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The more voters are educated the more likely they are to be negative about Johnson – politicalbettin

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  • eekeek Posts: 29,397
    Charles said:

    Disagree

    Electric vehicles being accelerated >>> Urgent need to provide government incentives to secure manufacturing >>> well paid secure jobs for red wallers >>> located in appropriate seats >>> well paid secure jobs for Tory MPs
    Yep - a new Gigafactory has been announced at Coventry "Airport". And two of the 3 seats there would be Tory were it not for Farage.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461
    Dura_Ace said:

    I can lease a 216i for less than £250/month. If you can get a functional car that doesn't need work and provides long term reliable transport for less than that it's by sheer luck.
    When I lived in Wiltshire, the poorest locals all drove old bangers. Fully "functional" and "long term reliable" weren't options for them.

    MOTs were feared and avoided.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,397
    moonshine said:

    Define soon. I have full confidence that the private sector will achieve it earlier than the Whitehall is operationally ready to implement dynamic road pricing.
    anytime before 2040 - it really is a 99.999/0.0001 problem rather than a 90/10% problem as other IT solutions are.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    Boris Johnson was involved in at least one injunction.

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2013/may/21/boris-johnson-fathered-child-affair
    Ah, thanks.

    Or rather, prima facie, involved in the events that led to the injunction, which was taken out by the lady in question, I see. But it's a curious story, not least why have a photoshoot if one is complaining about lack of privacy?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    If there were a superinjunction then any of his political opponents could use Parliamentary privilege to break the injunction and the media could report that.

    Why has not one of his political opponents done so? Only logical answer is there is no superinjunction.
    Indeed.

    There exists one very good reason, however: mutual deterrence.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,188

    That's a very specific list. Not that I am complaining about the first item on it, of course.
    Well Oxford and Hull complete dumps.

    A few months ago a friend and I were trying to come up with the most left wing city in the UK, we decided on Brighton because they elect a Green MP.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461

    That's a very specific list. Not that I am complaining about the first item on it, of course.
    Ah, another alumni of Fenland Polytechnic?
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 42,961
    edited July 2021
    Roger said:

    Why do people who write glowingly about the Prime Minister feel it necessary to add the rider that they personally don't like him. Is it supposed to add weight to the eulogy?
    It's like wearing a condom, better safe than sorry if/when BJ's trajectory ends in the equivalent of a suppurating mass of STDs.

    See also: I'm no fan of Trump, but..
  • BromBrom Posts: 3,760
    eek said:

    Yep - a new Gigafactory has been announced at Coventry "Airport". And two of the 3 seats there would be Tory were it not for Farage.
    If Zarah Sultana lost her seat it would be cause for national celebration. This would be fantastic news for Coventry.
    Boris is certainly doing more for forgotten corners of the UK than his predecessors, which in contrast to Theresa May shows what can be achieved with a large majority and by getting Brexit done.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    eek said:

    anytime before 2040 - it really is a 99.999/0.0001 problem rather than a 90/10% problem as other IT solutions are.
    It will almost certainly be available earlier than 2040, and absolutely certainly if we limit the discussion to defined road types.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398

    Which came first? Are graduates generally more left-leaning because they're indoctrinated, or are universities full of the more intelligent people who see the complexity of life and don't buy the simplistic arguments of Johnson and his ilk?

    You cite humanities and social sciences as being havens of left-wing thought. I think that is true, but for the reasons above. They encourage you to consider the shades of grey in life. There are few absolutes. Your personal assumptions are challenged. You have to have think.

    Maths, physics, engineering degrees, those based on numbers, probably have a higher degree of right-leaning students. Because they are neat. 2+2 always equals 4. There are always measurable, repeatable, outcomes. They are essentially 'Common sense', if you will.

    I don't thing that's necessarily a bad thing, just an inevitable result of what subjects differing personality types are drawn to study.
    I don't think it is true at all that only educated people can see the 'shades of grey' in life. All political movements are populist to some degree and craft easy narratives which claim to solve complex problems. I personally see Johnson as a politician with a different style, and it one that clearly agitates educated people; but what he is doing is the same thing as all his predecessors from the year dot. To my mind, he isn't in anywhere near the same league of insanity to Trump, or even Corbyn; the latter being a populist who I note was overwhelmingly popular on university campuses.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814

    Well Oxford and Hull complete dumps.

    A few months ago a friend and I were trying to come up with the most left wing city in the UK, we decided on Brighton because they elect a Green MP.
    But students don’t vote
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,103

    AFAIK none of his ex-wives (etc) have written a book, or even given a long interview on 'their time with Boris'. I've always assumed that that was because, in the case of the wives, the divorce settlement included a 'commitment to silence'
    Wives and those who had a serious relationship including children don't want to drag their families through the mud. I doubt money came into it. The fleeting ones feel embarrassed that they had an affair with someone so gross.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    Well Oxford and Hull complete dumps.

    A few months ago a friend and I were trying to come up with the most left wing city in the UK, we decided on Brighton because they elect a Green MP.
    Didn't Glasgow come into the discussion? Tommy Sheridan and George Galloway.
  • It's not a huge sample, but all of the people I know who take (and swear by) homeopathic magic sugar remedies have university degrees.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    Ah, another alumni of Fenland Polytechnic?
    Oh, is that what they call themselves in the singular as well?
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,153
    theProle said:

    V12 Bentley

    W12 FFS. It's two 15 deg V6 banks with inclined together at 72 deg.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,254
    Sweeney74 said:

    The left hate him as he can be portrayed as the worst of right wing excess.

    Boris isn't even all that right-wing by contemporary standards, never mind compared to some Tories of old. There are much sounder complaints to be made about him than trying to paint him as some hard-right nutter.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,103
    Dura_Ace said:

    I can lease a 216i for less than £250/month. If you can get a functional car that doesn't need work and provides long term reliable transport for less than that it's by sheer luck.
    There's an auction for classic cars with viewings over the next three days. The company is called Historics. Do you know anything about them?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,188
    Carnyx said:

    Didn't Glasgow come into the discussion? Tommy Sheridan and George Galloway.
    It did, my friend is half Scottish, he said Glasgow has two things that prevent it from being really lefty. The Orange Order and Sevco fans (Yes, I'm aware there's a strong crossover element between the two.)
  • Carnyx said:

    Oh, is that what they call themselves in the singular as well?
    The Royal nobis
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    It's not a huge sample, but all of the people I know who take (and swear by) homeopathic magic sugar remedies have university degrees.

    In fairness, that is better than poisoning yourself with the likes of laetrile and injecting yourself with bleach when you catch covid. (Which is wht the original homoeopaths scored so well against the average Vixctorian doctor, I suspect, given their prescribing habits.) Maybe it demonstrates their intelligence?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    It did, my friend is half Scottish, he said Glasgow has two things that prevent it from being really lefty. The Orange Order and Sevco fans (Yes, I'm aware there's a strong crossover element between the two.)
    That is an intelligent and well-argued discussion you two were having.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 64,779
    edited July 2021
    Breaking

    PHE - vaccines have prevented 7.2 million infections and 27,000 deaths

    Remarkable
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461
    darkage said:

    I don't think it is true at all that only educated people can see the 'shades of grey' in life. All political movements are populist to some degree and craft easy narratives which claim to solve complex problems. I personally see Johnson as a politician with a different style, and it one that clearly agitates educated people; but what he is doing is the same thing as all his predecessors from the year dot. To my mind, he isn't in anywhere near the same league of insanity to Trump, or even Corbyn; the latter being a populist who I note was overwhelmingly popular on university campuses.
    Populism isn't populism when it is popular with Ordo Equester or above.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    Selebian said:

    I find the Kaufman studies pretty limited - all self report perceptions, where there would be, for example, scope to look at actual progression by political viewpoint (promotions, for example, in my uni at least are assessed on written application at university level by a central committee who don't know you personally, at least at lower grades and certainly don't know your politics). Lack of confidence intervals on graphs, lack of headline data on sampe sizes. Questions about recruitment to studies. The question to postgrad students about whether their political views fit in - well, students - even postgrad - are mostly young and a bit lefty, but that's an age thing more than a university thing - and it's an odd way of putting the question unless you look for a prticular result. A seeming lack of the same question being asked of more senior/older academics. If I was trying to do this and get to the truth rather than the answer I wanted, I would do it differently.

    I could produce a similar study showing how left-leaning academics believe they are discriminated against by society (after all, society keep returning right-leaning governments!). When reading any study like this, it's important to keep in mind that it's very easy to get a study to show what you want by making outwardly reasonable choices about question, sample etc. It's harder to get that through peer review, but not impossible. Producing a not peer reviewed 'report' to show what you want is trivial.

    I don't doubt that academia is probably more left leaning than the general population. Academia skews young, for one thing - there's a pyramid with lots of postgrad students, fewer post-docs, fewer still at senior positions - it gets harder and harder to get funding and all but the most able tend to find they can do better in the private or public sector where being competent is enough. Different careers do attract different kinds of people. We don't wring our hands about the right-wing bias in investment banks (if there is one) and the impact of that on funding for parties, projects based on political bias. Nor the Brexit bias of builders (again, made up, no evidence for that!) and the difficulties residents in Remoania have getting building work done!

    Anecdata - among my colleagues, who are health science/social science, so in theory among one of the more left-leaning, the 2015 split among those who expressed an opinion was pretty even between Cameron and Milliband. I can only think of two staff members (out of 20 or so whose opinions I knew) who expressed any enthusiasm for Corbyn as Labour leader. We're not all reds. In GEs I've voted Labour once only* and I can't say I feel at all discriminated against.

    I don't know of any Johnson-supporting colleagues, but you have to bear in mind we're mostly not idiots :wink:

    * And no, my other votes weren't SWP!
    That's really interesting, thanks for taking the time to reply. I suppose that all studies have bias towards getting the answer they want: certainly this seems to be true of opinion polls!


  • eekeek Posts: 29,397
    moonshine said:

    It will almost certainly be available earlier than 2040, and absolutely certainly if we limit the discussion to defined road types.
    Once you limit it to defined road types you've still got a driver in the lorry so your savings have gone.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,137
    Selebian said:

    I find the Kaufman studies pretty limited - all self report perceptions, where there would be, for example, scope to look at actual progression by political viewpoint (promotions, for example, in my uni at least are assessed on written application at university level by a central committee who don't know you personally, at least at lower grades and certainly don't know your politics). Lack of confidence intervals on graphs, lack of headline data on sampe sizes. Questions about recruitment to studies. The question to postgrad students about whether their political views fit in - well, students - even postgrad - are mostly young and a bit lefty, but that's an age thing more than a university thing - and it's an odd way of putting the question unless you look for a prticular result. A seeming lack of the same question being asked of more senior/older academics. If I was trying to do this and get to the truth rather than the answer I wanted, I would do it differently.

    I could produce a similar study showing how left-leaning academics believe they are discriminated against by society (after all, society keep returning right-leaning governments!). When reading any study like this, it's important to keep in mind that it's very easy to get a study to show what you want by making outwardly reasonable choices about question, sample etc. It's harder to get that through peer review, but not impossible. Producing a not peer reviewed 'report' to show what you want is trivial.

    I don't doubt that academia is probably more left leaning than the general population. Academia skews young, for one thing - there's a pyramid with lots of postgrad students, fewer post-docs, fewer still at senior positions - it gets harder and harder to get funding and all but the most able tend to find they can do better in the private or public sector where being competent is enough. Different careers do attract different kinds of people. We don't wring our hands about the right-wing bias in investment banks (if there is one) and the impact of that on funding for parties, projects based on political bias. Nor the Brexit bias of builders (again, made up, no evidence for that!) and the difficulties residents in Remoania have getting building work done!

    Anecdata - among my colleagues, who are health science/social science, so in theory among one of the more left-leaning, the 2015 split among those who expressed an opinion was pretty even between Cameron and Milliband. I can only think of two staff members (out of 20 or so whose opinions I knew) who expressed any enthusiasm for Corbyn as Labour leader. We're not all reds. In GEs I've voted Labour once only* and I can't say I feel at all discriminated against.

    I don't know of any Johnson-supporting colleagues, but you have to bear in mind we're mostly not idiots :wink:

    * And no, my other votes weren't SWP!
    I should add that Johnson and co upsetting the metropolitan liberal elite (of which I must admit I am objectively one) and instead focusing on others in society is no bad thing. Someone should do it/offer that and Labour seem to have lost sight of that other than for those right at the bottom. There was a large part of society that none of the parties were talking to.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,153
    Roger said:

    There's an auction for classic cars with viewings over the next three days. The company is called Historics. Do you know anything about them?
    Yep, their reputation is no worse than anyone else in the car game.

    There's very rarely value at high end auctions though. Cars go to that sort of auction because there is either no liquidity for that type of car which makes it hard to price or the owner is greedy and hasn't been able to get the price they feel they deserve by any other means.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,639

    "MA Oxon..." please.
    Why not? If you’re offered a free (or nearly free) upgrade take it.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,137

    Well Oxford and Hull complete dumps.

    A few months ago a friend and I were trying to come up with the most left wing city in the UK, we decided on Brighton because they elect a Green MP.
    Hull, the uni, has some good bits. Hull-York Medical School, the environment/geography departments do good stuff (others may too, but those are the ones I know). The new bits of campus are also very nice. I wouldn't choose to live in most of the city, but then neither do the Hull academics I know.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    In other and OT news, this is fun: no wallpaper though.

    https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/jul/15/derbyshire-cave-house-identified-as-ninth-century-home-to-exiled-king

    'The discovery makes it “probably the oldest intact domestic interior in the UK”, said Simons. “We have churches from this kind of date but we haven’t got anywhere where people slept and ate and prayed, all that kind of thing. Here, we’ve got one. It is quite remarkable.”'
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,003
    edited July 2021
    Brom said:

    If Zarah Sultana lost her seat it would be cause for national celebration. This would be fantastic news for Coventry.
    Boris is certainly doing more for forgotten corners of the UK than his predecessors, which in contrast to Theresa May shows what can be achieved with a large majority and by getting Brexit done.
    If the boundary reviews go through, Sultana will be slightly safer as the trade of Lower Stoke for Binley and Willenhall is advantageous to Labour in Coventry.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,641

    I see him as likeable but untrustworthy, and mostly unfit for office because of his inability to take responsibility for his mistakes. But still much better than his main opponent in the 2019 GE.

    I do wonder if we've been lucky that Johnson won in 2019. I mean, Hunt or Stewart may have dealt with Covid better, but I've got no doubt that Corbyn's handling it would have been an absolute disaster.
    Jeremy Corbyn was not known for his aversion to state intervention, spending or the NHS. I expect we'd have done all right.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,298
    Mr. Carnyx, surely if we have churches from that era we have places that people prayed?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,188
    Carnyx said:

    That is an intelligent and well-argued discussion you two were having.
    You'd have liked the discussion, like America we're seeing the big cities heading leftwards and the other places rightwards, and we were discussing if London Independence might become a thing in our lifetimes.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    Mr. Carnyx, surely if we have churches from that era we have places that people prayed?

    He did say "slept and ate and prayed" - but I don't know if the C9 chaps used their cathedrals as shopping malls like the later ones did.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,080
    NI affairs committee hears that truck driver shortage also hitting NI. Sarah Hardy, biz dev of AM Nexday says even with salary hikes of 15% to 20% she cannot get drivers. Hardy: Its "perfect storm of covid and Brexit" people happy to remain on furlough and EU drivers staying away
    https://twitter.com/lisaocarroll/status/1415596383336288260
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    eek said:

    Once you limit it to defined road types you've still got a driver in the lorry so your savings have gone.
    Well no. No you don’t. But I cba to have this convo as your mind is closed to it.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    You'd have liked the discussion, like America we're seeing the big cities heading leftwards and the other places rightwards, and we were discussing if London Independence might become a thing in our lifetimes.
    Not to mention Fen City and Oxford (possibly even joined together with MK, to your horror, if the Bletchley link is completed).
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,871

    Jeremy Corbyn was not known for his aversion to state intervention, spending or the NHS. I expect we'd have done all right.
    Well, he's not keen to say whether he's been vaccinated, and whilst I generally think medical matters should be kept private, this is in the middle of an epidemic. People look up to him, and if he was to say 'yes', it would encourage others.

    I also wonder whether he'd have been as keen to get going on vaccinations from a philosophical point of view: it would mean working and negotiating with the most evil of private moneymaking corps: big pharma.

    Sadly, I think there's a little of his brother about him on this.
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,907
    Scott_xP said:

    BREAK:

    Team GB women’s footballers will take a knee ahead of their games during the Olympic tournament - a unanimous squad decision.

    Also meet the three players who will be sharing the captaincy - Steph Houghton, Kim Little & Sophie Ingle. Decision made by head coach Hege Riise


    https://twitter.com/SarahDawkins23/status/1415582034693656576/photo/1

    Taking the knee, fine, sharing the captaincy, absurd. Why not make the other players captain too.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,641

    Breaking

    PHE - vaccines have prevented 7.2 million infections and 27,000 deaths

    Remarkable

    Has anyone checked the list of 27,000 people whose deaths were allegedly prevented, to make sure they are still alive? :smile:
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    Taz said:

    Taking the knee, fine, sharing the captaincy, absurd. Why not make the other players captain too.
    Do they take it in turns, and how frequently?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461
    Carnyx said:

    He did say "slept and ate and prayed" - but I don't know if the C9 chaps used their cathedrals as shopping malls like the later ones did.
    I thought that churches and catherdrals were used as community centres, right from the earliest available evidence?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,240

    You'd have liked the discussion, like America we're seeing the big cities heading leftwards and the other places rightwards, and we were discussing if London Independence might become a thing in our lifetimes.
    More specifically the big cities are left liberal, rural areas and small towns are conservative and suburbia and the commuter belt are the key swing areas.

    For example Clinton won 59% of the cities vote in 2016 and Biden won 60% of the cities vote in 2020 and Trump won 62% of the rural vote in 2016 and 57% of the rural vote in 2020 but the suburbs went from 50% Trump 45% Clinton in 2016 to 50% Biden and 48% Trump in 2020
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_United_States_presidential_election#Close_states
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_presidential_election#Results
  • BromBrom Posts: 3,760
    Taz said:

    Taking the knee, fine, sharing the captaincy, absurd. Why not make the other players captain too.
    So they're the captains of England, Scotland and Wales. The squad contains 2 Scots,1 Welsh and 19 English. No wonder women's football is a bit of a joke.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461

    Breaking

    PHE - vaccines have prevented 7.2 million infections and 27,000 deaths

    Remarkable

    Expected - this is why vaccination against disease is considered such a big thing, in general.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    I thought that churches and catherdrals were used as community centres, right from the earliest available evidence?
    I bow to your expertise!
  • eekeek Posts: 29,397
    moonshine said:

    Well no. No you don’t. But I cba to have this convo as your mind is closed to it.
    So say you automate motorway driving (logical starting point) - how does the lorry get off the motorway to the factory.

    And for what time are you going to pay the driver.
  • SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,795
    Scott_xP said:

    NI affairs committee hears that truck driver shortage also hitting NI. Sarah Hardy, biz dev of AM Nexday says even with salary hikes of 15% to 20% she cannot get drivers. Hardy: Its "perfect storm of covid and Brexit" people happy to remain on furlough and EU drivers staying away
    https://twitter.com/lisaocarroll/status/1415596383336288260

    Time to cut furlough quicker then. Get people off their sofas and being paid for it,
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    Brom said:

    So they're the captains of England, Scotland and Wales. The squad contains 2 Scots,1 Welsh and 19 English. No wonder women's football is a bit of a joke.
    Are you joking, or is that really the case?

    It's simply the Council of the Isles solution, after all.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,639
    Selebian said:

    Hull, the uni, has some good bits. Hull-York Medical School, the environment/geography departments do good stuff (others may too, but those are the ones I know). The new bits of campus are also very nice. I wouldn't choose to live in most of the city, but then neither do the Hull academics I know.
    I literally owe my very existence to Hull University. My parents met there,
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461
    Carnyx said:

    I bow to your expertise!
    I'm not an expert - just some stuff I read. I'd understood that the concept of churches being reserved only for praying etc was actually a very modern concept.

    Does anyone with actual expertise in subject have a good reference?
  • BromBrom Posts: 3,760
    Carnyx said:

    Are you joking, or is that really the case?

    It's simply the Council of the Isles solution, after all.
    Sadly that's the case. Not exactly the British Lions is it? Wouldn't be surprised if the Welsh captain is a bit of a representative sympathy pick.
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,907

    Time to cut furlough quicker then. Get people off their sofas and being paid for it,
    Yes. There are plenty of jobs out there, those on furlough with no jobs to go back to, in some cases, will take them. I’d be surprised if there were a large amount of lorry drivers though.

    IR35 reform seems to be an issue here too.

    https://www.contractoruk.com/news/0015112ir35_reform_fuelling_100000_hgv_driver_shortage.html?utm_source=NL&utm_medium=News&utm_campaign=IR35
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,261
    DougSeal said:

    Why not? If you’re offered a free (or nearly free) upgrade take it.
    Ugh, it's just a fake title. I have one too but I would never put it on my CV.
  • TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,454
    edited July 2021

    Time to cut furlough quicker then. Get people off their sofas and being paid for it,
    Figures today suggest that the furlough scheme is now the smallest it has been since, effectively, its introduction. (This still amounts to 1.2m people though but steadily declining.)
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461

    Time to cut furlough quicker then. Get people off their sofas and being paid for it,
    Given the life of a long distance lorry driver compared to 80% of the pay for not doing long distance lorry driving.... it doesn't seem much of a choice to me.

    Why are lorry drivers on furlough though? Or is this one of those Daily Mail type stories (aka saloon bar bullshit)?
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,641
    edited July 2021

    Time to cut furlough quicker then. Get people off their sofas and being paid for it,
    Lots of people on furlough are (quite legally) doing second jobs. This might explain reluctance to go back, or otoh why there are suddenly so many new jobs as people leave furlough.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,397
    edited July 2021

    Given the life of a long distance lorry driver compared to 80% of the pay for not doing long distance lorry driving.... it doesn't seem much of a choice to me.

    Why are lorry drivers on furlough though? Or is this one of those Daily Mail type stories (aka saloon bar bullshit)?
    They aren't and never have been furloughed (except for some very niche edge cases).

    The lorry driver issues is a combination of a very competitive industry, tax abuse (IR35) to keep wages sane and a lack of willingness to invest and pay for training.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,295
    DougSeal said:

    I literally owe my very existence to Hull University. My parents met there,
    So I'm doing Whitstable Doug. Lovely little place. Don't know why you ever left.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,397
    edited July 2021
    Taz said:

    Yes. There are plenty of jobs out there, those on furlough with no jobs to go back to, in some cases, will take them. I’d be surprised if there were a large amount of lorry drivers though.

    IR35 reform seems to be an issue here too.

    https://www.contractoruk.com/news/0015112ir35_reform_fuelling_100000_hgv_driver_shortage.html?utm_source=NL&utm_medium=News&utm_campaign=IR35
    IR35 abuse would be a better explanation - I cannot see any way in which a driver could be self employed given that they would be named people on the end client's insurance policy.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    She called it gesture politics. By dismissing it so airily she fanned the flames of racism.

    And to anyone who doesn't get this, you can be non-white and bloody racist. I've seen it all-too-often and there's a particularly nasty, thoroughly unpleasant, kind of self-made Conservative (often Asian) who doesn't give a shit about others who haven't made it.

    Incidentally, the whole caste system is deeply racist.
    ‘Darn those “uppity Asians” outrageous that they should make it. They should know their place and vote Labour’

    That is a disgraceful position to take. Disgusting and despicable.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Interestingly on Heart Radio this week I've heard multiple adverts for drivers wanted. Never heard that on the station before during the ad breaks.

    Almost as if when there's a staff shortage, people can advertise to attract more staff. Nobody had bothered to months ago when certain posters were bemoaning a staff shortage, now firms are starting to bother.

    It's not the states job to do a firm's advertising, recruitment or training for them.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 54,742
    MaxPB said:

    Or we just let nature take its course for people who have refused the vaccine. If some of them die then it's the choice they've made.
    No, I think its right that the government does what it can to incentivise those who have not taken up the vaccine whilst making it clear that the rest of us are no longer going to wait for them to do so and will get on with our lives.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 25,707
    edited July 2021

    Lots of people on furlough are (quite legally) doing second jobs. This might explain reluctance to go back, or otoh why there are suddenly so many new jobs as people leave furlough.
    The numbers are running down encouragingly quickly, though.

    Now about 80-85% down from the peak to about 2 million. Ish.



    Roll on cautious reopening, and we'll find out how the economy has changed.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    OGH correctly and, literally, against all the odds predicted the Lib Dems would win Chesham & Amersham. He was derived on here by the likes of you who were made to look very stupid by him.

    OGH also correctly predicted that Labour would hold Batley & Spen against the odds and against what most other political commentators were saying, even members of the Labour Party.

    So perhaps a little less of your crowing, hmmm?
    Did he actually predict the results?

    I thought he just identified them as value bets
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461
    MattW said:

    The numbers are running down encouragingly quickly, though.

    Now about 80-85% down from the peak to about 2 million. Ish.


    That 2+ million "floor" occurs twice in that graph. It would be interesting to see what trades etc that breaks down into.
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,907

    Interestingly on Heart Radio this week I've heard multiple adverts for drivers wanted. Never heard that on the station before during the ad breaks.

    Almost as if when there's a staff shortage, people can advertise to attract more staff. Nobody had bothered to months ago when certain posters were bemoaning a staff shortage, now firms are starting to bother.

    It's not the states job to do a firm's advertising, recruitment or training for them.

    It’s nice to see firms actually trying to recruit rather than running to the media blaming brexit or other people for their woes.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 25,707
    edited July 2021
    Charles said:

    ‘Darn those “uppity Asians” outrageous that they should make it. They should know their place and vote Labour’

    That is a disgraceful position to take. Disgusting and despicable.
    It is gesture politics. Literally.

    My beef remains with the FA, though.

    This could have been done in a way which was unifying, and gave people who remember what happens when the game is politicised a route to express support without such an unnecessary dust-up; they chose not to do so.

    Fortunately I don't do football games, but I think I would probably stand up and turn my back as a protest.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,298
    Mr. Malmesbury, early Christianity in Britain was more about monasteries than churches, before the parish system got going, but the monasteries were rather more open than the cloistered/closed off approach adopted later.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    I agree with you on this one, just as I agreed with the same posters now outraged at "misogyny and racism" against Patel who rightly said it wasn't there against Abbott.

    Lets be clear. Both are BAME women and shit politicians. Most of the attacks on Abbott were her ludicrous gaffs, not her skin colour or gender, and frankly this cartoon with Patel is the same. They can't have some kind of "you can't touch them" rule because of their ethnicity or gender - that would be absurd.

    Can I remind some of the faux sensitive that Patel was sacked for both carrying out her own private foreign policy and for lying about it. Collusion with a foreign power against the interests of the government whilst a member of it is pretty bad. She shouldn't be Home Secretary
    The imagery is about male hands gagging a woman they disagree with. I don’t think it is about ethnicity.

    The “Hindu bull” cartoon was more about ethnicity (although there is also a gender / “cow” angle as well).

    Cartoonists tend to distort physical features - with Gove his ears, with Boris his blubber etc. But they consistently get it wrong with Priti Patel and it indicates some pretty unpleasant underlying thought patterns
  • JohnLilburneJohnLilburne Posts: 6,483
    Carnyx said:

    Do they take it in turns, and how frequently?
    I suspect the Scots and Welsh captains are effectively vice captains.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,686
    Carnyx said:

    In other and OT news, this is fun: no wallpaper though.

    https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/jul/15/derbyshire-cave-house-identified-as-ninth-century-home-to-exiled-king

    'The discovery makes it “probably the oldest intact domestic interior in the UK”, said Simons. “We have churches from this kind of date but we haven’t got anywhere where people slept and ate and prayed, all that kind of thing. Here, we’ve got one. It is quite remarkable.”'

    What a great article. Thank you for sharing. Fascinating period of history.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,641
    edited July 2021
    Charles said:

    Did he actually predict the results?

    I thought he just identified them as value bets
    If OGH identified the by-election results as value bets, that means he assessed those results as being far more probable than the consensus of market, pundits or politicians. That is enough to make OGH smarter than the average bear. Probably wealthier too.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,188
    Carnyx said:

    Are you joking, or is that really the case?

    It's simply the Council of the Isles solution, after all.
    It's an artefact that the FA and clubs have invested a lot of money in the WSL and women's football in general.

    Sadly the Welsh, Scots, and Irish football clubs do not have the inclination or resources to develop women's football.

    It involves a lot of time and money at the grassroots and youth level, it may happen in the future, I did read a while back that it is something Mrs Sturgeon is looking at doing as part of a wider better health campaign.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Charles said:

    Did he actually predict the results?

    I thought he just identified them as value bets
    Indeed. He also said that Labour were value for Hartlepool too didn't he?

    People remember the value winners much clearer than the value losers. But get enough value winners and you're up even if you have value losers.
  • theProletheProle Posts: 1,290
    Dura_Ace said:

    W12 FFS. It's two 15 deg V6 banks with inclined together at 72 deg.
    Doh... I really should have known that, espcially as they've been indirectly paying my wages for the last year (although nothing to do with the W12 powered cars, I did get a go in one out of it)
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461
    Charles said:

    The imagery is about male hands gagging a woman they disagree with. I don’t think it is about ethnicity.

    The “Hindu bull” cartoon was more about ethnicity (although there is also a gender / “cow” angle as well).

    Cartoonists tend to distort physical features - with Gove his ears, with Boris his blubber etc. But they consistently get it wrong with Priti Patel and it indicates some pretty unpleasant underlying thought patterns
    The Hindu Bull thing seemed straight out of some of the extremist attacks on "The Cow Worshippers" that I have seen.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Ugh, it's just a fake title. I have one too but I would never put it on my CV.
    1. It winds people up into paroxysms of fury
    2. I feel that having a proper one from a proper university retrospectively validates it
    3. It is a sign of high intelligence, because it says that at 17 you were bright enough to choose a university where you get an M for the price of a B.
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,907
    eek said:

    IR35 abuse would be a better explanation - I cannot see any way in which a driver could be self employed given that they would be named people on the end client's insurance policy.
    Don’t get me wrong I fully support reform of the extensive IR35 abuse that has gone on and has for many years. I worked for a while via an umbrella and I was, in every role I undertook, no more than a disguised employee. It was a while ago though. Had the reforms not been botched by new labour and again via Cameron’s govt this would have been put to bed years ago.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,686
    Brom said:

    So they're the captains of England, Scotland and Wales. The squad contains 2 Scots,1 Welsh and 19 English. No wonder women's football is a bit of a joke.
    Well done for sexist comment of the day. I watched the women's world cup and was highly impressed by the professionalism and athleticism. Perhaps you think all women's sport is a bit of a joke.
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,907

    Indeed. He also said that Labour were value for Hartlepool too didn't he?

    People remember the value winners much clearer than the value losers. But get enough value winners and you're up even if you have value losers.
    That’s remarkably similar to Warren Buffets approach to investing.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,188
    IshmaelZ said:

    1. It winds people up into paroxysms of fury
    2. I feel that having a proper one from a proper university retrospectively validates it
    3. It is a sign of high intelligence, because it says that at 17 you were bright enough to choose a university where you get an M for the price of a B.
    I always felt it devalues a genuine M and those who work hard for a M.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,397
    An interesting read on "levelling up" at https://ukandeu.ac.uk/long-read/levelling-up-britains-towns/

    The first thing that hits me is that people want the cuts austerity created in local amenities that were previously supported by local councils (until the money disappeared) fixed
  • MattWMattW Posts: 25,707

    It's an artefact that the FA and clubs have invested a lot of money in the WSL and women's football in general.

    Sadly the Welsh, Scots, and Irish football clubs do not have the inclination or resources to develop women's football.

    It involves a lot of time and money at the grassroots and youth level, it may happen in the future, I did read a while back that it is something Mrs Sturgeon is looking at doing as part of a wider better health campaign.
    I'd say it is institutionalising division.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,137
    edited July 2021
    darkage said:

    That's really interesting, thanks for taking the time to reply. I suppose that all studies have bias towards getting the answer they want: certainly this seems to be true of opinion polls!


    Yep. In any survey-type study looking at whether group X are disadvantaged, you will tend to preferentially get responses from people in group X who feel they have been disadvantaged, because they care and want to tell someone, while people not in group X and people in group X who don't feel disadvantaged have more urgent pressures on their time. Bad for getting to an answer about whether group X are disadvantaged, but very handy if all you want to show is that group X are disadvantaged.

    That's why things like the various ONS studies that use random address picking and then follow up doggedly, in person, to minimise non-response, over-sample non-responders and provide weightings for that are great, but they're very expensive and take a lot of time. In the little work I've done with surveys, e.g. one about climate change attitudes (which obviously suffers from the same potential problems), we've always piggy-backed on one of the ONS surveys that cover much more general topics (you can pay to have questions added, if they agree - they're also very strict about how you ask questions, to avoid bias, which to be honest is also useful, peer review before you do the study).

    Not sure how you'd do a study like this well in academia - I'd love to see a study as it is interesting and an important issue if people on the right are getting forced out. Probably bury it within a larger study on academia covering lots of different issues with university buy-in so they'd push it to staff and you wouldn't get preferental responses from a particular group as the real quesions of interest would not be obvious to an outsider. That, however, would need serious funding.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,639

    I'm not an expert - just some stuff I read. I'd understood that the concept of churches being reserved only for praying etc was actually a very modern concept.

    Does anyone with actual expertise in subject have a good reference?
    Old St Paul’s, before the Fire, was literally used as a shopping arcade. One of the reasons it was in such bad shape even before 1666.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    edited July 2021

    I always felt it devalues a genuine M and those who work hard for a M.
    See point 2. Otherwise I rather agree. And actually I think I'm faking it, I genuinely can't remember whether I ever put the £30 in the post or not. Wouldn't have been like me to do that.


    ETA and doesn't Cambridge do the same thing?
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 23,935
    MattW said:

    It is gesture politics. Literally.

    My beef remains with the FA, though.

    This could have been done in a way which was unifying, and gave people who remember what happens when the game is politicised a route to express support without such an unnecessary dust-up; they chose not to do so.

    Fortunately I don't do football games, but I think I would probably stand up and turn my back as a protest.
    The FA did not do anything, it was the England team who chose to do it. If you really want a "beef" with people expressing an opinion you don't like, it should be with the players.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,639

    Indeed. He also said that Labour were value for Hartlepool too didn't he?

    People remember the value winners much clearer than the value losers. But get enough value winners and you're up even if you have value losers.
    There’s a surprising amount of confusion even on this site (I’m thinking esp of a poster whose name begins with H and ends with D) between finding value bets and picking a winner.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 25,707
    IshmaelZ said:

    1. It winds people up into paroxysms of fury
    2. I feel that having a proper one from a proper university retrospectively validates it
    3. It is a sign of high intelligence, because it says that at 17 you were bright enough to choose a university where you get an M for the price of a B.
    Drives me to a modestly higher blood pressure.

    The alleged best universities in the world handing out fake mail-order degrees. Good sign of self-confidence :smile:

    Fortunately I'm not employer - that would perhaps be one of the early sifting criteria.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021
    eek said:

    Once you limit it to defined road types you've still got a driver in the lorry so your savings have gone.
    Yup. As you suggest, it’s not a 90/10 problem, it’s a 99.999/0.0001 problem.

    The only way SD vehicles will be deployed, is if they build another Milton Keynes around them, with separate and dedicated roads.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,240
    DougSeal said:

    There’s a surprising amount of confusion even on this site (I’m thinking esp of a poster whose name begins with H and ends with D) between finding value bets and picking a winner.
    I rarely bet, I come here for the political discussion and to give a conservative viewpoint, not so much for the betting
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,188
    MattW said:

    I'd say it is institutionalising division.
    Nah.

    The Premier League is the richest league in the world, the FA is one better run FAs in the world.

    In the PL in the last decade only one side have successfully defended their title.

    In Scotland you have talk of 10 in a row and the last side other than Rangers or Celtic to win Scotland's top flight was Aberdeen, 36 years ago.

    It is why so many of us opposed a closed shop European Super League.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    MattW said:

    Drives me to a modestly higher blood pressure.

    The alleged best universities in the world handing out fake mail-order degrees. Good sign of self-confidence :smile:

    Fortunately I'm not employer - that would perhaps be one of the early sifting criteria.
    I would never, ever, ever put it on a cv.
This discussion has been closed.