent rage of hardline Brexiteers who insist the UK must never again be beholden to Brussels on anything. But it amounts to the same thing."


    https://www.standard.co.uk/comment/no10-scottish-independence-boris-johnson-nicola-sturgeon-b933342.html

    Utter bollox, it will not change a thing.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,085

    Debates about an independent Scotland and currency and debt are exactly the kind of "arguments" that only help Yes win. Anyway, the counter argument is that so many other states manage to become independent without the kind of project fear disaster being suggested.

    Slovakia being a case in point. Dissolves the union and splits from its richer neighbour. Initially both use the same currency, then quickly national versions of the same currency, and later the Euro. Slovakia started as the poor neighbour with GDP per capita 20% lower than the Czechs, but after years of faster growth is now drawing level.

    Besides which, I expect* Scotland to adopt Bitcoin as its national currency :)

    That is heresy to the Scotch experts on here, don't you know we are a basket case and will be begging to come back in a fortnight, pensionless and poverty stricken.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,085

    I don't think economics is taught in English state schools either. I was never taught economics growing up in the 2000s.
    They don't even teach them to count nowadays, they need calculators after they run out of fingers.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,730
    edited May 2021
    ,,
This discussion has been closed.