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The by-election battle for Jo Cox’s old seat shouldn’t be as challenging for LAB as Hartlepool – pol

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  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,660
    edited May 2021

    Oh no, I am.
    • A lot along the lines of stuff Cyclefree has a tendency to put in her thread headers. - she has written many political suggestions I agree.
    • Equality before the law. - Policies to ensure this is protected. Many laws passed I support on this issue.
    • A free and fair judicial system. - Policies to ensure this is protected. Agree with Cyclefree the backlog on justice etc is a very bad thing and this needs sorting out.
    • A free and fair Parliamentary democracy. - Policies to ensure this is protected. Against changes in electoral system etc that could mess with this.
    • That all people, regardless of gender, race, sexual orientation, religion or anything else are free and equal. - Again support policies to support this. Again supported laws for years on this.
    • Welcoming anyone who comes to make this country their home. - Support policies ensuring this. Against those who campaign to do otherwise.
    • Generosity of spirit both at home and abroad. Giving aid to those who need it. - A good example of this is charities like Children in Need etc, policies like Gift Aid to facilitate and support this.
    • That anyone who gets sick in this country will be looked after. - Is the NHS not a policy area for you? Seriously?
    Etc etc etc

    Why would you NOT want policies to support these issues and to unify people? Of course you SHOULD not Thank God you don't.
    Ah now you DO want some specific policies to promote a Unifying English Identity.

    Ok so I ask you again - tell me a couple you'd like to see.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,516

    I see Andy Burnham won in every single ward in all 10 boroughs of Greater Manchester, some of those wards are really not typical Labour heartlands by any stretch.

    "Won" as in majority or "won" as in plurality?
  • borisatsunborisatsun Posts: 188
    On topic, will any B&S constituency polling be as heavily caveated here as the Hartlepool one was, given the success of the (Survation, was it?) poll there?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,660
    TOPPING said:

    What you have to remember is that because @kinabalu for some unknown reason is very insecure he is invested in belittling your views of nationality and what it means to be British.

    He does this because as a working class lad made good (very good) and now moved away from his roots, he is confused about what he is supposed to think about these things. He feels he should condemn anyone who even mentions nationality and being British but has no views himself on them.

    And hence when he bumps into someone like you, someone he believes he is far more successful and intelligent than, but someone who is far more confident in their own opinions on such to him delicate and taboo subjects, he has literally no answer.

    As you are finding out.
    Are you imagining me naked?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,905

    Was this before or after "In Place of Strife"?

    Which was quite controversial politically within the Labour Party, and rather dented Barbara Castle's career? Even if it was (or may well have been) the right . . . err . . . correct way to go?
    Should imagine, given my age, that it might have been a response to the surprise Tory win in 1970.
    But that's a guess.

    In Place of Strife was the way to go.
    Unfortunately it put in place strife.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,455

    I agree with all of those, and would gladly help you in any campaign for them. They don't strike me as uniquely English or British - arguably Denmark, of the countries that I know well, epitomises them more completely. As a programme for a Britain that we can all feel comfortable in, though, that's excellent.
    Stop being miserable. Mr PT's list is of course akin to the ideas of any sensible state. Denmark is a great example. The UK is however the best example. We fall short in many areas of course.

  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,526

    Re: Barbara Castle, used to enjoy hearing her on the BBC back in the salad days when we lowly colonials could listen to the Beeb on our computers.

    Have also read the condensed version of her Diaries. NOT what you'd call a ripping yarn.

    EDIT - Much less entertaining that diaries of Harold Nicholson, Paul Channon, Richard Crossman or (no suprise!) Alan Clark's.

    Haven't read Tony Benn's diaries yet but would like to.

    One problem with Benn's Diaries is that there are about 9 volumes of them.

    It's like trying to listen to the complete Alistair Cooke.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    Re: the English, when I said up thread that one thing world associates most strongly with England is parliamentary democracy, that's true, but should have added - representative government.

    US has Congress & separation of powers in order to NOT have an all or mostly powerful Parliament. But we embraced - indeed demanded - representative government right from the get-go.

    For which we have you to thank!

    And still do, even after Donald Trump's attempt to copy Oliver Cromwell.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,139
    edited May 2021

    That's a big difference between you and me. You are more traditional than I am and consider the land etc important. I don't. That's why I don't see it as a big deal if parts of the country choose to go independent.

    I consider it the people who choose to live here that make the country. I view the country as a living evolving nation that evolves with the people that live here. As immigrants arrive they rub off and influence the country just as much as the country influences them, and we are better off for it.

    But others disagree. As I finished my list with, it includes respecting the fact others have different opinions. I understand and respect your opinion, even though I don't share it. I hope for most people the feeling can be mutual.
    I don't think the first bit is even up for discussion - it's simply a fact.

    All forms of patriotism start with identifying with the land. That gives a country its boundaries and borders and is how it starts.

    That doesn't preclude immigration of course or its character changing but those immigrants in turn, over time, will also identify with the land.

    I think some people confuse this with exclusive "blood and soil" stuff, which it definitely isn't.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,445

    I haven't seen any other signs, if there are others, but that one just looks lazy by Hockney; like he really didn't care.
    I look forward to seeing the signs at East Ham.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited May 2021
    kinabalu said:

    Are you imagining me naked?
    Pretty much yes. Without the artifice.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Andy_JS said:

    "Martin Daubney
    @MartinDaubney

    This is an astonishing U-turn on open borders by EU's
    @MichelBarnier

    * End EU immigration for 3-5 yrs: it's "not working"
    * EU borders like "a sieve"
    * Links between immigration and “terrorist networks"

    He's gone full "taking back control""

    https://twitter.com/MartinDaubney/status/1392063057854189570

    Maybe he should have said this in 2016?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,139
    Sandpit said:

    Maybe he should have said this in 2016?
    I found that amusing.
  • borisatsunborisatsun Posts: 188
    Given all the fuss about who paid for Boris's refurbs and hols, interesting to note that in France there seems to be some consternation that Macron's blocking the publication of his payslips. Apparently noone can tell if he implemented Hollande's promise to reduce the Presidents's pay by 30%, ie the French have no idea how much the man gets paid.
    https://fr.sputniknews.com/france/202105111045580196-les-limites-de-la-transparence-lelysee-refuse-de-devoiler-les-fiches-de-paie-de-macron/
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243

    I don't think the first bit is even up for discussion - it's simply a fact.

    All forms of patriotism start with identifying with the land. That gives a country its boundaries and borders and is how it starts.

    That doesn't preclude immigration of course or its character changing but those immigrants in turn, over time, will also identify with the land.

    I think some people confuse this with exclusive "blood and soil" stuff, which it definitely isn't.
    Whoah...

    Are you saying there wasn't a pan-Jewish patriotism that predated the State of Israel?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,579
    Sandpit said:

    Maybe he should have said this in 2016?
    The French elite really is panicking thanks to Le Pen and the letters from the Army
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086
    edited May 2021
    UK cases by specimen date

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    UK cases summary

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    UK hospitals

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    UK deaths

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    UK R

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  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,579

    I agree with all of those, and would gladly help you in any campaign for them. They don't strike me as uniquely English or British - arguably Denmark, of the countries that I know well, epitomises them more completely. As a programme for a Britain that we can all feel comfortable in, though, that's excellent.
    Beating the shit out of small countries, and not feeling ashamed about it. That's England. We are a warrior nation. We still are, though we have sublimated these feelings into political exceptionalism and sport
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,455
    How on earth have BF not managed to have a Starmer exit market. I've tried twice to get them to do so, and I'm pretty sure I'm not alone. If only smarkets was other than awful.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,139
    rcs1000 said:

    Whoah...

    Are you saying there wasn't a pan-Jewish patriotism that predated the State of Israel?
    You mean Zionism? That was attached to a historical sense of the state of Israel.

    Let me try making the argument another way: there has to be a geography or boundary. Otherwise you could simply, as Nick Palmer says, tick off exactly the same policies and values in Denmark and they would also be "English".

    There has to be a sense of place. Otherwise it doesn't make sense.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086
    Age related data

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  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,516
    justin124 said:

    Barbara Castle was very popular in the second half of the 1960s and a credible possible successor to Wilson had he met his demise at the time.
    Paul Rose, who acted as Parliamentary Private Secretary to Castle between 1966 and 1968, later claimed that after his visit to the six counties in 1967, she asked why a young man like him was concerned about Northern Ireland, “’What about Vietnam? What about Rhodesia?’ I just looked at her with incomprehension and said ‘You’ll see when they start shooting one another’. She was totally oblivious to this. I think their priorities were focused on other things to the extent that they were totally blinded as to what was going on in their own backyard”. Perhaps it was not so surprising that two years later, on 14th August 1969, Barbara Castle wrote in her diary that she “was astonished to learn from the news that British troops have moved into Derry”.

    https://radicalmanchester.wordpress.com/2009/11/05/paul-rose-and-the-campaign-for-democracy-in-ulster/
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086
    Age related data scaled to 100k population per age group

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  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086
    CFR

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  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,579
    Incidentally I got the first real feelings of a return to normality today - nothing major, it's still tough out there, still cruel, still hard, still deadly, and the new normality is austere, impoverished, challenging, but I definitely did feel better as I downed an entire bottle of Sancerre with a huge plate of fruits de mer with a friend outside Bibendum on the Fulham Road, in the warm spring sun

    Excellent Jersey oysters, @kinabalu, excellent
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086
    Vaccinations

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  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,660
    So, a UNIFYING National Identity is meaningless because we all have different and equally valid notions of what it is.

    Fair conclusion?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,579
    TOPPING said:

    Far k'nell. As a very callow youth I went to see the Jam at Poplar Town Hall it could have been my first ever gig - 1977 I just googled. All I remember was an awful lot of working class folk with very short hair and Harringtons having a huge scrap on the platform of Poplar tube station and onesuch, in the midst of it all, running past me, pausing - was I going to get a smack? - realising I was very young, and running on to attack someone else.

    Happy days!
    Jesus. You and I are almost exactly the same vintage. My first "big" gig was Malvern Winter Gardens, the Jam. About 1977? Same tour?!
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,445


    I think those are values - with some policies - but I'm not sure they are the basis for a common identity.

    I think it starts with identifying with the land, and sense of place, together with the people that live there.

    This is where I struggle - as I said yesterday, there are many Englands - the bit of England in which I live is, I sense, very different from where some others on here reside.

    There's an old adage - "people like people like themselves". We gravitate toward people and places and lifestyles and relationships which work for us. All too often, we want to be with people who think like we do, act like we do and are how we are because we recognise and understand that.

    I suppose "my" England isn't anyone else's England but that doesn't matter. No one has a monopoly on the definition of what it is to be English. To try, as some do, to distil it or refine it or reduce it is futile - it defies and should defy such actions.

    Certainly, no political party or movement can claim to be the mouthpiece of the English - it's absurd.

    It is the variety, diversity and difference in which our greater commonality resides - the whole is the sum of the parts, both positive and negative.

    Perhaps that is as near as I can get to defining what it is to be English.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,660
    Leon said:

    Incidentally I got the first real feelings of a return to normality today - nothing major, it's still tough out there, still cruel, still hard, still deadly, and the new normality is austere, impoverished, challenging, but I definitely did feel better as I downed an entire bottle of Sancerre with a huge plate of fruits de mer with a friend outside Bibendum on the Fulham Road, in the warm spring sun

    Excellent Jersey oysters, @kinabalu, excellent

    No problem if not in a pub. I'm not a puritan.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,516

    You mean Zionism? That was attached to a historical sense of the state of Israel.

    Let me try making the argument another way: there has to be a geography or boundary. Otherwise you could simply, as Nick Palmer says, tick off exactly the same policies and values in Denmark and they would also be "English".

    There has to be a sense of place. Otherwise it doesn't make sense.
    86% of Danes "can speak English":

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_English-speaking_population
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    Leon said:

    Jesus. You and I are almost exactly the same vintage. My first "big" gig was Malvern Winter Gardens, the Jam. About 1977? Same tour?!
    EXACTLY ONE WEEK AFTER!

    Ha!
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    stodge said:

    This is where I struggle - as I said yesterday, there are many Englands - the bit of England in which I live is, I sense, very different from where some others on here reside.

    There's an old adage - "people like people like themselves". We gravitate toward people and places and lifestyles and relationships which work for us. All too often, we want to be with people who think like we do, act like we do and are how we are because we recognise and understand that.

    I suppose "my" England isn't anyone else's England but that doesn't matter. No one has a monopoly on the definition of what it is to be English. To try, as some do, to distil it or refine it or reduce it is futile - it defies and should defy such actions.

    Certainly, no political party or movement can claim to be the mouthpiece of the English - it's absurd.

    It is the variety, diversity and difference in which our greater commonality resides - the whole is the sum of the parts, both positive and negative.

    Perhaps that is as near as I can get to defining what it is to be English.
    Obviously you are right to say that defining a nationality is inherently difficult. My problem is that I get the feeling that you think it’s peculiar to England. It isn’t.

    What I would say is that the extent to which regional identities are strong varies dramatically across England. I’ll be honest, I don’t have a regional identity despite living in Woking almost of my life. By contrast, the Merseyside identity is very strong.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,773
    Leon said:

    Beating the shit out of small countries, and not feeling ashamed about it. That's England. We are a warrior nation. We still are, though we have sublimated these feelings into political exceptionalism and sport
    Not necessarily sure that that's what I'd add to my list of English cultural norms, but a welcome addition to the debate nonetheless.

    I'd say Englishness, or Britishness, is more noticeable when you see something that isn't it. The Batley Grammar School incident, for example. Because here, religion doesn't justify trading other norms like freedom of speech. That's not solely true of Britain, but it is far from universal in the world.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,455
    kinabalu said:

    No problem if not in a pub. I'm not a puritan.
    Few are, and few have left their signature on their posts so firmly as SeanT used to do :)
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086
    Iron Dome seems to be working again.

    Which brings us to the interesting concept of denial of things people don't want to be true. There is a True Faith of the Anti-Anti-Ballistic-Missile church - people who believe that you can never stop ballistic weapons. Hilariously, they have tried to claim that Iron Dome (limited though it is) can't work, actually misses everything, or costs 10 trillion dollars. Often all of the above.

    This is because they are ideologically opposed to anti-ballistic weapons.

    The mental processes involved are fascinating.

    I once watched as someone created a whole new denial in response to a scientific fact we were discussing. I wish I could have videoed it.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    tlg86 said:

    Obviously you are right to say that defining a nationality is inherently difficult. My problem is that I get the feeling that you think it’s peculiar to England. It isn’t.

    What I would say is that the extent to which regional identities are strong varies dramatically across England. I’ll be honest, I don’t have a regional identity despite living in Woking almost of my life. By contrast, the Merseyside identity is very strong.
    Is Woking exceptionally-especially woke?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,579
    stodge said:

    This is where I struggle - as I said yesterday, there are many Englands - the bit of England in which I live is, I sense, very different from where some others on here reside.

    There's an old adage - "people like people like themselves". We gravitate toward people and places and lifestyles and relationships which work for us. All too often, we want to be with people who think like we do, act like we do and are how we are because we recognise and understand that.

    I suppose "my" England isn't anyone else's England but that doesn't matter. No one has a monopoly on the definition of what it is to be English. To try, as some do, to distil it or refine it or reduce it is futile - it defies and should defy such actions.

    Certainly, no political party or movement can claim to be the mouthpiece of the English - it's absurd.

    It is the variety, diversity and difference in which our greater commonality resides - the whole is the sum of the parts, both positive and negative.

    Perhaps that is as near as I can get to defining what it is to be English.
    I'll have a go, using Bill Buford, from Among the Thugs, his description of his years as an English football hooligan. He's in a stramash in Italy, fleeing down the road, and being chased by cops:


    "Someone shouted that we were all English. Why are we running? The English don't run. And so it went on. Having fled in panic, some of the supporters would then remember that they were English and this was important, and they would remind the others that they too were English, and this was important, and with renewed sense of national identity, they would come abruptly to a halt, turn around, and charge the Italian police"


    That, basically, is Brexit. We ran away for forty years then we remembered who we are.

    That is us. A confused rabble, often uncouth, and yet, we finally turn and fight. And generally we win
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,773
    Cookie said:

    Not necessarily sure that that's what I'd add to my list of English cultural norms, but a welcome addition to the debate nonetheless.

    I'd say Englishness, or Britishness, is more noticeable when you see something that isn't it. The Batley Grammar School incident, for example. Because here, religion doesn't justify trading other norms like freedom of speech. That's not solely true of Britain, but it is far from universal in the world.
    On a more edifying note, I want to encourage anyone interested in what British culture is to go to Blackpool. Over the road from the tower there is a massive art installation in the pavement - basically it's punchline after punchline after punchline. And every British person will know what almost all of it is about. It will be utterly impenetrable to most foreigners,even Anglophone ones. It's brilliant - my favourite piece of public art in the country.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513

    Is Woking exceptionally-especially woke?
    Not especially. It’s basically a permanent building site.
  • oggologioggologi Posts: 29

    Was this before or after "In Place of Strife"?

    Which was quite controversial politically within the Labour Party, and rather dented Barbara Castle's career? Even if it was (or may well have been) the right . . . err . . . correct way to go?
    If Place of Strife had been implemented, would Thatcher have had such an argument against Trade Unionism?
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,455
    Alistair said:
    That sounds like a chess move contrived on the Welsh border.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    It's interesting that when people in America, France, German or wherever speak of "English" the generally mean "British". Though sometimes what we call British is really English.

    Because the English are so quintessentially British?

    The United States, France and Germany are all nations that have VERY strong regional identities that have been forged and fused into strong national identities, within one umbrella. In contrast to England which has been subsumed even more into the Britain MORE than Wales, Scotland or (most certainly!) Ireland.

    English to British is somewhat like Prussian to German pre-WW2. But even more so.
  • CursingStoneCursingStone Posts: 421
    Smash them, smash them into the ground. No half measures, do it properly this time Netanyahu.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938

    Smash them, smash them into the ground. No half measures, do it properly this time Netanyahu.
    That won't work.
  • dixiedean said:

    I heard that too. Is there a link anywhere?
    Some of them are true Blue Tory heartlands. Which probably have never voted Labour ever before.
    https://scontent.fltn2-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t1.6435-9/185391590_3978079095620440_1807396722191743689_n.png?_nc_cat=110&ccb=1-3&_nc_sid=730e14&_nc_ohc=p6Ylw34Is_QAX_ePc_t&_nc_ht=scontent.fltn2-1.fna&oh=bc0e0a277453415d5bae313d7be41734&oe=60C19678
  • CursingStoneCursingStone Posts: 421

    That won't work.
    Neither have the alternatives.
  • borisatsunborisatsun Posts: 188
    Leon said:

    Incidentally I got the first real feelings of a return to normality today - nothing major, it's still tough out there, still cruel, still hard, still deadly, and the new normality is austere, impoverished, challenging, but I definitely did feel better as I downed an entire bottle of Sancerre with a huge plate of fruits de mer with a friend outside Bibendum on the Fulham Road, in the warm spring sun

    Excellent Jersey oysters, @kinabalu, excellent

    I had a stunning Pouilly Fumé (Château de Tracy 2019) - in an online Wine Society cheese & wine tasting, paired beautifully with a Sainte Maure de Tourraine (not sure how it'd go with oysters!). The Wine Soc has sold out of it since the tasting. I highly recommend it; probably my favourite Sauv Blanc I've ever had, and worth every penny of the £23 it cost.

    I think this is probably mostly evidence of the awesome power of auto-suggestion, but I got every flavour in this rather detailed set of tasting notes from the maker's website:

    "Apparence : Pale yellow with bright green-tinged highlights
    Nose: Very intense. At first, fresh notes of blackcurrants, boxwood, peppermint and tarragon dominate.
    The nose then evolves towards fruitier notes of lemon followed by exotic fruit such as mango and passionfruit.
    Aromas of kiwi fruit are also revealed on a mineral and spicy background (coriander and green pepper)
    Palate: First impressions are full-bodied and supple with appetising notes of blackcurrant.
    The acidity then progressively rises, echoing the ripe, lemony flavours found on the nose.
    Flavours of exotic fruit and mango coulis bring it softness. The finish is long and structured and reveals notes of lime and grapefruit peel."

    https://www.chateau-de-tracy.com/en/our-wines/blanc-fume-125440.html
    https://www.lafromagerie.co.uk/sainte-maure-de-touraine
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,579
    Cornish scholar A L Rowse on the English, accidentally describing our response to Covid, to a tee, about 60 years ago

    “The English….are lazy, constitutionally indolent. They are always being caught lagging behind, unprepared – again and again in their history it has been the same; and then, when up against it – they more than make up for lost time by their resourcefulness, their inventiveness, their ability to extemporise, their self-reliance.”
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,279
    Leon said:

    I'll have a go, using Bill Buford, from Among the Thugs, his description of his years as an English football hooligan. He's in a stramash in Italy, fleeing down the road, and being chased by cops:


    "Someone shouted that we were all English. Why are we running? The English don't run. And so it went on. Having fled in panic, some of the supporters would then remember that they were English and this was important, and they would remind the others that they too were English, and this was important, and with renewed sense of national identity, they would come abruptly to a halt, turn around, and charge the Italian police"


    That, basically, is Brexit. We ran away for forty years then we remembered who we are.

    That is us. A confused rabble, often uncouth, and yet, we finally turn and fight. And generally we win
    I just read this book a couple of weeks ago, 30 years after it was published.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited May 2021

    Neither have the alternatives.
    The two groups are never going to disappear from the area, and cannot eradicate each other. Better agreement sooner and fewer deaths.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    The Queens Speech was rather thin.
    This is not a great reforming government.

    Most of the measures appear to be about centralising further control in Downing Street,
    - restrictions in rights to protest
    - restrictions on judicial review
    - a voter repression measure
    - centralisation of NHS control
    - centralisation of planning measures

    And we know there’s no money, except for Defence and the NHS. Nowt on social care.

    What happened to “levelling up”?
    What happened to “take back control?”
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,279
    TOPPING said:

    EXACTLY ONE WEEK AFTER!

    Ha!
    Eton Rifles is one of my favourite songs from the late 70s.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207

    The two groups are never going to disappear from the area, and cannot eradicate each other. Better agreement sooner and fewer deaths.
    I can't see there being peace - much as I would love for both sides to be able to
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,445
    tlg86 said:


    Obviously you are right to say that defining a nationality is inherently difficult. My problem is that I get the feeling that you think it’s peculiar to England. It isn’t.

    What I would say is that the extent to which regional identities are strong varies dramatically across England. I’ll be honest, I don’t have a regional identity despite living in Woking almost of my life. By contrast, the Merseyside identity is very strong.

    I'm sure it's not and from what small amount of travelling I've done, it's the same almost everywhere.

    I agree completely about regional identities - in some areas very strong, in others much less so. In Switzerland, the German, French and Italian speaking areas are very different from each other as an example,

    @NickPalmer might think differently but I always thought there was a strong Sonderjysk identity and the Fynboer always considered themselves different as did those from Lolland and Falster.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086
    Andy_JS said:

    I just read this book a couple of weeks ago, 30 years after it was published.
    The best parody of the above sentiment I have seen - https://www.pprune.org/jet-blast/348382-french-version-battle-agincourt.html#post4484416

    it's a repost of a brilliant USENET post from soc.history.what-if
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,660
    Andy_JS said:

    Eton Rifles is one of my favourite songs from the late 70s.
    All that rugby puts hair on their chests.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,298
    edited May 2021

    The Queens Speech was rather thin.
    This is not a great reforming government.

    Most of the measures appear to be about centralising further control in Downing Street,
    - restrictions in rights to protest
    - restrictions on judicial review
    - a voter repression measure
    - centralisation of NHS control
    - centralisation of planning measures

    And we know there’s no money, except for Defence and the NHS. Nowt on social care.

    What happened to “levelling up”?
    What happened to “take back control?”

    Well, the occupant of Number Ten is taking back control to himself, which was largely the point, wasn't it?
  • isamisam Posts: 41,217
    If you have a double barrelled name and you remember there only being four tv channels you are upper class, if you have one and you dont, you are working class!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,348
    Floater said:

    I can't see there being peace - much as I would love for both sides to be able to
    Unfortunately it has got to pretty much the stage where neither side will accept less than the whole. Positions are too entrenched, and both sides talk only to themselves and deliberately past each other. The Israelis see no reason to give up what they hold which suits them rather nicely, and with Gaza out of the way an annexation of the West Bank could be done comparatively easily. Meanwhile Hamas are adamant that the Arabs should hold all of Palestine, and for some strange reason the stranglehold Israel have put over them in Gaza isn’t changing their mind or softening their attitude.

    There is a book on this, called ‘The Two State Delusion’ by Padruig O’Malley that goes into this in some depth and is well worth reading.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    This idiot was filming on the street and laughing in Holon

    https://twitter.com/ELINTNews/status/1392183158293028865

    Then a rocket hit just down the street - Incredible views
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182

    Well, the occupant of Number Ten is taking back control to himself, which was largely the point, wasn't it?
    Indeed.
    It’s also scary. It’s not as if Boris, or this government, is very competent.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,266

    I had a stunning Pouilly Fumé (Château de Tracy 2019) - in an online Wine Society cheese & wine tasting, paired beautifully with a Sainte Maure de Tourraine (not sure how it'd go with oysters!). The Wine Soc has sold out of it since the tasting. I highly recommend it; probably my favourite Sauv Blanc I've ever had, and worth every penny of the £23 it cost.

    I think this is probably mostly evidence of the awesome power of auto-suggestion, but I got every flavour in this rather detailed set of tasting notes from the maker's website:

    "Apparence : Pale yellow with bright green-tinged highlights
    Nose: Very intense. At first, fresh notes of blackcurrants, boxwood, peppermint and tarragon dominate.
    The nose then evolves towards fruitier notes of lemon followed by exotic fruit such as mango and passionfruit.
    Aromas of kiwi fruit are also revealed on a mineral and spicy background (coriander and green pepper)
    Palate: First impressions are full-bodied and supple with appetising notes of blackcurrant.
    The acidity then progressively rises, echoing the ripe, lemony flavours found on the nose.
    Flavours of exotic fruit and mango coulis bring it softness. The finish is long and structured and reveals notes of lime and grapefruit peel."

    https://www.chateau-de-tracy.com/en/our-wines/blanc-fume-125440.html
    https://www.lafromagerie.co.uk/sainte-maure-de-touraine

    I had a stunning Pouilly Fumé (Château de Tracy 2019) - in an online Wine Society cheese & wine tasting, paired beautifully with a Sainte Maure de Tourraine (not sure how it'd go with oysters!). The Wine Soc has sold out of it since the tasting. I highly recommend it; probably my favourite Sauv Blanc I've ever had, and worth every penny of the £23 it cost.

    I think this is probably mostly evidence of the awesome power of auto-suggestion, but I got every flavour in this rather detailed set of tasting notes from the maker's website:

    "Apparence : Pale yellow with bright green-tinged highlights
    Nose: Very intense. At first, fresh notes of blackcurrants, boxwood, peppermint and tarragon dominate.
    The nose then evolves towards fruitier notes of lemon followed by exotic fruit such as mango and passionfruit.
    Aromas of kiwi fruit are also revealed on a mineral and spicy background (coriander and green pepper)
    Palate: First impressions are full-bodied and supple with appetising notes of blackcurrant.
    The acidity then progressively rises, echoing the ripe, lemony flavours found on the nose.
    Flavours of exotic fruit and mango coulis bring it softness. The finish is long and structured and reveals notes of lime and grapefruit peel."

    https://www.chateau-de-tracy.com/en/our-wines/blanc-fume-125440.html
    https://www.lafromagerie.co.uk/sainte-maure-de-touraine
    Well thanks for recommending a wine the WS have sold out of! 😉
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    ydoethur said:

    Unfortunately it has got to pretty much the stage where neither side will accept less than the whole. Positions are too entrenched, and both sides talk only to themselves and deliberately past each other. The Israelis see no reason to give up what they hold which suits them rather nicely, and with Gaza out of the way an annexation of the West Bank could be done comparatively easily. Meanwhile Hamas are adamant that the Arabs should hold all of Palestine, and for some strange reason the stranglehold Israel have put over them in Gaza isn’t changing their mind or softening their attitude.

    There is a book on this, called ‘The Two State Delusion’ by Padruig O’Malley that goes into this in some depth and is well worth reading.
    The “Two State Delusion” could be about the Anglo-Scottish Union.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    ydoethur said:

    Unfortunately it has got to pretty much the stage where neither side will accept less than the whole. Positions are too entrenched, and both sides talk only to themselves and deliberately past each other. The Israelis see no reason to give up what they hold which suits them rather nicely, and with Gaza out of the way an annexation of the West Bank could be done comparatively easily. Meanwhile Hamas are adamant that the Arabs should hold all of Palestine, and for some strange reason the stranglehold Israel have put over them in Gaza isn’t changing their mind or softening their attitude.

    There is a book on this, called ‘The Two State Delusion’ by Padruig O’Malley that goes into this in some depth and is well worth reading.
    Years ago when Harry's place was up and running they showed excerpts from KIDS tv shows in Gaza - a whole generation indoctrinated to hate and want to kill
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,348

    The “Two State Delusion” could be about the Anglo-Scottish Union.
    Mr Walker, behave! :smile:
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,007
    TOPPING said:

    EXACTLY ONE WEEK AFTER!

    Ha!
    My first gig was Neil Diamond at Woburn in c1980 is and also in that era Mott the Hoople at the Odeon Hammersmith.
  • borisatsunborisatsun Posts: 188

    Well thanks for recommending a wine the WS have sold out of! 😉
    Available at Tanner's for £22.50, if that helps!
    https://www.tanners-wines.co.uk/pouilly-fume-chateau-de-tracy-2019
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,266

    Available at Tanner's for £22.50, if that helps!
    https://www.tanners-wines.co.uk/pouilly-fume-chateau-de-tracy-2019
    Thanks - I was only teasing tbh
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,348
    Floater said:

    Years ago when Harry's place was up and running they showed excerpts from KIDS tv shows in Gaza - a whole generation indoctrinated to hate and want to kill
    There is a whole chapter in that book on how both sides establish ‘narratives’ about the other.

    You would find equally disturbing items in the educational programme for IDF conscripts. The whole programme is geared to developing a siege mentality - ‘we’re alone against the world, and if we don’t fight like tigers we’ll all be killed.’ It’s no coincidence much of it happens at Yad Vashem.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    https://twitter.com/AuroraIntel/status/1392194930416705539

    Reserves called up and navy deploying offshore

    Netanyahu addressing nation in about 10 mins
  • borisatsunborisatsun Posts: 188

    Thanks - I was only teasing tbh
    I thought you might be! But then noticed that the actually winery's link that I'd posted had sold out too, so thought I best give a useful link to my recommendation :smiley:
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,348
    Floater said:

    https://twitter.com/AuroraIntel/status/1392194930416705539

    Reserves called up and navy deploying offshore

    Netanyahu addressing nation in about 10 mins

    Protective Edge Mark However Many the Fuck it is?

    Perhaps if he hadn’t been trying to steal yet more land in the West Bank to enrich his mates this wouldn’t have flared up in the first place...
  • CursingStoneCursingStone Posts: 421
    Floater said:

    https://twitter.com/AuroraIntel/status/1392194930416705539

    Reserves called up and navy deploying offshore

    Netanyahu addressing nation in about 10 mins

    He needs to flatten Tehran also. Stands up and informs Israel that he has approved the deployment of a preemptive attack on Iran.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,413


    And still do, even after Donald Trump's attempt to copy Oliver Cromwell.

    He invaded Jamaica?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,579
    Floater said:

    https://twitter.com/AuroraIntel/status/1392194930416705539

    Reserves called up and navy deploying offshore

    Netanyahu addressing nation in about 10 mins

    Israel can handle this assault pretty easily. it looks like

    But one day a larger Islamic regime will buy missiles that Israel cannot resist, and will use them, possibly armed with nukes. And America the great Protector will no longer be the global superpower, ready to intervene. It will be China. And China doesn't give a fuck about Jews, China just wants money, power and obeisance

    Israel is playing a very dangerous game, in the long term. Tho I accept that making peace with the Palestinians is fiendishly hard, too many on the "Palestinian" side have no interest in peace, at all
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,139
    stodge said:

    This is where I struggle - as I said yesterday, there are many Englands - the bit of England in which I live is, I sense, very different from where some others on here reside.

    There's an old adage - "people like people like themselves". We gravitate toward people and places and lifestyles and relationships which work for us. All too often, we want to be with people who think like we do, act like we do and are how we are because we recognise and understand that.

    I suppose "my" England isn't anyone else's England but that doesn't matter. No one has a monopoly on the definition of what it is to be English. To try, as some do, to distil it or refine it or reduce it is futile - it defies and should defy such actions.

    Certainly, no political party or movement can claim to be the mouthpiece of the English - it's absurd.

    It is the variety, diversity and difference in which our greater commonality resides - the whole is the sum of the parts, both positive and negative.

    Perhaps that is as near as I can get to defining what it is to be English.
    Yes, of course, but it all lies within the same geography - that's what I mean by land.

    The reason England "works" and still exists as a state is because you and I, Leon, Gallowgate, Philip, David Herdson, Richard Tyndall, TSE, Bunnco, Nigel etc. all identify as having something in common within a defined geography. We have choices as to what we emphasise in that - and some are uncomfortable specifying anything at all - but there need to be sufficient similarities for that to hold true.

    If it did not hold true, England would have already split up into, say, Wessex, Cornwall, Northumbria and Mercia or other successor states. Alternatively, it might have been wholly absorbed upwards into a transcontinental state.

    I see this as axiomatic otherwise you could simply come up with a list of values and say anyone who subscribes to it anywhere in the world would be "English", and I think that fundamentally misconstrues what nationality is; you'd be describing a club or society, not a nationality.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,579

    He needs to flatten Tehran also. Stands up and informs Israel that he has approved the deployment of a preemptive attack on Iran.
    Iran is a mighty regional power. If Israel did something as insane as that Israel would be crushed
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,526
    Does anyone have a clue what has happened to the EU rollout?

    It looks like far more than a weekend dip, and across so many countries.



  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,298

    Indeed.
    It’s also scary. It’s not as if Boris, or this government, is very competent.
    Oh no. Johnson is very competent at what matters to him, which is being popular and doing down the other lot.
    Running the Her Majesty's Government well in the interests of Her Majesty's subjects? Meh. That's more of a "nice to have".
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,139
    stodge said:

    I'm sure it's not and from what small amount of travelling I've done, it's the same almost everywhere.

    I agree completely about regional identities - in some areas very strong, in others much less so. In Switzerland, the German, French and Italian speaking areas are very different from each other as an example,

    @NickPalmer might think differently but I always thought there was a strong Sonderjysk identity and the Fynboer always considered themselves different as did those from Lolland and Falster.
    Yes, identities can be multilayered and complimentary.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    Leon said:

    Iran is a mighty regional power. If Israel did something as insane as that Israel would be crushed
    By who?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,579
    MattW said:

    Does anyone have a clue what has happened to the EU rollout?

    It looks like far more than a weekend dip, and across so many countries.



    MI5
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,413

    He needs to flatten Tehran also. Stands up and informs Israel that he has approved the deployment of a preemptive attack on Iran.
    Iran are no mugs at this stuff, I suspect.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,446
    Leon said:

    Iran is a mighty regional power. If Israel did something as insane as that Israel would be crushed
    Unlikely but it would unleash chaos.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    edited May 2021
    California Recall - Latest Polling Crosstabs

    https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1m66w3d9

    On recalling Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom (registered voters)

    by Party
    > Total Reg Yes 36% No 49% Undecided 15% (change since Jan 2021 Yes 0% No +4% Und -4%)
    > Democrats Yes 8% No 75% Undecided 17%
    > Republicans Yes 85% No 8% Undecided 7%
    > No Party Yes 33% No 45% Undecided 22%

    by Age Group
    > all are net negative on recalling Newsom
    > highest percent Yes are age 50-64 at 38% Yes 51% No 11% undecided
    > highest percent No are age 65+ at 36% Yes 58% No 8% undecided
    > undecideds higher among younger age groups

    by Geographic region
    > North Coast/Sierras highest Yes at 52% Yes No 39% undecided 9%
    > Net in favor of recall: Central Valley, Inland Empire (southeast CA)
    > Net tie on recall: Orange County at 45% Yes 45% No 10% undecided
    > Net against recall: Los Angeles County, San Diego County, Central Coast
    > San Francisco Bay Area highest No at 25% Yes 65% No 15% undecided

    UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Affairs / Los Angeles Times
    On-line survey of 10,210 CA registered voters April 29 - May 5, moe plus/minus 2%

  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,579
    Floater said:

    By who?
    The entire Arab/Muslim world. You think they wouldn't respond if Israel "flattened Tehran" - presumably with nukes - killing 10m people?

    Don't talk nonsense
  • May have been missed my many but Queens speech included HS2 from Crewe to Manc today.

    Many have predicted the failure of HS2 since right back in 2008, 13 years on it continues to progress.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,971
    Leon said:

    Iran is a mighty regional power. If Israel did something as insane as that Israel would be crushed
    Didn't they have to resort to pushing school children over the top in the Iran/Iraq war? What's changed?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,348

    He needs to flatten Tehran also. Stands up and informs Israel that he has approved the deployment of a preemptive attack on Iran.
    You must have started early.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,348
    Leon said:

    The entire Arab/Muslim world. You think they wouldn't respond if Israel "flattened Tehran" - presumably with nukes - killing 10m people?

    Don't talk nonsense
    I reckon the Saudis would make a lot of angry noises in public and wet themselves laughing in private, actually.

    The Russians might be a different matter.
This discussion has been closed.