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New poll for the Daily Mail has Rishi beating Boris as “Best PM” – politicalbetting.com

SystemSystem Posts: 11,002
edited August 2021 in General
imageNew poll for the Daily Mail has Rishi beating Boris as “Best PM” – politicalbetting.com

The graphic above is from today’s Daily Mail and has numbers that will seriously worry Downing Street. For as can been seen it suggests that those polled want Rishi Sunak to replace Johnson as PM and for the change to take place if not now then within a year.

Read the full story here

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Comments

  • MikeSmithsonMikeSmithson Posts: 7,382
    Test
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 23,780
    edited August 2021
    Facebook has removed hundreds of accounts which it says were involved in anti-vax disinformation campaigns operated from Russia.
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-58167339
    (There's a podcast linked from the bottom btw.)

    We are lucky British elections and referendums are immune!

    Oh, and that Russian outfit running the anti-vax campaign? It's registered in Britain.
    https://about.fb.com/news/2021/08/july-2021-coordinated-inauthentic-behavior-report/
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited August 2021
    "That the paper should commission such a survey and highlight the outcome in the manner it has indicates a desire that Johnson should go and this looks set to impact on future coverage. "

    You say that like it is a a revelation. Its not new or a massive secret that the editor of the Daily Mail despises Boris and Brexit. They aren't the Daily Boris-graph. People seem to fail to grasp this. The only thing that restrains this is they have to be careful not lose the readership.

    But their COVID coverage has been incredibly critical of the government's handling, I would say up there with the most hostile, government too slow, government too fast, not spending enough, spending too much....sometimes all these articles in the same day.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    - “I’ve just had a small bet at 8/1 on an exit this year.”

    Best price in that market now is 15/2 (PP). Alternatively, there is this market:

    Next G20 leader to leave - Smarkets
    - Which of the listed G20 leaders will be the next to leave their position?

    Yoshihide Suga, Japan 10/11
    Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil 10/3
    Emmanuel Macron, France 36/5
    Boris Johnson, England 38/5
    Joe Biden, U.S. 39/5
    Justin Trudeau, Canada 42/5
    Cyril Ramaphosa, S Africa 56/5
    Vladimir Putin, Russia 56/5
    Xi Jinping, China 68/5
    Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Turkey 68/5

    (“In the event of the death of any of the listed contracts before the completion of this market, the market will be void.”)
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited August 2021
    Dr Richard Sargeant, an academic and former cricketer, said in June before the review concluded: “I’d ask how a black person is meant to feel when they go to Lord’s, the so-called home of cricket, and there is a stand named after a man whose family wealth was built on slavery?”

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/08/10/not-lords-keep-stand-named-england-captain-family-ties-slavery/

    What a dickhead statement....if that's your standard, pretty much every bodies surname could be considered taboo, as I am sure somebody somewhere at some point called that did something really bad. And of course lots of people whose family wealth was built on things now considered bad, famously used that advantage for good, should we also cancel them because their forefathers did evil stuff?

    Thankfully Holding is more sensible chap.

    “I would not be crucifying family members for what happened 100 years ago. That aspect I don’t care about. The Warner Stand is named after him, but he was not someone actively involved in slavery. I have no problem with that.”
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,655
    Call for urgent A-levels overhaul as grades soar
    70% of private school entries A or higher as Williamson at risk after series of missteps

    The credibility of the A-level system risks being undermined by soaring grade inflation, politicians and education experts warned after yesterday’s unprecedented results.



  • Dr Richard Sargeant, an academic and former cricketer, said in June before the review concluded: “I’d ask how a black person is meant to feel when they go to Lord’s, the so-called home of cricket, and there is a stand named after a man whose family wealth was built on slavery?”

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/08/10/not-lords-keep-stand-named-england-captain-family-ties-slavery/

    What a dickhead statement....if that's your standard, pretty much every bodies surname could be considered taboo, as I am sure somebody somewhere at some point called that did something really bad. And of course lots of people whose family wealth was built on things now considered bad, used that advantage for good, should we also cancel them because their forefathers did evil stuff?

    Thankfully Holding is more sensible chap.

    “I would not be crucifying family members for what happened 100 years ago. That aspect I don’t care about. The Warner Stand is named after him, but he was not someone actively involved in slavery. I have no problem with that.”

    Speaking of Michael Holding, his new book on racism and sport has been well-reviewed by the Racing Post.
    Michael Holding's masterpiece might be the most important sports book you read
    https://www.racingpost.com/news/michael-holdings-masterpiece-might-be-the-most-important-sports-book-you-read/504206
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 23,780
    edited August 2021
    Scott_xP said:

    Call for urgent A-levels overhaul as grades soar
    70% of private school entries A or higher as Williamson at risk after series of missteps

    The credibility of the A-level system risks being undermined by soaring grade inflation, politicians and education experts warned after yesterday’s unprecedented results.


    [cartoon removed]

    It is all right.

    The government has a cunning plan to replace grade letters A to E with numbers.
    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/08/10/a-level-grades-could-scrapped-end-top-marks-free-for-all/ (£££)
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    edited August 2021
    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then?

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

  • ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then?

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    One thing is for certain Airmiles Andy won't be sweating.....
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 23,780
    edited August 2021

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.

    ETA the Mail doubts Andrew has immunity anyway, not being the Queen.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,654

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.
    The girl was below the age of consent in her home state, but, unless I'm mistaken above it in UK. It doesn't make what appears to be trafficking any less unpleasant, of course. Or, as I understand it, illegal, since the (any) sex surely can't be described as consensual.

    And good morning everyone. Brighter looking today, weatherise, although it's only 3 deg, according to my app.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then?

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    One thing is for certain Airmiles Andy won't be sweating.....
    Him and Fergie, who I’m amazed to learn actually introduced him to Epstein, turned up at Balmoral yesterday. Fergie didn’t waste any time! The Duke of Edinburgh banned her from Balmoral 25 years ago, but the second he’s six feet under she swans back in the joint. Absolutely no shame.

    Fergie’s social media outing last week was gut-wrenching. I urge anyone who missed it to catch up. You will not believe your eyes.

    One feels sorry for Her Majesty who has to share a breakfast table this morning with that pair. If I was her I’d kick them out the door and release the hounds.

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/15834016/prince-andrew-bombshell-lawsuit-rape-first-degree/


  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 54,971
    Either this is a great time to lay Rishi, or I should really stop laying Rishi.
  • ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.
    The girl was below the age of consent in her home state, but, unless I'm mistaken above it in UK. It doesn't make what appears to be trafficking any less unpleasant, of course. Or, as I understand it, illegal, since the (any) sex surely can't be described as consensual.

    And good morning everyone. Brighter looking today, weatherise, although it's only 3 deg, according to my app.
    Of course.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,654

    Either this is a great time to lay Rishi, or I should really stop laying Rishi.

    Are the skids finally under Williamson? Or will he creep away from trouble again?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 66,496

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.

    ETA the Mail doubts Andrew has immunity anyway, not being the Queen.
    A+ for whataboutery and squirrel spotting. Impressive even by PB standards.

    The place to deny allegations of criminal “incidents” against a teenager is in a court of law, not in the media.

    Rape, sex trafficking, sexual assault and sex abuse are illegal. If the person is 7, 17, 27 or 87, it is illegal. These are very serious criminal acts.
    If it also transpires that the victim was underage in the jurisdiction where the crime occurred, that will increase the sentence.

    Incidentally, the man in a powerful position in Scotland actually faced the allegations in a court of law, and was cleared on all counts:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-52004285
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,654
    edited August 2021
    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    With what.or how, should they be replaced? The cohort now approaching 16 and about to do GCSE seem, if my family is any guide, to be in as bad a position as those who have just completed A levels. Then there ae those about to enter what I still call the Upper VIth; half way though a course which they know could well be life defining and their elders and 'betters' are threatening to shake the system up yet again.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,216

    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    With what.or how, should they be replaced? The cohort now approaching 16 and about to do GCSE seem, if my family is any guide, to be in as bad a position as those who have just completed A levels. Then there ae those about to enter what I still call the Upper VIth; half way though a course which they know could well be life defining and their elders and 'betters' are threatening to shake the system up yet again.
    What’s wrong with awarding A Level grades on a forced ranking basis but with a 100 point rather than 6 letter scale?
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    Why is the Daily Mail describing it as “the Epstein scandal” and not “the Windsor scandal”. It’s a Windsor who’s being dragged to court screaming and shouting.

    And why is the Daily Mail focussing on Andrew and Fergie losing their grace and favour (ie taxpayer-funded) mansion in Windsor? I’ll tell you why: this is the establishment setting up their own idea of what a reasonable “punishment” is for a royal deviant: getting his vast mansion taken away so that he can live in another slightly less vast mansion. They really do despise the public. Take their cash and then spit in their faces.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 66,496

    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    With what.or how, should they be replaced? The cohort now approaching 16 and about to do GCSE seem, if my family is any guide, to be in as bad a position as those who have just completed A levels. Then there ae those about to enter what I still call the Upper VIth; half way though a course which they know could well be life defining and their elders and 'betters' are threatening to shake the system up yet again.
    You’re rather presupposing in that post that having nothing would be worse than what we have now.

    Most of the actually important functions of the three education admin bodies could be moved elsewhere and done better - the DfE’s functions to the Treasury or the DCLG, OFSTED’s to the HSE and OFQUAL’s to either the universities (who used to hold it) or to the major professional bodies.

    The last is probably the way we’re heading anyway given unis and professional associations are looking at having their own entrance exams.
  • ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.

    ETA the Mail doubts Andrew has immunity anyway, not being the Queen.
    A+ for whataboutery and squirrel spotting. Impressive even by PB standards.

    The place to deny allegations of criminal “incidents” against a teenager is in a court of law, not in the media.

    Rape, sex trafficking, sexual assault and sex abuse are illegal. If the person is 7, 17, 27 or 87, it is illegal. These are very serious criminal acts.
    If it also transpires that the victim was underage in the jurisdiction where the crime occurred, that will increase the sentence.

    Incidentally, the man in a powerful position in Scotland actually faced the allegations in a court of law, and was cleared on all counts:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-52004285
    Agreed. The alleged crimes are terrible. It was your insinuation about specifically English courts.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,216

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then?

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    One thing is for certain Airmiles Andy won't be sweating.....
    Him and Fergie, who I’m amazed to learn actually introduced him to Epstein, turned up at Balmoral yesterday. Fergie didn’t waste any time! The Duke of Edinburgh banned her from Balmoral 25 years ago, but the second he’s six feet under she swans back in the joint. Absolutely no shame.

    Fergie’s social media outing last week was gut-wrenching. I urge anyone who missed it to catch up. You will not believe your eyes.

    One feels sorry for Her Majesty who has to share a breakfast table this morning with that pair. If I was her I’d kick them out the door and release the hounds.

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/15834016/prince-andrew-bombshell-lawsuit-rape-first-degree/


    Awful arrogant woman. Fergie I mean. I’m about fed up with the Royals. The only question mark is what to replace the head of state with.

    How about an Archbishop as head of the church, a lords clerk to rubber stamp bills, and an honorary position to entertain lesser dignitaries that the PM is too busy to meet. Johanna Lumley perhaps. Or Jo Rowling, Michael Palin. Russell Brand for the ones you want to get given an earful.

    And if the US President visits, he can jolly well do what we have to do and put up with listening to our elected leader.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,654
    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    With what.or how, should they be replaced? The cohort now approaching 16 and about to do GCSE seem, if my family is any guide, to be in as bad a position as those who have just completed A levels. Then there ae those about to enter what I still call the Upper VIth; half way though a course which they know could well be life defining and their elders and 'betters' are threatening to shake the system up yet again.
    You’re rather presupposing in that post that having nothing would be worse than what we have now.

    Most of the actually important functions of the three education admin bodies could be moved elsewhere and done better - the DfE’s functions to the Treasury or the DCLG, OFSTED’s to the HSE and OFQUAL’s to either the universities (who used to hold it) or to the major professional bodies.

    The last is probably the way we’re heading anyway given unis and professional associations are looking at having their own entrance exams.
    It's at least arguable that a massive rethink, and confusion could be worse than what we have now. I'm thinking of the young people in the system; they know we may well haven't finished with Covid yet, so they fear that they could have their school time, their study time interrupted and disorganised yet again. And on top of that there are threats that the exam system will be substantially rejigged.
    Whatever happens ought to happen in a planned and thoughtful way. Not hastily and piecemeal.
  • ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    With what.or how, should they be replaced? The cohort now approaching 16 and about to do GCSE seem, if my family is any guide, to be in as bad a position as those who have just completed A levels. Then there ae those about to enter what I still call the Upper VIth; half way though a course which they know could well be life defining and their elders and 'betters' are threatening to shake the system up yet again.
    You’re rather presupposing in that post that having nothing would be worse than what we have now.

    Most of the actually important functions of the three education admin bodies could be moved elsewhere and done better - the DfE’s functions to the Treasury or the DCLG, OFSTED’s to the HSE and OFQUAL’s to either the universities (who used to hold it) or to the major professional bodies.

    The last is probably the way we’re heading anyway given unis and professional associations are looking at having their own entrance exams.
    It's at least arguable that a massive rethink, and confusion could be worse than what we have now. I'm thinking of the young people in the system; they know we may well haven't finished with Covid yet, so they fear that they could have their school time, their study time interrupted and disorganised yet again. And on top of that there are threats that the exam system will be substantially rejigged.
    Whatever happens ought to happen in a planned and thoughtful way. Not hastily and piecemeal.
    One fundamental question is whether we still need GCSEs now that, for all practical purposes, the school-leaving age has been raised to 18. Scrap GCSEs and save a bunch of money and teenage angst.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    ‘Prince Andrew Accuser 'Feared Death' If She Defied Him and Epstein: Court Filing’

    Prince Andrew's accuser feared for her life if she did not have sex with him on the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's orders…

    … accused the royal of "sexual assault and battery" when she was 17 years old in a court filing alleging abuse in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    … "During each of the aforementioned incidents, [Giuffre] was compelled by express or implied threats by Epstein, Maxwell, and/or Prince Andrew to engage in sexual acts with Prince Andrew, and feared death or physical injury to herself or another and other repercussions for disobeying Epstein, Maxwell, and Prince Andrew due to their powerful connections, wealth, and authority."

    She had previously complained to the Metropolitan Police about Prince Andrew's conduct but Britain's biggest police force had dropped the investigation.

    …"In this country no person, whether President or Prince, is above the law, and no person, no matter how powerless or vulnerable, can be deprived of the law's protection.”

    https://www.newsweek.com/prince-andrew-ghislaine-maxwell-feared-death-defied-epstein-lawsuit-new-york-1617735?amp=1

    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.
  • TazTaz Posts: 10,533
    ‘Fix Wobbly Shelf’ !
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,654

    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    With what.or how, should they be replaced? The cohort now approaching 16 and about to do GCSE seem, if my family is any guide, to be in as bad a position as those who have just completed A levels. Then there ae those about to enter what I still call the Upper VIth; half way though a course which they know could well be life defining and their elders and 'betters' are threatening to shake the system up yet again.
    You’re rather presupposing in that post that having nothing would be worse than what we have now.

    Most of the actually important functions of the three education admin bodies could be moved elsewhere and done better - the DfE’s functions to the Treasury or the DCLG, OFSTED’s to the HSE and OFQUAL’s to either the universities (who used to hold it) or to the major professional bodies.

    The last is probably the way we’re heading anyway given unis and professional associations are looking at having their own entrance exams.
    It's at least arguable that a massive rethink, and confusion could be worse than what we have now. I'm thinking of the young people in the system; they know we may well haven't finished with Covid yet, so they fear that they could have their school time, their study time interrupted and disorganised yet again. And on top of that there are threats that the exam system will be substantially rejigged.
    Whatever happens ought to happen in a planned and thoughtful way. Not hastily and piecemeal.
    One fundamental question is whether we still need GCSEs now that, for all practical purposes, the school-leaving age has been raised to 18. Scrap GCSEs and save a bunch of money and teenage angst.
    Not sure; it's a sorting-out opportunity, but at least arguable.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 58,932



    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    I'm not sure you are in a position to make that assertion. Unless you've seen the evidence they reviewed when they took that decision?
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,216

    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    With what.or how, should they be replaced? The cohort now approaching 16 and about to do GCSE seem, if my family is any guide, to be in as bad a position as those who have just completed A levels. Then there ae those about to enter what I still call the Upper VIth; half way though a course which they know could well be life defining and their elders and 'betters' are threatening to shake the system up yet again.
    You’re rather presupposing in that post that having nothing would be worse than what we have now.

    Most of the actually important functions of the three education admin bodies could be moved elsewhere and done better - the DfE’s functions to the Treasury or the DCLG, OFSTED’s to the HSE and OFQUAL’s to either the universities (who used to hold it) or to the major professional bodies.

    The last is probably the way we’re heading anyway given unis and professional associations are looking at having their own entrance exams.
    It's at least arguable that a massive rethink, and confusion could be worse than what we have now. I'm thinking of the young people in the system; they know we may well haven't finished with Covid yet, so they fear that they could have their school time, their study time interrupted and disorganised yet again. And on top of that there are threats that the exam system will be substantially rejigged.
    Whatever happens ought to happen in a planned and thoughtful way. Not hastily and piecemeal.
    One fundamental question is whether we still need GCSEs now that, for all practical purposes, the school-leaving age has been raised to 18. Scrap GCSEs and save a bunch of money and teenage angst.
    Not sure; it's a sorting-out opportunity, but at least arguable.
    Part of doing well in A Levels is being well practiced at taking exams. Having GCSEs as a dry run is no bad thing.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 66,496

    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    With what.or how, should they be replaced? The cohort now approaching 16 and about to do GCSE seem, if my family is any guide, to be in as bad a position as those who have just completed A levels. Then there ae those about to enter what I still call the Upper VIth; half way though a course which they know could well be life defining and their elders and 'betters' are threatening to shake the system up yet again.
    You’re rather presupposing in that post that having nothing would be worse than what we have now.

    Most of the actually important functions of the three education admin bodies could be moved elsewhere and done better - the DfE’s functions to the Treasury or the DCLG, OFSTED’s to the HSE and OFQUAL’s to either the universities (who used to hold it) or to the major professional bodies.

    The last is probably the way we’re heading anyway given unis and professional associations are looking at having their own entrance exams.
    It's at least arguable that a massive rethink, and confusion could be worse than what we have now. I'm thinking of the young people in the system; they know we may well haven't finished with Covid yet, so they fear that they could have their school time, their study time interrupted and disorganised yet again. And on top of that there are threats that the exam system will be substantially rejigged.
    Whatever happens ought to happen in a planned and thoughtful way. Not hastily and piecemeal.
    Given that the nature of the top administration is to make hasty, piecemeal decisions to (a) respond to criticism and (b) justify their ridiculous salaries, that seems an even better argument for getting rid of it.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,004

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.
    The girl was below the age of consent in her home state, but, unless I'm mistaken above it in UK. It doesn't make what appears to be trafficking any less unpleasant, of course. Or, as I understand it, illegal, since the (any) sex surely can't be described as consensual.

    And good morning everyone. Brighter looking today, weatherise, although it's only 3 deg, according to my app.
    15.5C here; you must live up a mountain to be down at 3C this morning.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 23,780
    edited August 2021

    ‘Prince Andrew Accuser 'Feared Death' If She Defied Him and Epstein: Court Filing’

    Prince Andrew's accuser feared for her life if she did not have sex with him on the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's orders…

    … accused the royal of "sexual assault and battery" when she was 17 years old in a court filing alleging abuse in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    … "During each of the aforementioned incidents, [Giuffre] was compelled by express or implied threats by Epstein, Maxwell, and/or Prince Andrew to engage in sexual acts with Prince Andrew, and feared death or physical injury to herself or another and other repercussions for disobeying Epstein, Maxwell, and Prince Andrew due to their powerful connections, wealth, and authority."

    She had previously complained to the Metropolitan Police about Prince Andrew's conduct but Britain's biggest police force had dropped the investigation.

    …"In this country no person, whether President or Prince, is above the law, and no person, no matter how powerless or vulnerable, can be deprived of the law's protection.”

    https://www.newsweek.com/prince-andrew-ghislaine-maxwell-feared-death-defied-epstein-lawsuit-new-york-1617735?amp=1

    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    According to Virginia Giuffre herself, the FBI had also dropped the case, or been forced to drop the case.
    https://twitter.com/VRSVirginia/status/1199113816077824001

    It's a mess but not a particularly English one.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 23,780
    edited August 2021
    deleted
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    moonshine said:

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then?

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    One thing is for certain Airmiles Andy won't be sweating.....
    Him and Fergie, who I’m amazed to learn actually introduced him to Epstein, turned up at Balmoral yesterday. Fergie didn’t waste any time! The Duke of Edinburgh banned her from Balmoral 25 years ago, but the second he’s six feet under she swans back in the joint. Absolutely no shame.

    Fergie’s social media outing last week was gut-wrenching. I urge anyone who missed it to catch up. You will not believe your eyes.

    One feels sorry for Her Majesty who has to share a breakfast table this morning with that pair. If I was her I’d kick them out the door and release the hounds.

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/15834016/prince-andrew-bombshell-lawsuit-rape-first-degree/
    Awful arrogant woman. Fergie I mean. I’m about fed up with the Royals. The only question mark is what to replace the head of state with.

    How about an Archbishop as head of the church, a lords clerk to rubber stamp bills, and an honorary position to entertain lesser dignitaries that the PM is too busy to meet. Johanna Lumley perhaps. Or Jo Rowling, Michael Palin. Russell Brand for the ones you want to get given an earful.

    And if the US President visits, he can jolly well do what we have to do and put up with listening to our elected leader.
    Tim Brooke-Taylor would have done a great job, in his Union Jack waistcoat. Cheery, friendly, light-hearted, twinkle in the eye, and a slight air of vulnerability. But the poor bloke got Covid early on. I sense that the BBC were largely to blame for unreasonably exposing him, and many other elderly people (audience and performers), to the then-known dangers of the virus.

    But Bill Oddie or Graeme Garden would do. Even a giant white kitten would suffice.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 54,971

    Why is the Daily Mail describing it as “the Epstein scandal” and not “the Windsor scandal”. It’s a Windsor who’s being dragged to court screaming and shouting.

    And why is the Daily Mail focussing on Andrew and Fergie losing their grace and favour (ie taxpayer-funded) mansion in Windsor? I’ll tell you why: this is the establishment setting up their own idea of what a reasonable “punishment” is for a royal deviant: getting his vast mansion taken away so that he can live in another slightly less vast mansion. They really do despise the public. Take their cash and then spit in their faces.

    Nurse!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 66,496
    IanB2 said:

    ‘Prince Andrew Accuser 'Feared Death' If She Defied Him and Epstein: Court Filing’

    Prince Andrew's accuser feared for her life if she did not have sex with him on the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's orders…

    … accused the royal of "sexual assault and battery" when she was 17 years old in a court filing alleging abuse in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    … "During each of the aforementioned incidents, [Giuffre] was compelled by express or implied threats by Epstein, Maxwell, and/or Prince Andrew to engage in sexual acts with Prince Andrew, and feared death or physical injury to herself or another and other repercussions for disobeying Epstein, Maxwell, and Prince Andrew due to their powerful connections, wealth, and authority."

    She had previously complained to the Metropolitan Police about Prince Andrew's conduct but Britain's biggest police force had dropped the investigation.

    …"In this country no person, whether President or Prince, is above the law, and no person, no matter how powerless or vulnerable, can be deprived of the law's protection.”

    https://www.newsweek.com/prince-andrew-ghislaine-maxwell-feared-death-defied-epstein-lawsuit-new-york-1617735?amp=1

    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    Returning drivers who have killed people abroad don’t seem particularly troubled by the law.
    Donald Trump’s accountants and Rudy Giuliani also seem to have been behind the door when the memo was read out.

    Possibly along with Epstein...
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,654
    IanB2 said:

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.
    The girl was below the age of consent in her home state, but, unless I'm mistaken above it in UK. It doesn't make what appears to be trafficking any less unpleasant, of course. Or, as I understand it, illegal, since the (any) sex surely can't be described as consensual.

    And good morning everyone. Brighter looking today, weatherise, although it's only 3 deg, according to my app.
    15.5C here; you must live up a mountain to be down at 3C this morning.
    Bad proof-reading! should have been 13! And nearly up to 14 now. Slightly concerning clouds, but only slightly!
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,004

    IanB2 said:

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.
    The girl was below the age of consent in her home state, but, unless I'm mistaken above it in UK. It doesn't make what appears to be trafficking any less unpleasant, of course. Or, as I understand it, illegal, since the (any) sex surely can't be described as consensual.

    And good morning everyone. Brighter looking today, weatherise, although it's only 3 deg, according to my app.
    15.5C here; you must live up a mountain to be down at 3C this morning.
    Bad proof-reading! should have been 13! And nearly up to 14 now. Slightly concerning clouds, but only slightly!
    If you’d actually stepped outside you might have noticed the difference!
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,641

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then?

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    He would never see the inside of a court in this country.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,216

    moonshine said:

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then?

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    One thing is for certain Airmiles Andy won't be sweating.....
    Him and Fergie, who I’m amazed to learn actually introduced him to Epstein, turned up at Balmoral yesterday. Fergie didn’t waste any time! The Duke of Edinburgh banned her from Balmoral 25 years ago, but the second he’s six feet under she swans back in the joint. Absolutely no shame.

    Fergie’s social media outing last week was gut-wrenching. I urge anyone who missed it to catch up. You will not believe your eyes.

    One feels sorry for Her Majesty who has to share a breakfast table this morning with that pair. If I was her I’d kick them out the door and release the hounds.

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/15834016/prince-andrew-bombshell-lawsuit-rape-first-degree/
    Awful arrogant woman. Fergie I mean. I’m about fed up with the Royals. The only question mark is what to replace the head of state with.

    How about an Archbishop as head of the church, a lords clerk to rubber stamp bills, and an honorary position to entertain lesser dignitaries that the PM is too busy to meet. Johanna Lumley perhaps. Or Jo Rowling, Michael Palin. Russell Brand for the ones you want to get given an earful.

    And if the US President visits, he can jolly well do what we have to do and put up with listening to our elected leader.
    Tim Brooke-Taylor would have done a great job, in his Union Jack waistcoat. Cheery, friendly, light-hearted, twinkle in the eye, and a slight air of vulnerability. But the poor bloke got Covid early on. I sense that the BBC were largely to blame for unreasonably exposing him, and many other elderly people (audience and performers), to the then-known dangers of the virus.

    But Bill Oddie or Graeme Garden would do. Even a giant white kitten would suffice.
    The tricky bit would be finding someone to agree to dine with violent African dictators. Tyson Fury perhaps. You could have a new junior minister role to arrange it all, “Minister for Lunching”. Or just appoint a Domestic Ambassador. Job done. I would vote for that. President vs Monarchy I would choose Monarch still. Can’t run the risk of someone like Blair squeezing his way back in.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,641

    ‘Prince Andrew Accuser 'Feared Death' If She Defied Him and Epstein: Court Filing’

    Prince Andrew's accuser feared for her life if she did not have sex with him on the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's orders…

    … accused the royal of "sexual assault and battery" when she was 17 years old in a court filing alleging abuse in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    … "During each of the aforementioned incidents, [Giuffre] was compelled by express or implied threats by Epstein, Maxwell, and/or Prince Andrew to engage in sexual acts with Prince Andrew, and feared death or physical injury to herself or another and other repercussions for disobeying Epstein, Maxwell, and Prince Andrew due to their powerful connections, wealth, and authority."

    She had previously complained to the Metropolitan Police about Prince Andrew's conduct but Britain's biggest police force had dropped the investigation.

    …"In this country no person, whether President or Prince, is above the law, and no person, no matter how powerless or vulnerable, can be deprived of the law's protection.”

    https://www.newsweek.com/prince-andrew-ghislaine-maxwell-feared-death-defied-epstein-lawsuit-new-york-1617735?amp=1

    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    According to Virginia Giuffre herself, the FBI had also dropped the case, or been forced to drop the case.
    https://twitter.com/VRSVirginia/status/1199113816077824001

    It's a mess but not a particularly English one.
    What guff as well , in US all you need is lots of cash and you are well above the law
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,641
    RobD said:



    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    I'm not sure you are in a position to make that assertion. Unless you've seen the evidence they reviewed when they took that decision?
    The Met are a joke, Keystone Cops could do a better job.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.

    ETA the Mail doubts Andrew has immunity anyway, not being the Queen.
    A+ for whataboutery and squirrel spotting. Impressive even by PB standards.

    The place to deny allegations of criminal “incidents” against a teenager is in a court of law, not in the media.

    Rape, sex trafficking, sexual assault and sex abuse are illegal. If the person is 7, 17, 27 or 87, it is illegal. These are very serious criminal acts.
    If it also transpires that the victim was underage in the jurisdiction where the crime occurred, that will increase the sentence.

    Incidentally, the man in a powerful position in Scotland actually faced the allegations in a court of law, and was cleared on all counts:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-52004285
    Agreed. The alleged crimes are terrible. It was your insinuation about specifically English courts.
    What do you mean “insinuation”?

    One of the alleged crimes took place in London. If her case had ever got to court it would have been tried under English law, in an English court, led by a member of the English judiciary. The N Ireland and Scottish legal systems lack jurisdiction to try a criminal case alleged to have taken place in England.

    Failures in this case lie fairly and squarely with England’s law enforcement and legal system. Don’t blame the rest of us.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,641

    Either this is a great time to lay Rishi, or I should really stop laying Rishi.

    That sounds gruesome
  • RobDRobD Posts: 58,932
    malcolmg said:

    RobD said:



    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    I'm not sure you are in a position to make that assertion. Unless you've seen the evidence they reviewed when they took that decision?
    The Met are a joke, Keystone Cops could do a better job.
    My statement is correct, even the FBI in the US (where no person is above the law) chucked it out.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,654
    IanB2 said:

    IanB2 said:

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.
    The girl was below the age of consent in her home state, but, unless I'm mistaken above it in UK. It doesn't make what appears to be trafficking any less unpleasant, of course. Or, as I understand it, illegal, since the (any) sex surely can't be described as consensual.

    And good morning everyone. Brighter looking today, weatherise, although it's only 3 deg, according to my app.
    15.5C here; you must live up a mountain to be down at 3C this morning.
    Bad proof-reading! should have been 13! And nearly up to 14 now. Slightly concerning clouds, but only slightly!
    If you’d actually stepped outside you might have noticed the difference!
    I might well have, but I don't usually do that until after 8am, when my wife awakens.

    Annoyingly sometimes I'm one of life's larks; I wake early and, when I was concerned about such things, my best working time was about 7.30am - 2pm. After that I tended to tail off.
    My next duty this morning, having dispensed wisdom and good cheer here, is to go and make my wife a coffee to start her day. We both start early, but she not quite as early as me.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 54,971
    On the peak train this morning for the first time since February 2020.

    It's August but I'd say commuting traffic is at least 50% of normal (a normal Wednesday; I'd expect Fridays to be very quiet).
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,147

    Dr Richard Sargeant, an academic and former cricketer, said in June before the review concluded: “I’d ask how a black person is meant to feel when they go to Lord’s, the so-called home of cricket, and there is a stand named after a man whose family wealth was built on slavery?”

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/08/10/not-lords-keep-stand-named-england-captain-family-ties-slavery/

    What a dickhead statement....if that's your standard, pretty much every bodies surname could be considered taboo, as I am sure somebody somewhere at some point called that did something really bad. And of course lots of people whose family wealth was built on things now considered bad, famously used that advantage for good, should we also cancel them because their forefathers did evil stuff?

    Thankfully Holding is more sensible chap.

    “I would not be crucifying family members for what happened 100 years ago. That aspect I don’t care about. The Warner Stand is named after him, but he was not someone actively involved in slavery. I have no problem with that.”

    Also, didn’t plenty of slaves take the surname of their slaveholder? So we’d need to cancel their descendants.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,641
    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    They will just shuffles some of the arse lickers and give them much higher salaries and say it is their top priority and we will be world beaters in 5 years, rinse and repeat many times. Different donkeys same results.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 54,971
    IanB2 said:

    ‘Prince Andrew Accuser 'Feared Death' If She Defied Him and Epstein: Court Filing’

    Prince Andrew's accuser feared for her life if she did not have sex with him on the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's orders…

    … accused the royal of "sexual assault and battery" when she was 17 years old in a court filing alleging abuse in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    … "During each of the aforementioned incidents, [Giuffre] was compelled by express or implied threats by Epstein, Maxwell, and/or Prince Andrew to engage in sexual acts with Prince Andrew, and feared death or physical injury to herself or another and other repercussions for disobeying Epstein, Maxwell, and Prince Andrew due to their powerful connections, wealth, and authority."

    She had previously complained to the Metropolitan Police about Prince Andrew's conduct but Britain's biggest police force had dropped the investigation.

    …"In this country no person, whether President or Prince, is above the law, and no person, no matter how powerless or vulnerable, can be deprived of the law's protection.”

    https://www.newsweek.com/prince-andrew-ghislaine-maxwell-feared-death-defied-epstein-lawsuit-new-york-1617735?amp=1

    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    Returning drivers who have killed people abroad don’t seem particularly troubled by the law.
    Stuart's analysis of this issue is driven by a simple reflexive anti-Englishness.

    He's not even bothering to try and hide it.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,641

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.
    The girl was below the age of consent in her home state, but, unless I'm mistaken above it in UK. It doesn't make what appears to be trafficking any less unpleasant, of course. Or, as I understand it, illegal, since the (any) sex surely can't be described as consensual.

    And good morning everyone. Brighter looking today, weatherise, although it's only 3 deg, according to my app.
    Odious as it is and he is a creepy git for sure, but was she brought to UK in chains and tied to a bed. It is always dubious when these people turn up 20+ years later looking to get money.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,641
    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    RobD said:



    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    I'm not sure you are in a position to make that assertion. Unless you've seen the evidence they reviewed when they took that decision?
    The Met are a joke, Keystone Cops could do a better job.
    My statement is correct, even the FBI in the US (where no person is above the law) chucked it out.
    LOL , US statement is bollox as well, the FBI are about as straight and honest as the Met.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,654
    tlg86 said:

    Dr Richard Sargeant, an academic and former cricketer, said in June before the review concluded: “I’d ask how a black person is meant to feel when they go to Lord’s, the so-called home of cricket, and there is a stand named after a man whose family wealth was built on slavery?”

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/08/10/not-lords-keep-stand-named-england-captain-family-ties-slavery/

    What a dickhead statement....if that's your standard, pretty much every bodies surname could be considered taboo, as I am sure somebody somewhere at some point called that did something really bad. And of course lots of people whose family wealth was built on things now considered bad, famously used that advantage for good, should we also cancel them because their forefathers did evil stuff?

    Thankfully Holding is more sensible chap.

    “I would not be crucifying family members for what happened 100 years ago. That aspect I don’t care about. The Warner Stand is named after him, but he was not someone actively involved in slavery. I have no problem with that.”

    Also, didn’t plenty of slaves take the surname of their slaveholder? So we’d need to cancel their descendants.
    Slavery seems to have ended the original culture of the slaves. And, of course. some of the slaves were the children of the slave-owners or white overseers.
    IIRC the child of a slave was presumed to be a slave, even though it's father was free.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    IanB2 said:

    ‘Prince Andrew Accuser 'Feared Death' If She Defied Him and Epstein: Court Filing’

    Prince Andrew's accuser feared for her life if she did not have sex with him on the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's orders…

    … accused the royal of "sexual assault and battery" when she was 17 years old in a court filing alleging abuse in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    … "During each of the aforementioned incidents, [Giuffre] was compelled by express or implied threats by Epstein, Maxwell, and/or Prince Andrew to engage in sexual acts with Prince Andrew, and feared death or physical injury to herself or another and other repercussions for disobeying Epstein, Maxwell, and Prince Andrew due to their powerful connections, wealth, and authority."

    She had previously complained to the Metropolitan Police about Prince Andrew's conduct but Britain's biggest police force had dropped the investigation.

    …"In this country no person, whether President or Prince, is above the law, and no person, no matter how powerless or vulnerable, can be deprived of the law's protection.”

    https://www.newsweek.com/prince-andrew-ghislaine-maxwell-feared-death-defied-epstein-lawsuit-new-york-1617735?amp=1

    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    Returning drivers who have killed people abroad don’t seem particularly troubled by the law.
    That case pissed off the English. And quite rightly.

    But this is different. This Windsor scandal could seriously piss off the Americans. Just as the Tories are desperately trying to scrape together a trade deal. Then add in Joe Biden’s unswerving support for Clinton’s Good Friday Agreement, and the Tories have a diplomatic nightmare on their hands.

    And troubles usually come in threes. Any other big issues on the horizon where the U.S. is going to be displeased with its 51st colony?
  • RobDRobD Posts: 58,932

    IanB2 said:

    ‘Prince Andrew Accuser 'Feared Death' If She Defied Him and Epstein: Court Filing’

    Prince Andrew's accuser feared for her life if she did not have sex with him on the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's orders…

    … accused the royal of "sexual assault and battery" when she was 17 years old in a court filing alleging abuse in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    … "During each of the aforementioned incidents, [Giuffre] was compelled by express or implied threats by Epstein, Maxwell, and/or Prince Andrew to engage in sexual acts with Prince Andrew, and feared death or physical injury to herself or another and other repercussions for disobeying Epstein, Maxwell, and Prince Andrew due to their powerful connections, wealth, and authority."

    She had previously complained to the Metropolitan Police about Prince Andrew's conduct but Britain's biggest police force had dropped the investigation.

    …"In this country no person, whether President or Prince, is above the law, and no person, no matter how powerless or vulnerable, can be deprived of the law's protection.”

    https://www.newsweek.com/prince-andrew-ghislaine-maxwell-feared-death-defied-epstein-lawsuit-new-york-1617735?amp=1

    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    Returning drivers who have killed people abroad don’t seem particularly troubled by the law.
    That case pissed off the English. And quite rightly.

    But this is different. This Windsor scandal could seriously piss off the Americans. Just as the Tories are desperately trying to scrape together a trade deal. Then add in Joe Biden’s unswerving support for Clinton’s Good Friday Agreement, and the Tories have a diplomatic nightmare on their hands.

    And troubles usually come in threes. Any other big issues on the horizon where the U.S. is going to be displeased with its 51st colony?
    Why would it be a diplomatic nightmare? The US authorities similarly dismissed the allegations.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,603

    On the peak train this morning for the first time since February 2020.

    It's August but I'd say commuting traffic is at least 50% of normal (a normal Wednesday; I'd expect Fridays to be very quiet).

    Tuesday and Thursday are both the busiest, the tube is standing room only on both. Friday is basically only under 40s looking to go for drinks after work.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 54,971
    MaxPB said:

    On the peak train this morning for the first time since February 2020.

    It's August but I'd say commuting traffic is at least 50% of normal (a normal Wednesday; I'd expect Fridays to be very quiet).

    Tuesday and Thursday are both the busiest, the tube is standing room only on both. Friday is basically only under 40s looking to go for drinks after work.
    That figures.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 43,866
    The polling on Sunak is bizarre in the header. He leads Johnson even in areas of policy where he has expressed no particular view. It looks like projection to me. Also that there are loads of people that really loathe Johnson, which is quite a motivator to GOTV.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,641

    tlg86 said:

    Dr Richard Sargeant, an academic and former cricketer, said in June before the review concluded: “I’d ask how a black person is meant to feel when they go to Lord’s, the so-called home of cricket, and there is a stand named after a man whose family wealth was built on slavery?”

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/08/10/not-lords-keep-stand-named-england-captain-family-ties-slavery/

    What a dickhead statement....if that's your standard, pretty much every bodies surname could be considered taboo, as I am sure somebody somewhere at some point called that did something really bad. And of course lots of people whose family wealth was built on things now considered bad, famously used that advantage for good, should we also cancel them because their forefathers did evil stuff?

    Thankfully Holding is more sensible chap.

    “I would not be crucifying family members for what happened 100 years ago. That aspect I don’t care about. The Warner Stand is named after him, but he was not someone actively involved in slavery. I have no problem with that.”

    Also, didn’t plenty of slaves take the surname of their slaveholder? So we’d need to cancel their descendants.
    Slavery seems to have ended the original culture of the slaves. And, of course. some of the slaves were the children of the slave-owners or white overseers.
    IIRC the child of a slave was presumed to be a slave, even though it's father was free.
    Time for these saddo's to get a life , it was hundreds of years ago and they have had zero involvement, just moire shysters trying to get money from some perceived historic issue. Tell them if they don't like it then don't go to the cricket ground and go get a life. FFS always anyone could come up with some bollox about their relatives being treated like crap two or three hundred years ago , apart from the handful of silver spoon brigade whose forbears were meting out the crap.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 12,845

    Why is the Daily Mail describing it as “the Epstein scandal” and not “the Windsor scandal”. It’s a Windsor who’s being dragged to court screaming and shouting.

    And why is the Daily Mail focussing on Andrew and Fergie losing their grace and favour (ie taxpayer-funded) mansion in Windsor? I’ll tell you why: this is the establishment setting up their own idea of what a reasonable “punishment” is for a royal deviant: getting his vast mansion taken away so that he can live in another slightly less vast mansion. They really do despise the public. Take their cash and then spit in their faces.

    He's always got that place in Switzerland for which he and Fergie are getting sued over not paying.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    RobD said:

    IanB2 said:

    ‘Prince Andrew Accuser 'Feared Death' If She Defied Him and Epstein: Court Filing’

    Prince Andrew's accuser feared for her life if she did not have sex with him on the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's orders…

    … accused the royal of "sexual assault and battery" when she was 17 years old in a court filing alleging abuse in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    … "During each of the aforementioned incidents, [Giuffre] was compelled by express or implied threats by Epstein, Maxwell, and/or Prince Andrew to engage in sexual acts with Prince Andrew, and feared death or physical injury to herself or another and other repercussions for disobeying Epstein, Maxwell, and Prince Andrew due to their powerful connections, wealth, and authority."

    She had previously complained to the Metropolitan Police about Prince Andrew's conduct but Britain's biggest police force had dropped the investigation.

    …"In this country no person, whether President or Prince, is above the law, and no person, no matter how powerless or vulnerable, can be deprived of the law's protection.”

    https://www.newsweek.com/prince-andrew-ghislaine-maxwell-feared-death-defied-epstein-lawsuit-new-york-1617735?amp=1

    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    Returning drivers who have killed people abroad don’t seem particularly troubled by the law.
    That case pissed off the English. And quite rightly.

    But this is different. This Windsor scandal could seriously piss off the Americans. Just as the Tories are desperately trying to scrape together a trade deal. Then add in Joe Biden’s unswerving support for Clinton’s Good Friday Agreement, and the Tories have a diplomatic nightmare on their hands.

    And troubles usually come in threes. Any other big issues on the horizon where the U.S. is going to be displeased with its 51st colony?
    Why would it be a diplomatic nightmare? The US authorities similarly dismissed the allegations.
    Aha. I see you have not read up on the various cases. No worries. Take your time.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 23,780
    edited August 2021
    moonshine said:

    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    With what.or how, should they be replaced? The cohort now approaching 16 and about to do GCSE seem, if my family is any guide, to be in as bad a position as those who have just completed A levels. Then there ae those about to enter what I still call the Upper VIth; half way though a course which they know could well be life defining and their elders and 'betters' are threatening to shake the system up yet again.
    You’re rather presupposing in that post that having nothing would be worse than what we have now.

    Most of the actually important functions of the three education admin bodies could be moved elsewhere and done better - the DfE’s functions to the Treasury or the DCLG, OFSTED’s to the HSE and OFQUAL’s to either the universities (who used to hold it) or to the major professional bodies.

    The last is probably the way we’re heading anyway given unis and professional associations are looking at having their own entrance exams.
    It's at least arguable that a massive rethink, and confusion could be worse than what we have now. I'm thinking of the young people in the system; they know we may well haven't finished with Covid yet, so they fear that they could have their school time, their study time interrupted and disorganised yet again. And on top of that there are threats that the exam system will be substantially rejigged.
    Whatever happens ought to happen in a planned and thoughtful way. Not hastily and piecemeal.
    One fundamental question is whether we still need GCSEs now that, for all practical purposes, the school-leaving age has been raised to 18. Scrap GCSEs and save a bunch of money and teenage angst.
    Not sure; it's a sorting-out opportunity, but at least arguable.
    Part of doing well in A Levels is being well practiced at taking exams. Having GCSEs as a dry run is no bad thing.
    Agreed but do we really need the GCSE system if it has been reduced to a round of glorified mock A-levels? GCSEs used to be a pathway to jobs and a route into sixth form or further education. Now it is neither because the school-leaving age is effectively 18. Of course, it may be that abolition is more trouble than it is worth but it is hard to see why they could not have been suspended during the pandemic.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 58,932

    RobD said:

    IanB2 said:

    ‘Prince Andrew Accuser 'Feared Death' If She Defied Him and Epstein: Court Filing’

    Prince Andrew's accuser feared for her life if she did not have sex with him on the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's orders…

    … accused the royal of "sexual assault and battery" when she was 17 years old in a court filing alleging abuse in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    … "During each of the aforementioned incidents, [Giuffre] was compelled by express or implied threats by Epstein, Maxwell, and/or Prince Andrew to engage in sexual acts with Prince Andrew, and feared death or physical injury to herself or another and other repercussions for disobeying Epstein, Maxwell, and Prince Andrew due to their powerful connections, wealth, and authority."

    She had previously complained to the Metropolitan Police about Prince Andrew's conduct but Britain's biggest police force had dropped the investigation.

    …"In this country no person, whether President or Prince, is above the law, and no person, no matter how powerless or vulnerable, can be deprived of the law's protection.”

    https://www.newsweek.com/prince-andrew-ghislaine-maxwell-feared-death-defied-epstein-lawsuit-new-york-1617735?amp=1

    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    Returning drivers who have killed people abroad don’t seem particularly troubled by the law.
    That case pissed off the English. And quite rightly.

    But this is different. This Windsor scandal could seriously piss off the Americans. Just as the Tories are desperately trying to scrape together a trade deal. Then add in Joe Biden’s unswerving support for Clinton’s Good Friday Agreement, and the Tories have a diplomatic nightmare on their hands.

    And troubles usually come in threes. Any other big issues on the horizon where the U.S. is going to be displeased with its 51st colony?
    Why would it be a diplomatic nightmare? The US authorities similarly dismissed the allegations.
    Aha. I see you have not read up on the various cases. No worries. Take your time.
    In your original comment you compared the Met to the authorities in the US, where supposedly no-one is above the law. Except the FBI dismissed the allegations of the same complainant. I'm not sure how this translates into a diplomatic nightmare given that the Met and the FBI obviously thought the same thing.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 54,971
    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 58,932

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    My advice would be to buy some comfy headphones.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,654

    moonshine said:

    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    With what.or how, should they be replaced? The cohort now approaching 16 and about to do GCSE seem, if my family is any guide, to be in as bad a position as those who have just completed A levels. Then there ae those about to enter what I still call the Upper VIth; half way though a course which they know could well be life defining and their elders and 'betters' are threatening to shake the system up yet again.
    You’re rather presupposing in that post that having nothing would be worse than what we have now.

    Most of the actually important functions of the three education admin bodies could be moved elsewhere and done better - the DfE’s functions to the Treasury or the DCLG, OFSTED’s to the HSE and OFQUAL’s to either the universities (who used to hold it) or to the major professional bodies.

    The last is probably the way we’re heading anyway given unis and professional associations are looking at having their own entrance exams.
    It's at least arguable that a massive rethink, and confusion could be worse than what we have now. I'm thinking of the young people in the system; they know we may well haven't finished with Covid yet, so they fear that they could have their school time, their study time interrupted and disorganised yet again. And on top of that there are threats that the exam system will be substantially rejigged.
    Whatever happens ought to happen in a planned and thoughtful way. Not hastily and piecemeal.
    One fundamental question is whether we still need GCSEs now that, for all practical purposes, the school-leaving age has been raised to 18. Scrap GCSEs and save a bunch of money and teenage angst.
    Not sure; it's a sorting-out opportunity, but at least arguable.
    Part of doing well in A Levels is being well practiced at taking exams. Having GCSEs as a dry run is no bad thing.
    Agreed but do we really need the GCSE system if it has been reduced to a round of glorified mock A-levels? GCSEs used to be a pathway to jobs and a route into sixth form or further education. Now it is neither because the school-leaving age is effectively 18. Of course, it may be that abolition is more trouble than it is worth but it is hard to see why they could not have been suspended during the pandemic.
    Quite. Supports the argument for having a good hard think and discussion about these exams, rather than having a piecemeal, panic-driven 'quick-fix'.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    Dura_Ace said:

    Why is the Daily Mail describing it as “the Epstein scandal” and not “the Windsor scandal”. It’s a Windsor who’s being dragged to court screaming and shouting.

    And why is the Daily Mail focussing on Andrew and Fergie losing their grace and favour (ie taxpayer-funded) mansion in Windsor? I’ll tell you why: this is the establishment setting up their own idea of what a reasonable “punishment” is for a royal deviant: getting his vast mansion taken away so that he can live in another slightly less vast mansion. They really do despise the public. Take their cash and then spit in their faces.

    He's always got that place in Switzerland for which he and Fergie are getting sued over not paying.
    Is Prince Andrew set to lose £13million on a quick sale of his Verbier skiing chalet?

    … The pair are said to be desperate to shift it to repay part of a reported £6.7 million debt…

    … a chalet which reportedly boasts a 650 square foot indoor pool, sauna, sun terrace and bar…

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-9071557/TALK-TOWN-Prince-Andrew-set-lose-13m-quick-sale-Verbier-skiing-chalet.html


  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 43,866
    RobD said:

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    My advice would be to buy some comfy headphones.
    Or to work from home, and skip those commuting pleasures.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    Thermos brother, commiserations on restarting the commute.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,654

    Dura_Ace said:

    Why is the Daily Mail describing it as “the Epstein scandal” and not “the Windsor scandal”. It’s a Windsor who’s being dragged to court screaming and shouting.

    And why is the Daily Mail focussing on Andrew and Fergie losing their grace and favour (ie taxpayer-funded) mansion in Windsor? I’ll tell you why: this is the establishment setting up their own idea of what a reasonable “punishment” is for a royal deviant: getting his vast mansion taken away so that he can live in another slightly less vast mansion. They really do despise the public. Take their cash and then spit in their faces.

    He's always got that place in Switzerland for which he and Fergie are getting sued over not paying.
    Is Prince Andrew set to lose £13million on a quick sale of his Verbier skiing chalet?

    … The pair are said to be desperate to shift it to repay part of a reported £6.7 million debt…

    … a chalet which reportedly boasts a 650 square foot indoor pool, sauna, sun terrace and bar…

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-9071557/TALK-TOWN-Prince-Andrew-set-lose-13m-quick-sale-Verbier-skiing-chalet.html


    Well, they can't go for as long now, can they!
  • isamisam Posts: 40,658
    The Tory voters opinions (in brackets on the graphic) are nowhere near as bad as the headline figures, and surely that’s where to look if you’re thinking about betting on whether Boris should be replaced? They prefer him to Rishi
  • RobDRobD Posts: 58,932
    Foxy said:

    RobD said:

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    My advice would be to buy some comfy headphones.
    Or to work from home, and skip those commuting pleasures.
    Meh, going into the office has its advantages. Maybe not every day, but never going in doesn't seem like an enticing prospect.
  • isamisam Posts: 40,658
    edited August 2021
    JL partners also did a poll asking who was doing a better job, Boris or Sir Keir, last week


  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    RobD said:

    RobD said:

    IanB2 said:

    ‘Prince Andrew Accuser 'Feared Death' If She Defied Him and Epstein: Court Filing’

    Prince Andrew's accuser feared for her life if she did not have sex with him on the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's orders…

    … accused the royal of "sexual assault and battery" when she was 17 years old in a court filing alleging abuse in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    … "During each of the aforementioned incidents, [Giuffre] was compelled by express or implied threats by Epstein, Maxwell, and/or Prince Andrew to engage in sexual acts with Prince Andrew, and feared death or physical injury to herself or another and other repercussions for disobeying Epstein, Maxwell, and Prince Andrew due to their powerful connections, wealth, and authority."

    She had previously complained to the Metropolitan Police about Prince Andrew's conduct but Britain's biggest police force had dropped the investigation.

    …"In this country no person, whether President or Prince, is above the law, and no person, no matter how powerless or vulnerable, can be deprived of the law's protection.”

    https://www.newsweek.com/prince-andrew-ghislaine-maxwell-feared-death-defied-epstein-lawsuit-new-york-1617735?amp=1

    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    Returning drivers who have killed people abroad don’t seem particularly troubled by the law.
    That case pissed off the English. And quite rightly.

    But this is different. This Windsor scandal could seriously piss off the Americans. Just as the Tories are desperately trying to scrape together a trade deal. Then add in Joe Biden’s unswerving support for Clinton’s Good Friday Agreement, and the Tories have a diplomatic nightmare on their hands.

    And troubles usually come in threes. Any other big issues on the horizon where the U.S. is going to be displeased with its 51st colony?
    Why would it be a diplomatic nightmare? The US authorities similarly dismissed the allegations.
    Aha. I see you have not read up on the various cases. No worries. Take your time.
    In your original comment you compared the Met to the authorities in the US, where supposedly no-one is above the law. Except the FBI dismissed the allegations of the same complainant. I'm not sure how this translates into a diplomatic nightmare given that the Met and the FBI obviously thought the same thing.
    Aha. I see you have not read up on the various cases. No worries. Take your time.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 58,932

    RobD said:

    RobD said:

    IanB2 said:

    ‘Prince Andrew Accuser 'Feared Death' If She Defied Him and Epstein: Court Filing’

    Prince Andrew's accuser feared for her life if she did not have sex with him on the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's orders…

    … accused the royal of "sexual assault and battery" when she was 17 years old in a court filing alleging abuse in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    … "During each of the aforementioned incidents, [Giuffre] was compelled by express or implied threats by Epstein, Maxwell, and/or Prince Andrew to engage in sexual acts with Prince Andrew, and feared death or physical injury to herself or another and other repercussions for disobeying Epstein, Maxwell, and Prince Andrew due to their powerful connections, wealth, and authority."

    She had previously complained to the Metropolitan Police about Prince Andrew's conduct but Britain's biggest police force had dropped the investigation.

    …"In this country no person, whether President or Prince, is above the law, and no person, no matter how powerless or vulnerable, can be deprived of the law's protection.”

    https://www.newsweek.com/prince-andrew-ghislaine-maxwell-feared-death-defied-epstein-lawsuit-new-york-1617735?amp=1

    In the U.S. no person is above the law, but the Metropolitan Police do not recognise that basic principle.

    Returning drivers who have killed people abroad don’t seem particularly troubled by the law.
    That case pissed off the English. And quite rightly.

    But this is different. This Windsor scandal could seriously piss off the Americans. Just as the Tories are desperately trying to scrape together a trade deal. Then add in Joe Biden’s unswerving support for Clinton’s Good Friday Agreement, and the Tories have a diplomatic nightmare on their hands.

    And troubles usually come in threes. Any other big issues on the horizon where the U.S. is going to be displeased with its 51st colony?
    Why would it be a diplomatic nightmare? The US authorities similarly dismissed the allegations.
    Aha. I see you have not read up on the various cases. No worries. Take your time.
    In your original comment you compared the Met to the authorities in the US, where supposedly no-one is above the law. Except the FBI dismissed the allegations of the same complainant. I'm not sure how this translates into a diplomatic nightmare given that the Met and the FBI obviously thought the same thing.
    Aha. I see you have not read up on the various cases. No worries. Take your time.
    You don't think it says anything about the reliability of the claimant that their allegations were dismissed by both the Met and the FBI (where no one is above the law)?
  • TazTaz Posts: 10,533

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    Does he slurp when taking a drink ?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,603
    RobD said:

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    My advice would be to buy some comfy headphones.
    Noise cancelling headphones are the best invention for commuting. It does legitimately block out the rest of the world.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 54,971
    Taz said:

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    Does he slurp when taking a drink ?
    Not so much, but unscrewing a metal cap from a metal flask (and it requires several rotations to get it off and on) is really loud and a few commuters try and nap in the quiet carriage on the way up, particularly if they have young kids at home and they've had a disturbed night.

    This guy just doesn't get it - even though he gets DefCon1 grade British looks at times from others.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 2,162
    The right wing press is pretty grim reading for Number 10 today. Fury over grade inflation turned full force on the hapless Williamson. Cameron lobbying stories finally surfacing. Nasty polls for Johnson. As in Chesham and Amersham, those most critical of this shambles of a government are those who voted for it in 2019.

    In the end "the economy, stupid" is probably where Conservatives may well decide that Johnson isn´t a Conservative. If that happens then his grip on power will be gone immediately. The problem for GBNI is that the endless soap opera of Tory party leadership challenges is the epitome of Westminster bubble politics: in the end frustration at government failures may vent with "a plague of all your houses" and then no Tory leader looks credible.

    Therefore those who think that Sunak is the 7th cavalry riding to the rescue may well find that this figure who has risen without trace is a straw man at a barn fire. An urbane Wykhamist who married his money is not exactly a firey tribune of the people.

    Wait until the polls get really bad in the late winter. Starmer (and Davey) have gravitas and that may well be what counts as the country faces ever increasing problems from the slow puncture Brexit and the government´s sloppy fiscal incontinence while the economy wallows in post Covid incompetence and inefficiency and the spectre of exploding government debt turns into a crisis.

    Calls to "Get a grip" will move to "Get Lost". Johnson may then be the fall guy, but looking at the cabinet I, for one, see no beginning to their talents. Choosing a Jim Hacker like figure such as Sunak will not alter that.

    The pendulum will be really swinging by then.
  • TazTaz Posts: 10,533

    Taz said:

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    Does he slurp when taking a drink ?
    Not so much, but unscrewing a metal cap from a metal flask (and it requires several rotations to get it off and on) is really loud and a few commuters try and nap in the quiet carriage on the way up, particularly if they have young kids at home and they've had a disturbed night.

    This guy just doesn't get it - even though he gets DefCon1 grade British looks at times from others.
    I love our British way of dealing with these situations. Glaring daggers and mild tut tutting.
  • isam said:

    The Tory voters opinions (in brackets on the graphic) are nowhere near as bad as the headline figures, and surely that’s where to look if you’re thinking about betting on whether Boris should be replaced? They prefer him to Rishi

    We are not betting on whether Boris should be replaced but whether, or rather when, he will be. Lots of things should happen that don't, or at least not within the right timescale.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 17,938
    edited August 2021
    Morning all. Picking my way through the threads :smiley:

    Transition? Pull the other one. The Brexit Revolution has only just begun.

    ‘Emergency Brexit powers for lorry queues to be made permanent’
    - Exclusive: ministers to make traffic provisions indefinite in expectation of further cross-Channel disruption

    … Naomi Smith, the chief executive of the internationalist campaign group Best for Britain, said: “This is an admission that far from ‘teething problems’, the government expects supply problems from their rushed Brexit deal to continue indefinitely. Shelves are empty and our supply chains are already at breaking point. The government should be seeking improvements to their deal with Europe rather than preparing to make Kent a permanent lorry park.”

    … Operation Brock has proved unpopular with residents as a way of managing lorry traffic…

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/aug/10/emergency-brexit-powers-for-lorry-queues-to-be-made-permanent

    So the Gina Miller muppet show thinks that a contingency measure for use when necessary is the same as "preparing to make Kent a permanent lorry park"?

    How embarrassing for them.

    Internationalist?

    Sorry - that's just funny.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 50,607

    ‘Prince Andrew faces no good choice in Epstein accuser case’

    … Andrew’s team is likely to wage a protracted battle over the U.S. court’s jurisdiction while arguing that their client is entitled to immunity as a member of the royal family.

    https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/celebrities/article253400255.html

    This strikes me as being profoundly unwise. There are shades of Tories breaking Covid rules (Johnson, Jenrick, Cummings, Gove, Hancock, Seely etc): one rule for the plebs but another rule for the entitled.

    Why should teenage girls be protected in law from sexual abuse, sexual assault, rape and sex trafficking, but then when it transpires that the repulsive middle-aged man who allegedly forced her to have sex was a member of a royal family, then… oh well… that’s alright then.

    A lot of people will forgive, or at least look away, when ministers break Covid rules. These are after all busy people doing important jobs. But what that pathetic man is accused of doing is utterly unforgivable. There is zero excuse.

    Luckily the US courts will not swallow such guff. One hates to think how the English courts would have (mis)handled this case.

    How would Scottish courts have handled it? And what is the age of consent in Scotland? Remember the victim here was 17 at the time of the incidents, which have been denied (although it might be that some denials at least focussed on the under-age part). Can you think of any recent cases in Scotland involving alleged sexual abuse by men in powerful positions?

    Doubtless some conspiracy theorists will be disappointed no MI6 assassins are sent to Australia to silence the accuser.

    ETA the Mail doubts Andrew has immunity anyway, not being the Queen.
    I think a problem for the Scottish courts (and quite possibly for the English courts too) is that the age of consent here is 16 and she was 17 when this allegedly happened. That means, in the absence of other coercion, this was not an offence here. IANAE on this but my understanding is that other than under special cases like the EAW for someone to be extradited the offence in the requesting country would normally have to be an offence here too.

    This, of course, is a civil suit so what she will need to prove is that this occurred in the US, specifically in NY. The case has been raised to prevent it being time barred for ever on the expiry of a time limited exemption for claimants who were children at the time of the alleged conduct. I suspect that the jurisdiction dispute will be lengthy.

    Andrew does not benefit from Crown immunity.
  • eekeek Posts: 24,698

    moonshine said:

    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    I don't know about A-Levels being scrapped, surely the more pressing issue is scrapping Gavin Williamson.

    But as I said yesterday, getting rid of him but not the DfE itself will be the equivalent of deckchairs on the Titanic.

    I know in Scotland they are planning some changes, but from what I’ve seen so far it’s likely the same people who have screwed up before will simply be left running a new, even less coherent quango.
    With what.or how, should they be replaced? The cohort now approaching 16 and about to do GCSE seem, if my family is any guide, to be in as bad a position as those who have just completed A levels. Then there ae those about to enter what I still call the Upper VIth; half way though a course which they know could well be life defining and their elders and 'betters' are threatening to shake the system up yet again.
    You’re rather presupposing in that post that having nothing would be worse than what we have now.

    Most of the actually important functions of the three education admin bodies could be moved elsewhere and done better - the DfE’s functions to the Treasury or the DCLG, OFSTED’s to the HSE and OFQUAL’s to either the universities (who used to hold it) or to the major professional bodies.

    The last is probably the way we’re heading anyway given unis and professional associations are looking at having their own entrance exams.
    It's at least arguable that a massive rethink, and confusion could be worse than what we have now. I'm thinking of the young people in the system; they know we may well haven't finished with Covid yet, so they fear that they could have their school time, their study time interrupted and disorganised yet again. And on top of that there are threats that the exam system will be substantially rejigged.
    Whatever happens ought to happen in a planned and thoughtful way. Not hastily and piecemeal.
    One fundamental question is whether we still need GCSEs now that, for all practical purposes, the school-leaving age has been raised to 18. Scrap GCSEs and save a bunch of money and teenage angst.
    Not sure; it's a sorting-out opportunity, but at least arguable.
    Part of doing well in A Levels is being well practiced at taking exams. Having GCSEs as a dry run is no bad thing.
    Agreed but do we really need the GCSE system if it has been reduced to a round of glorified mock A-levels? GCSEs used to be a pathway to jobs and a route into sixth form or further education. Now it is neither because the school-leaving age is effectively 18. Of course, it may be that abolition is more trouble than it is worth but it is hard to see why they could not have been suspended during the pandemic.
    Quite. Supports the argument for having a good hard think and discussion about these exams, rather than having a piecemeal, panic-driven 'quick-fix'.
    That requires actual thinking (and worse would make Gove's reforms look like the complete f**k up that they were) so I can't see this Government doing that.

    Worse people will now be expecting changes for next year and that isnt going to help anyone.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 40,885

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    Oh No! Have they strapped you in to your seat on a 50% capacity train? How awful.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Taz said:

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    Does he slurp when taking a drink ?
    Not so much, but unscrewing a metal cap from a metal flask (and it requires several rotations to get it off and on) is really loud and a few commuters try and nap in the quiet carriage on the way up, particularly if they have young kids at home and they've had a disturbed night.

    This guy just doesn't get it - even though he gets DefCon1 grade British looks at times from others.
    Club together and get him a modern insulated mug with a click on/off cap. It'll be just like The Railway Children.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 40,885
    On topic.

    Poor old Boris all he ever wanted to do was be PM without a care in the world and having saved the world UK from the EU and then the vaccine some beastly upstart seems to be challenging for his position.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Dura_Ace said:

    Why is the Daily Mail describing it as “the Epstein scandal” and not “the Windsor scandal”. It’s a Windsor who’s being dragged to court screaming and shouting.

    And why is the Daily Mail focussing on Andrew and Fergie losing their grace and favour (ie taxpayer-funded) mansion in Windsor? I’ll tell you why: this is the establishment setting up their own idea of what a reasonable “punishment” is for a royal deviant: getting his vast mansion taken away so that he can live in another slightly less vast mansion. They really do despise the public. Take their cash and then spit in their faces.

    He's always got that place in Switzerland for which he and Fergie are getting sued over not paying.
    Is Prince Andrew set to lose £13million on a quick sale of his Verbier skiing chalet?

    … The pair are said to be desperate to shift it to repay part of a reported £6.7 million debt…

    … a chalet which reportedly boasts a 650 square foot indoor pool, sauna, sun terrace and bar…

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-9071557/TALK-TOWN-Prince-Andrew-set-lose-13m-quick-sale-Verbier-skiing-chalet.html


    Well, they can't go for as long now, can they!
    IPCC report gonna do wonders for Alpine property prices, too.
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 4,774

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    The silent passive aggressive opprobrium of 20 other commuters is a beautiful thing. In the days of broadsheets woe betide the commuter who didn't know the regulation way to fold a broadsheet.

    I remember when we went to the Olympics with the kids on one of the special advance tickets that got you into London cheaply before 9am. The Peterborough crew didn't like their train invading one little bit.

    Not really like that on the Transpennine trains - not so much Northern friendliness, more that it is a much more mixed group of passengers, so never the sense that commuters rule the roost.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,244
    Apologies if already pointed out, but the 58% is 58% of the 42% who want a change, i.e. 24%. It's natural that people who want a change would like it soon, but a mistake to think that 58% of the voters want that.

    The substantial lead for spend/borrow less seems to be among all voters, not just Tories, if that's correctly reported. That represents a substantial gap between the voters and the current policies of all the major parties, and I wonder how proof it will be against actual substantial tax rises.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 50,607
    Of course a slightly different lens would say that a government that has a popular and apparently competent chancellor is a strong government and well done Boris for picking him.

    Williamson, not so much.
  • MikeSmithsonMikeSmithson Posts: 7,382
    isam said:

    The Tory voters opinions (in brackets on the graphic) are nowhere near as bad as the headline figures, and surely that’s where to look if you’re thinking about betting on whether Boris should be replaced? They prefer him to Rishi

    So just 43% of CON voters want Johnson to stay - 57% don't hardly a vote of confidence except for 'Boris fan boys.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 54,971
    TOPPING said:

    Ah, Captain Thermos is here; that makes me nostalgic.

    He spends the whole journey up to Waterloo sitting in a quiet carriage whilst noisly screwing and unscrewing his thermos so he can take regular sips of coffee the whole way.

    Woe betide you if you are seated within 2-3 rows of him. It drives you mad like a dripping tap.

    Oh No! Have they strapped you in to your seat on a 50% capacity train? How awful.
    Ah, it's you.
  • isam said:

    The Tory voters opinions (in brackets on the graphic) are nowhere near as bad as the headline figures, and surely that’s where to look if you’re thinking about betting on whether Boris should be replaced? They prefer him to Rishi

    So just 43% of CON voters want Johnson to stay - 57% don't hardly a vote of confidence except for 'Boris fan boys.
    Come on Mike, you know full well that is not the question that was asked.

    If given a hypothetical forced choice between Boris and Rishi then I might say I think Rishi could do a better job, but I still want Boris to stay. For one thing, I don't know if Boris goes if he will definitely be replaced by Rishi or if he could be replaced by someone worse like Williamson (no sniggering in the back).

    If you want to know what percentage of CON voters want Boris to stay then ask that question, don't put up a forced choice between him and another Tory and then claim everyone who doesn't choose him wants him to go.
This discussion has been closed.