Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

Italy makes vaccinations compulsory for the over 50s – politicalbetting.com

123468

Comments

  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578

    Absolutely no one: IT WAS A UNIQUELY EUROPEAN PHENOMENON

    Someone: I'm pointing out it was not a uniquely European phenomenon

    Agreement of sorts, I guess.

    Absolutely no one: IT WAS A UNIQUELY EUROPEAN PHENOMENON

    Someone: I'm pointing out it was not a uniquely European phenomenon

    Agreement of sorts, I guess.
    You obviously haven't read much of the latest literature on it, it is essentially portrayed as uniquely European and all other examples of slave tradery are not talked about. And you know what they say - silence is violence.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,586
    Selebian said:

    "We fully support the signing of the national anthem, Her Majesty the Queen and other expressions of patriotism – including the flying of the Union Jack" (emphasis mine)

    I'm not sure whether that refers to ensuring there are BSL signers every time the anthem is sung or whether it also encompasses encouraging people to scribble their signatures on HMQ.

    I assume the 'Union Jack' to be flown more is Alister Jack or Maybe Jackson Carlaw?
    Wouldn't cost much, running the same BSL loop every time BBC shuts down at night.

  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578

    When we lived in the US people tended to assume she was the nanny, not helped by our eldest daughter looking white - my celtic genes are apparently very strong.
    Are you red headed per chance?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021

    Actually, I had a problem a few months back. I changed to a new phone with the same number, and whilst WhatsApp registered correctly, numerous attempts to backup WhatsApp data off the old phone onto the new have failed. Fortunately I only have a couple of little-used groups on WhatsApp, but I did lose all the data and those groups.

    No idea what went wrong, or whether I did anything wrong.
    The only reliable way I have found for this, is to backup to a cloud service, setup the new phone, then restore the backup. Groups are a special case, because the encryption key is different for the new device, and won’t be shared with everyone in the group.
    https://faq.whatsapp.com/android/chats/how-to-restore-your-chat-history/?lang=en

    Long thread here https://android.stackexchange.com/questions/74973/transfer-whatsapp-chat-history-to-new-device
    The gist of it, is that this is a consumer application not an enterprise application, and there’s no support for it.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    On topic: The evidence of the last few weeks suggests that Omicron is essentially unstoppable at the population level, so there's no longer any point in trying to push the refusers into accepting the jabs (as a means of suppression and, by extension, a device to minimise the need for harmful restrictions to be imposed on other people, so as to alleviate the pressure on healthcare systems.) Indeed, it's ripping through the population in many countries, including both the UK and Italy, so fast that there is no time to offer reasonable protection to that portion of the remaining unvaccinated population who are going to catch Covid over the next few weeks, even if they change their minds. And if there's no longer a significant benefit to society to be had from imposing vaccination upon the remaining holdouts, then should governments be seeking to do it?
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,863
    Nigelb said:

    'Expansionist' is an odd word to use for someone who was maniacally determined to prosecute a world-wide race war - and was prepared to see his entire nation exterminated in the attempt, should they fail.

    Asking anyone to determine which of the two monsters was more evil seems morally fruitless. But they were monsters of different types.
    I agree with your last paragraph, which is exactly the point; they were both evil and (including Mao in this, if you don't mind) people still seem to like or even revere Stalin and Mao, and/or their bankrupt, evil systems.

    For the former paragraph, I'm unsure Hitler and Stalin were very different. The Holodomor is an example, and you might want to look up the Doctors' Plot if you don't know it.

    And we should all know it and the Holodomor, as much as we know about Hitler's evils.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,291
    MrEd said:

    Spot on.

    Ps it still was criminal damage by the definition of the law but you have to accept all jury verdicts if you believe in the system
    It was easy peasy. I duly condemned all tyranny and slavery and thus earned my right to also condemn ours. But pls bookmark this post so I don't have to always preface any negative comment about our colonial crimes with a reference to lots of other stuff that we didn't do. Time saver.

    As for the statue, what they did wasn't criminal. So said the jury. I'd like you to say that back to me to show you really do accept it. Least you can do, Ed, after what I've just done.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,256
    MrEd said:

    Are you red headed per chance?
    No, but I am extremely (hideously?) white.
  • I'm a vegetarian, like that famous Aryan - so I will find my niche, and finish off the quiche.
    Hey! I thought I was the only vegetarian in the PB Village!
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,137

    Ha ha, no, sorry, I have been one of THEM for almost 35 years but I have a sense of humour. 😜
    Hmm, new acronym to me.

    Totalitarian Hitlerite Excluders of Meat? :wink:
  • Actually, I had a problem a few months back. I changed to a new phone with the same number, and whilst WhatsApp registered correctly, numerous attempts to backup WhatsApp data off the old phone onto the new have failed. Fortunately I only have a couple of little-used groups on WhatsApp, but I did lose all the data and those groups.

    No idea what went wrong, or whether I did anything wrong.
    I have recently migrated both my own and my son's WhatsApp accounts to a new number. Unless Peppa has created an entirely new profile which all of his contacts have to then change to, he has migrated his phone number.

    That's how WhatsApp works. So his assumption is that Lord Geidt doesn't know and won't check when he says something so obviously stupid.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021
    rpjs said:

    First Amendment.
    Indeed so!

    In the UK, it’s illegal to interview a juror about a case, even if you’re an academic or statistician trying to gather data on jury trials, and definitely if you’re a journalist with a cheque book!
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,863
    Sandpit said:

    The only reliable way I have found for this, is to backup to a cloud service, setup the new phone, then restore the backup. Groups are a special case, because the encryption key is different for the new device, and won’t be shared with everyone in the group.
    https://faq.whatsapp.com/android/chats/how-to-restore-your-chat-history/?lang=en

    Long thread here https://android.stackexchange.com/questions/74973/transfer-whatsapp-chat-history-to-new-device
    The gist of it, is that this is a consumer application not an enterprise application, and there’s no support for it.
    Thanks. Good to know it wasn't me being too stoopid.
  • MrEd said:

    You obviously haven't read much of the latest literature on it, it is essentially portrayed as uniquely European and all other examples of slave tradery are not talked about. And you know what they say - silence is violence.
    Last country to officially abolish slavery was Mauretania, as recently as 1981.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,863

    I have recently migrated both my own and my son's WhatsApp accounts to a new number. Unless Peppa has created an entirely new profile which all of his contacts have to then change to, he has migrated his phone number.

    That's how WhatsApp works. So his assumption is that Lord Geidt doesn't know and won't check when he says something so obviously stupid.
    Well, it didn't work for me when changing it to the same number!
  • Stocky said:

    YBard's argument is a valid one. Shades of the Wakefield MMR furore, where parents who decided not to have their children vaccinated benefited from the herd immunity created by the children of other parents who did.

    To be honest, I'm not opposed to legally mandating it in theory. In practice however it will not work because cohorts will lobby to get themselves excluded from the mandate - for example for medical reasons (many dubious) and religiosity. Laws should apply to all.

    What appals me are the views of TSE and Nick P on here who are so utterly illiberal (from right and left) in demonising people who have made a legal choice.
    Calm your tits.

    There are consequences from a legal choice, this is just that.

    Choosing not to obtain a driving licence has consequences, for example you cannot drive a car, this is just an extension of that.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,000
    pigeon said:

    On topic: The evidence of the last few weeks suggests that Omicron is essentially unstoppable at the population level, so there's no longer any point in trying to push the refusers into accepting the jabs (as a means of suppression and, by extension, a device to minimise the need for harmful restrictions to be imposed on other people, so as to alleviate the pressure on healthcare systems.) Indeed, it's ripping through the population in many countries, including both the UK and Italy, so fast that there is no time to offer reasonable protection to that portion of the remaining unvaccinated population who are going to catch Covid over the next few weeks, even if they change their minds. And if there's no longer a significant benefit to society to be had from imposing vaccination upon the remaining holdouts, then should governments be seeking to do it?

    Yes, immunity after vaccination and infection > Immunity after infection. This wave will play out come what may, it's the next one we want to try and keep as low as possible.
  • Well, it didn't work for me when changing it to the same number!
    Did you back up all chats first?
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,295
    Mr. Jessop, exactly. We came within a few thousand votes of a man who marched alongside banners of Stalin and the hammer and sickle becoming PM. That by itself should've disqualified him, just as anyone marching with Hitler portraits and swastika flags should be unacceptable.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    Calm your tits.

    There are consequences from a legal choice, this is just that.

    Choosing not to obtain a driving licence has consequences, for example you cannot drive a car, this is just an extension of that.
    I'm sorry, driving liscenceless people are having their liberty impinged. This must be repealed forthwith.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,137
    Sandpit said:

    Indeed so!

    In the UK, it’s illegal to interview a juror about a case, even if you’re an academic or statistician trying to gather data on jury trials, and definitely if you’re a journalist with a cheque book!
    Interesting, that bit on research - would be useful to be able to have studies on how juries operate, how people come to certain conclusions. I wonder whether there are exceptions. The Health Sec, for example, has the power to permit on a case by case basis some things that would otherwise be illegal with respect to data access etc. I've been involved in a study in the past in which we had to go that route - it was research supporting a government review and would have been more or less impossible without those data, so we didn't face much oppositio, but it still took some time to get through (layers of civil service, including legal teams, before we got to put it directly to the Health Sec).
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578
    kinabalu said:

    It was easy peasy. I duly condemned all tyranny and slavery and thus earned my right to also condemn ours. But pls bookmark this post so I don't have to always preface any negative comment about our colonial crimes with a reference to lots of other stuff that we didn't do. Time saver.

    As for the statue, what they did wasn't criminal. So said the jury. I'd like you to say that back to me to show you really do accept it. Least you can do, Ed, after what I've just done.
    Haha Kinablu, ok I will. It wasn't criminal because the jury said it wasn't.

    And yes I promise.
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578

    No, but I am extremely (hideously?) white.
    Keep it as extremely.
  • Thanks. Good to know it wasn't me being too stoopid.
    It is an utterly seamless process on iPhones.

    Just back up to iCloud and switch over to your new phone and there it is.

    As an aside the quick start transferring entire iPhones to a new one is brilliant.

    I transferred 400GB in around an hour, all the apps and stuff worked straight away.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 42,956
    edited January 2022
    MrEd said:

    You obviously haven't read much of the latest literature on it, it is essentially portrayed as uniquely European and all other examples of slave tradery are not talked about. And you know what they say - silence is violence.
    Can you supply a link or links? I'd be most interested in the literature that clearly posits that slavery was a uniquely European phenomenon, if only to point and laugh at it.
    Of course you can't be referring to any posters on here because absolutely no one has suggested IT WAS A UNIQUELY EUROPEAN PHENOMENON.
  • On Djokovic, I see it was discussed here earlier but I didn't notice the crucial detail that I heard on the radio mentioned. Apologies if I missed it, but..

    The State rule for domestic travel to Victoria is that you can have been previously infected, rather than vaccinated. Apparently all that Djokovic has is "proof" that he's been infected.

    The Federal rule for entering Australia has no such exemption. You have to prove that you are unable to be vaccinated. It's quite clear that any State rules are in addition.

    "Proof that you cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons when coming to Australia
    If you are coming to Australia and have a medical contraindication recorded in the Australian Immunisation Register (AIR) you can show an Australian COVID-19 digital certificate to airline staff. You can otherwise show your immunisation history statement.

    If you do not have your medical contraindication recorded in the AIR you will need to show airline staff a medical certificate that indicates you are unable to be vaccinated with a COVID-19 vaccine because of a medical condition. The medical certificate must be in English and include the following information:

    your name (this must match your travel identification documents)
    date of medical consultation and details of your medical practitioner
    details that clearly acknowledge that you have a medical condition which means you cannot receive a COVID-19 vaccination (vaccination is contraindicated).
    Airlines are responsible for ensuring your proof meets these requirements.

    People who have received non-TGA approved or recognised vaccines should not be certified in this category and cannot be treated as vaccinated for the purposes of their travel.

    You should check any requirements, particularly quarantine and post-arrival testing requirements, in the state or territory to which you are travelling as this will impact your travel arrangements.

    If you are planning on traveling onwards to or through a different state or territory when you arrive in Australia, you need to check domestic travel restrictions. States and territories can apply their own travel restrictions.

    You are responsible for complying with travel restrictions and requirements that apply to you. Please note: proof that you cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons is separate to a Commissioner’s travel exemption."
    https://covid19.homeaffairs.gov.au/vaccinated-travellers#toc-6

    I'm sure they won't let him in. He might be able to sue his airline.
  • I'm too busy to do more than occasionally dive in and out, but is much of the debate about Juries because of the Colson case?

    Juries can acquit for whatever reason they like. Its a demonstrable fact that the 4 tits pushed the statue into the water, but the jury have decided that it doesn't constitute criminal damage.

    Isn't that the whole point of a jury system? Or can we now expect Priti Vacant to try and abolish trial by jury? Mind you, with both mega cuts and Covid the legal system has defacto done so with so big a backlog...
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,053
    MrEd said:

    Spot on.

    Ps it still was criminal damage by the definition of the law but you have to accept all jury verdicts if you believe in the system
    They were charged with criminal damage. A due process (trial by jury) found them not guilty. Ergo, whatever they did was not criminal damage.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021
    Selebian said:

    Interesting, that bit on research - would be useful to be able to have studies on how juries operate, how people come to certain conclusions. I wonder whether there are exceptions. The Health Sec, for example, has the power to permit on a case by case basis some things that would otherwise be illegal with respect to data access etc. I've been involved in a study in the past in which we had to go that route - it was research supporting a government review and would have been more or less impossible without those data, so we didn't face much oppositio, but it still took some time to get through (layers of civil service, including legal teams, before we got to put it directly to the Health Sec).
    Turns out there is actually a single academic research group working with juries.
    https://www.ucl.ac.uk/made-at-ucl/stories/ground-breaking-research-ensure-juries-are-fair-and-effective
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 64,646

    They were charged with criminal damage. A due process (trial by jury) found them not guilty. Ergo, whatever they did was not criminal damage.
    Thread from a lawyer:

    Matthew Scott
    @Barristerblog
    The jury had at least 3 separate legal routes to finding the defendants not guilty. The verdict was absolutely not an "assault on the rule of law."

    https://twitter.com/Barristerblog/status/1478845243340599304
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021

    It is an utterly seamless process on iPhones.

    Just back up to iCloud and switch over to your new phone and there it is.

    As an aside the quick start transferring entire iPhones to a new one is brilliant.

    I transferred 400GB in around an hour, all the apps and stuff worked straight away.
    You do know that you can get the porn online these days, don’t you?
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,145

    Bacon is the toughest, but I am strong. I can even fry it for my kids without eating it.
    Bacon is practically poison anyway. Leaving aside the atrocity of treating the animal like shit and killing it.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,000
    edited January 2022

    Thread from a lawyer:

    Matthew Scott
    @Barristerblog
    The jury had at least 3 separate legal routes to finding the defendants not guilty. The verdict was absolutely not an "assault on the rule of law."

    https://twitter.com/Barristerblog/status/1478845243340599304
    He's letting his political prejudices show with that tweet.

    Here's a more sane assessment with his own blog.

    https://barristerblogger.com/2020/06/08/the-colston-statue-destroyers-have-no-defence-in-law-but-they-will-never-be-convicted/

    It's a simple case of Bushel's.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,164

    I agree with your last paragraph, which is exactly the point; they were both evil and (including Mao in this, if you don't mind) people still seem to like or even revere Stalin and Mao, and/or their bankrupt, evil systems.

    For the former paragraph, I'm unsure Hitler and Stalin were very different. The Holodomor is an example, and you might want to look up the Doctors' Plot if you don't know it.

    And we should all know it and the Holodomor, as much as we know about Hitler's evils.
    Agreed - I've previously recommended Snyder's book on the subject.
    But there was a cold political rationale to the Ukraine genocide, which I think was absent from Nazi ideology.

    Does it matter ?
    Possibly, since communism is an ideology which lays claim to universal appeal, whereas the need to oppose Nazism is simply a matter of survival for much for the world.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,137
    edited January 2022
    kinabalu said:

    It was easy peasy. I duly condemned all tyranny and slavery and thus earned my right to also condemn ours. But pls bookmark this post so I don't have to always preface any negative comment about our colonial crimes with a reference to lots of other stuff that we didn't do. Time saver.

    As for the statue, what they did wasn't criminal. So said the jury. I'd like you to say that back to me to show you really do accept it. Least you can do, Ed, after what I've just done.
    Just need an inialism (like IANAL) to preface each statement:
    IDCATASEBAGAATAATBPSALGTATBAWSSAAATT* but Colston was a wrong'un, wasn't he?

    Simple :wink:

    *I duly condemn all tyranny and slavery everywhere by any group at any time and acknowledge that bad people sometimes also did good things and their bad actions were sometimes seen as acceptable at the time
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,421

    Last country to officially abolish slavery was Mauretania, as recently as 1981.
    Still plenty of it there, informally, by all accounts.

    Slavery is an example of how humans, wherever they come from, have the capacity to be and do evil. National and power structures provide the opportunity.

    The way I see the question of inherited ancestral guilt is this: there should be symmetrical treatment of both pride and shame. If you are proud of the good things your ancestors did in the past, and feel that this somehow rubs off on your own virtue, then you also need to feel accountability for the shameful acts carried out by your ancestors. If on the other hand you don't take a national or ethnic view of history, and instead see yourself as human first and foremost, then neither the sins of the ancestors nor their achievements are your responsibility.

    It gets murkier when someone benefits materially from actions in the past (as we all do - ultimately we benefit from the fact someone in Sumeria invented the wheel, for example) if those actions inflicted long term harm which is still felt today and affects the life chances and wellbeing of others. In the case of African slavery that is demonstrably so, and likewise there's an argument for this in the unrest in the Middle East. Less clear cut for other shady acts of our history.
  • RattersRatters Posts: 1,242

    Calm your tits.

    There are consequences from a legal choice, this is just that.

    Choosing not to obtain a driving licence has consequences, for example you cannot drive a car, this is just an extension of that.
    The analogy is nonsense. There are qualifications to doing all kinds of activities, whether driving, practicing law or all manner of things. There are clear reasons why you need to demonstrate a level of skill to practice them.

    An unvaccinated person does not lack the skills needed to go to the theatre. Nor do they necessarily present a higher Covid risk to other attendees than a vaccinated secondary school teacher that goes clubbing at weekends.

    In my view there should be no activity off limits based on vaccination status. But in favour of as kind of income tax surcharge to reflect the additional cost unvaccinated people put upon the NHS in aggregate (analogous to how we tax other externalities like smoking).
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,766
    Aficionados of the State of the Union may find this piece interesting. Don't necessarily agree with it - muddling through can be the most effective approach - food for thought nevertheless on the possible imminent demise of the Union.

    https://mobile.twitter.com/TomMcTague/status/1478635488693080068
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,298
    edited January 2022
    OK I am going to ask what is probably an idiotic question but I'm struggling to get this gas prices issue. I understand why it happened in the first place but we have had it for a few months now and gas is a commodity type product and not (I believe) something that has a huge timeline in changing supply volumes so why is it still an issue? I appreciate the UK storage issue, but the price issue isn't unique to the UK.
  • Sandpit said:

    You do know that you can get the porn online these days, don’t you?
    There is no porn on my phone.

    I've had iPhones since 2010 and so I've effectively better part of 12 years worth of texts, Whatsapp, pictures, and videos on there, which I like having on my phone. I back them up the cloud, but I don't want to be at the mercy of an iCloud outage/issue, some of these photos, videos, and texts, are utterly irreplaceable.

    It's great to be able to look at the messages that made me happy in 2012.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,053
    kjh said:

    @HYUFD That is an excellent, concise and clear post. I have no idea about the ranking but happy to assume you are right for the point I want to make, which is that some wish to muddy the water by focusing on those that were worse than us.

    a) Although some were worse, it does not excuse what we did.

    b) We focus on what we did and less on what others did because that is our history.

    Our only defence is that it wasn't our atrocities but our ancestors and that times were different then.
    Portuguese, yes, obviously. Are there estimates somewhere for the Romans’ total?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 33,890
    "Steven Barrett
    The Colston verdict is the triumph of values, not law
    And politics is for parliament, not the courts"

    https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-colston-verdict-is-the-triumph-of-values-not-law
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,200

    Portuguese, yes, obviously. Are there estimates somewhere for the Romans’ total?
    Between 5-10 million.
    https://www.britishmuseum.org/exhibitions/nero-man-behind-myth/slavery-ancient-rome#:~:text=Scholars estimate about 10% (but,and ten million were enslaved.

    The Vikings also obviously had a few too but much lower down the league table
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,644
    MrEd said:

    Oh I do.

    I think the Oxford definition says "very useful term for those on the left to defend a position which is logically inconsistent with their loudly proclaimed beliefs. For example, if one is asked "why are you not protesting outside the Saudi Embassy if you are campaigning for gay rights", you shout "whataboutery"

    It is why I respect a lot people like Peter Thatchell a lot - he's not scared to be accused of being racist, Islamophobic etc etc in the support of his cause.

    A parallel meaning of 'whataboutery' is the form of argument which responds to a question or criticism X by ignoring it and saying 'what about Y'. This is a valuable though intellectually worthless form for both left and right, and for PMQs, and between schoolchildren of all ages.



  • eekeek Posts: 29,394
    edited January 2022

    It is an utterly seamless process on iPhones.

    Just back up to iCloud and switch over to your new phone and there it is.

    As an aside the quick start transferring entire iPhones to a new one is brilliant.

    I transferred 400GB in around an hour, all the apps and stuff worked straight away.
    The issue wasn't that Boris got a new phone, it was he got a new number.

    Was it Boris whose number was discovered to be in the public domain due to putting it on a post or article years ago or was that another Minister / MP? The timing fits perfectly for Boris needing to rapidly getting a new phone number.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976
    Selebian said:

    Just need an inialism (like IANAL) to preface each statement:
    IDCATASEBAGAATAATBPSALGTATBAWSSAAATT* but Colston was a wrong'un, wasn't he?

    Simple :wink:

    *I duly condemn all tyranny and slavery everywhere by any group at any time and acknowledge that bad people sometimes also did good things and their bad actions were sometimes seen as acceptable at the time
    Just IDC will do, thanks.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 33,890
    tlg86 said:

    On the subject of juries, can someone explain why jurors in the US talk to the press after a case? Do they get good money for doing so? I can't recall ever seeing something like that here. Is that because it is a criminal offence here when it is not in the US?

    It's not allowed here. Good thing in my opinion.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,394
    HYUFD said:

    Between 5-10 million.
    https://www.britishmuseum.org/exhibitions/nero-man-behind-myth/slavery-ancient-rome#:~:text=Scholars estimate about 10% (but,and ten million were enslaved.

    The Vikings also obviously had a few too but much lower down the league table
    When we are looking at historical numbers surely we should be comparing it as a percentage of the total human population at the time rather than headline figures

    Note - I know that doesn't help us that much...
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,282
    eek said:

    The issue wasn't that Boris got a new phone, it was he got a new number.

    Was it Boris whose number was discovered to be in the public domain due to putting it on a post or article years ago or was that another Minister / MP? The timing fits perfectly for Boris needing to rapidly getting a new phone number.
    According to Guido 15 years, but a (then) recent PopBitch article forced the change.
  • Now acting as liaison trying to fix this customs issue. Chain is Customs agent > Customer > Me > Factory team > Haulier. Information that appears on one screen doesn't appear on the same system on a different screen. Haulier doesn't seem to understand the system just changed and even if they did the paperwork they should have they don't have - but HMRC *may* have.

    Certainly a boon for the UK that we removed all that EU red tape.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,186
    edited January 2022
    eek said:

    The issue wasn't that Boris got a new phone, it was he got a new number.

    Was it Boris whose number was discovered to be in the public domain due to putting it on a post or article years ago or was that another Minister / MP? The timing fits perfectly for Boris needing to rapidly getting a new phone number.
    Yes it was Boris, even I had Boris Johnson's number going back to 2012.

    I've transferred numbers on WhatsApp without losing previous messages, it gives you an option the moment you put a new sim in, or you can just go into the WhatsApp settings.


  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,430
    eek said:

    The issue wasn't that Boris got a new phone, it was he got a new number.

    Was it Boris whose number was discovered to be in the public domain due to putting it on a post or article years ago or was that another Minister / MP? The timing fits perfectly for Boris needing to rapidly getting a new phone number.
    People at a certain level of celebrity change their phone numbers regularly.

    Source - was a member of Home House for a number of years and interacted with a number of A-listers.
  • eek said:

    The issue wasn't that Boris got a new phone, it was he got a new number.

    Was it Boris whose number was discovered to be in the public domain due to putting it on a post or article years ago or was that another Minister / MP? The timing fits perfectly for Boris needing to rapidly getting a new phone number.
    Sure - he needed a number not known to the public. So he gets a new number and transfers things across that need transferring across and leaves the things that aren't. If some of the contacts were via WhatsApp those people wouldn't have his new number and couldn't contact, but he can still access everything on his account.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,295
    Mr. Eagles, but this presents a difficult conundrum: is Boris Johnson more incompetent than he is deceitful, or vice versa?
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,863

    I've transferred numbers on WhatsApp without losing previous messages, it gives you an option the moment you put a new sim in, or you can just go into the WhatsApp settings.


    All I can say it didn't work for me. Believe that, or believe it not.

    And I am reasonably tech-savvy.
  • Mr. Eagles, but this presents a difficult conundrum: is Boris Johnson more incompetent than he is deceitful, or vice versa?

    As somebody who knows him well says it comes down to Boris Johnson being lazy then when he's in a mess he lies and rushes things and act incompetently.

    The stress of the latter makes him lazy as he needs a rest.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,291
    MrEd said:

    Haha Kinablu, ok I will. It wasn't criminal because the jury said it wasn't.

    And yes I promise.
    ... said it wasn't having heard the evidence and considered the context.

    But, ok, good enough. Your response to any future posts of mine which are critical of our colonialism and its legacy will not be to accuse me of turning a blind eye to other things.

    You'll have to come up with a different line of crap. This is progress.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 25,683
    Nigelb said:

    Agreed - I've previously recommended Snyder's book on the subject.
    But there was a cold political rationale to the Ukraine genocide, which I think was absent from Nazi ideology.
    I think that the expansion east qualifies as cold political rationale.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,394
    edited January 2022

    Yes it was Boris, even I had Boris Johnson's number going back to 2012.

    I've transferred numbers on WhatsApp without losing previous messages, it gives you an option the moment you put a new sim in, or you can just go into the WhatsApp settings.


    Do you think Boris knew what he was doing with WhatsApp?

    As you say it gives you an option to do X and Y. Boris picked the option that looked best for him (which was probably the one that lost the messages given that he was trying to fix the issue people knowing his number)

    I used to daily (when doing support type work) deal with people who pick the incorrect option because they didn't understand what the question was actually asking them...
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,000

    People at a certain level of celebrity change their phone numbers regularly.

    Source - was a member of Home House for a number of years and interacted with a number of A-listers.
    This is probably wrong, but the website gives off an upmarket swingers club vibe.
  • All I can say it didn't work for me. Believe that, or believe it not.

    And I am reasonably tech-savvy.
    I doubt you are tech-savvy, the constant attacks on Apple is my evidence.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,053
    HYUFD said:

    Between 5-10 million.
    https://www.britishmuseum.org/exhibitions/nero-man-behind-myth/slavery-ancient-rome#:~:text=Scholars estimate about 10% (but,and ten million were enslaved.

    The Vikings also obviously had a few too but much lower down the league table
    Thanks. What’s the number for Britain?* I’ve seen 3.1 million enslaved people being shipped out of Africa by the British. However, the descendants of slaves were also enslaved, so the total number of people enslaved by the British Empire was greater.

    * During the period of the transatlantic slave trade and imperial possessions in the Americas. That is, not counting earlier periods of slavery, e.g. the Anglo-Saxons had slaves before the Normans abolished slavery.
  • FF43 said:

    Aficionados of the State of the Union may find this piece interesting. Don't necessarily agree with it - muddling through can be the most effective approach - food for thought nevertheless on the possible imminent demise of the Union.

    https://mobile.twitter.com/TomMcTague/status/1478635488693080068

    It was interesting if overly long. I'm assuming the demise of Britishness is a matter of some regret for the author? I thought the point that Britain is not a traditional country like most others was well made. Intriguing to speculate on who the person of Austro-Hungarian descent with the public profile who feared the same fate (as A-H) for the UK.

    Oddly half the accompanying photos were of Scottish subjects which didn't really reflect the space Scotland took up in the essay, or even really the bits of Scotland to which the author travelled.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,586
    FF43 said:

    Aficionados of the State of the Union may find this piece interesting. Don't necessarily agree with it - muddling through can be the most effective approach - food for thought nevertheless on the possible imminent demise of the Union.

    https://mobile.twitter.com/TomMcTague/status/1478635488693080068

    Intderesting (though, possibly for space reasons, missing the point about the SNP not intervening in English domestic legislation, though presumably EVEL had been scrapped by the time he toured?).
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,153
    pigeon said:

    On topic: The evidence of the last few weeks suggests that Omicron is essentially unstoppable at the population level, so there's no longer any point in trying to push the refusers into accepting the jabs (as a means of suppression and, by extension, a device to minimise the need for harmful restrictions to be imposed on other people, so as to alleviate the pressure on healthcare systems.) Indeed, it's ripping through the population in many countries, including both the UK and Italy, so fast that there is no time to offer reasonable protection to that portion of the remaining unvaccinated population who are going to catch Covid over the next few weeks, even if they change their minds. And if there's no longer a significant benefit to society to be had from imposing vaccination upon the remaining holdouts, then should governments be seeking to do it?

    I think there could be an argument for locking down the unvaccinated if that would slow the spread amongst those most likely to need hospital treatment, at least enough to keep the health system functioning. It kind of depends on what measures you would need to make a difference, but "unstoppable" is not the same as "unslowdownable". The first weeks of Omicron in Germany seem to show a doubling rate nearer 4 days, compared to the 2 days or so that was reported in the first weeks of Omicron in the UK (not sure if that held up?). If measures for unvaccinated push some people to get vaccinated that can only help, though I agree it's getting a bit late to give them a good level of protection.

    Meanwhile, Bremen, which has easily the highest official vaccination rate of any state in Germany, now also has easily the highest 7-day incidence rate - 713.7 (per 100000/7-days) compared to nationally 285.9

    Partly due to Omicron becoming dominant earlier in Bremen than in some other parts of Germany (probably because close to the Netherlands and Denmark). Probably partly due to the testing and reporting of testing in Bremen being less disrupted during the holidays than in most of Germany.

    Of course Bremen is small - it's still "only" 1330 new cases reported yesterday, and zero new deaths. But it's a good indication of where much of the rest of Germany will be sometime next week.

  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,291
    Sandpit said:

    Yes, it’s part of the system of trial by jury, that occasionally the twelve good men might choose to do their own thing, contrary to the evidence in front of them. It’s an important part of the system, that they have that option.
    No! Not contrary to the evidence. The evidence included the context. The context was key because the act was not in dispute. This wasn't an OJ Simpson type affair.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,863

    Did you back up all chats first?
    Yep. In fact, I had several backups that I'd made in the previous three years that I'd had that phone (*). I could create backups from the old phone, but Whatsapp could not find them on the new, despite them being visible on the new phone. Part of me wonders if that was part of the problem. I didn't try for too long, as I don't use WhatsApp that much. I *think* I'd clicked all the correct permissions.

    (*) Yes, TSE, phones can remain usable for more than six months. ;)
  • eek said:

    Do you think Boris knew what he was doing with WhatsApp?

    As you say it gives you an option to do X and Y? Boris picked the option that looked best for him (which was probably the one that lost the messages given that he was trying to fix the issue people knowing his number)
    When you swap numbers, and you don't go that route I posted above, it gets you several warnings that your previous number is no longer registered to this phone, would you want to transfer over otherwise that chats and media will be permanently deleted, you, from memory, have to click that alert three times.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    kinabalu said:

    No! Not contrary to the evidence. The evidence included the context. The context was key because the act was not in dispute. This wasn't an OJ Simpson type affair.
    Plus and also you are only guilty of CD if you do stuff "without lawful excuse" so the jury is entitled to think there was no crime cos there was a lawful ex
  • Lest we forget this government has a history about lying about losing Whatsapp messages.

    The former health minister Lord Bethell admitted deleting texts and WhatsApp messages related to coronavirus testing contracts because he mistakenly thought there would be back-ups, disclosures show.

    Bethell, who had been appointed in March last year, was sacked in September’s reshuffle amid an investigation by the information commissioner into the use of private email by health ministers.

    Official guidance says ministers should use government systems, and if they use private channels, should ensure a record of these is provided to their department.

    Details of his personal phone use have emerged as part of a High Court challenge related to the award of £90 million coronavirus testing contracts made by the Good Law Project.

    In a witness statement signed by Bethell as part of the proceedings, he explained that three previous explanations he had given as to why messages could be produced to the court had been mistaken.

    He had apparently claimed that he could not produce them because the handset had been “lost”, according to letters from the government’s legal department. A few days later, Bethell said instead that his phone was “broken” or “defective”.

    Finally, in a meeting with lawyers, he said that was wrong, and he had given the phone to a member of his family.


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/covid-contracts-lord-bethell-thought-deleted-messages-were-backed-up-gpd6tf65j
  • The BBC have a report on Serbs reaction to novax being detained along with this photo of a mural....I thought that Ronaldo statue was bad...

    https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/live-experience/cps/624/cpsprodpb/vivo/live/images/2022/1/6/5bed7c8a-59b8-4253-8650-7b6942439f51.jpg
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005
    Covid anecdote. My mother who is on the clinically vulnerable has said she has been contacted to arrange getting an in-home PCR test kit to has available to use if she gets symptoms. She believes the idea is that if a positive result is shown that they will be immediately sent one of the new Covid anti-viral treatments to start taking. This seems like a very sensible system to setup in my view and likely have a massive impact on reducing hospitalisations.

    Also from the same source some German Covid anecdata from a friend of hers who is a teacher in Germany. This friend is really into alternative therapies and has been against Covid vaccinations. She has now been "forced against her will" to have one due to not being able to do almost anything without having been jabbed. She also reports there have been scuffles in her school between the vaccination and un-vaccinated secondary school kids.
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578
    kinabalu said:

    ... said it wasn't having heard the evidence and considered the context.

    But, ok, good enough. Your response to any future posts of mine which are critical of our colonialism and its legacy will not be to accuse me of turning a blind eye to other things.

    You'll have to come up with a different line of crap. This is progress.
    Deal. And I expect not to be called a supporter of insurrection or even an anti-vaxxer as I was by one poster because I said I would have voted for Trump. Fair enough?

  • Lest we forget this government has a history about lying about losing Whatsapp messages.

    The former health minister Lord Bethell admitted deleting texts and WhatsApp messages related to coronavirus testing contracts because he mistakenly thought there would be back-ups, disclosures show.

    Bethell, who had been appointed in March last year, was sacked in September’s reshuffle amid an investigation by the information commissioner into the use of private email by health ministers.

    Official guidance says ministers should use government systems, and if they use private channels, should ensure a record of these is provided to their department.

    Details of his personal phone use have emerged as part of a High Court challenge related to the award of £90 million coronavirus testing contracts made by the Good Law Project.

    In a witness statement signed by Bethell as part of the proceedings, he explained that three previous explanations he had given as to why messages could be produced to the court had been mistaken.

    He had apparently claimed that he could not produce them because the handset had been “lost”, according to letters from the government’s legal department. A few days later, Bethell said instead that his phone was “broken” or “defective”.

    Finally, in a meeting with lawyers, he said that was wrong, and he had given the phone to a member of his family.


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/covid-contracts-lord-bethell-thought-deleted-messages-were-backed-up-gpd6tf65j

    'This is government by burner phone and an absolute racket'
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,947
    edited January 2022
    The problem is that this Omicron picture is similar but *bigger*.
    Before we get ONS regional prevalences (tomorrow), reported cases per 100k will be an imperfect proxy, but they suggest the North is going past London's peak.
    Hospitals there are buckling because it's worse.
    (2/2).

    https://twitter.com/PaulMainwood/status/1479075865237594114?s=20

    The NW has constantly been hard hit.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,256
    Dura_Ace said:

    Bacon is practically poison anyway. Leaving aside the atrocity of treating the animal like shit and killing it.
    Agreed on all counts, which is why I don't eat it and buy it only after extremely pronounced lobbying.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,394

    When you swap numbers, and you don't go that route I posted above, it gets you several warnings that your previous number is no longer registered to this phone, would you want to transfer over otherwise that chats and media will be permanently deleted, you, from memory, have to click that alert three times.
    Once again, we are talking about a technophobe (Boris) being asked a question that he doesn't understand?

    Have you never had to spend 30 minutes using multiple different analogies / examples / stories to get a client to understand something that is perfectly obvious to you and everyone else in the room?

    That client is Boris.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,947
    edited January 2022
    AlistairM said:

    Covid anecdote. My mother who is on the clinically vulnerable has said she has been contacted to arrange getting an in-home PCR test kit to has available to use if she gets symptoms. She believes the idea is that if a positive result is shown that they will be immediately sent one of the new Covid anti-viral treatments to start taking. This seems like a very sensible system to setup in my view and likely have a massive impact on reducing hospitalisations.

    My elderly parents have been also contacted over this.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,256

    'This is government by burner phone and an absolute racket'
    Ooh can we re-litigate the great burner phone debate?
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578

    They were charged with criminal damage. A due process (trial by jury) found them not guilty. Ergo, whatever they did was not criminal damage.
    Correct - I should have prefixed my comment by saying "PS I believe..."
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,291

    On Djokovic, I see it was discussed here earlier but I didn't notice the crucial detail that I heard on the radio mentioned. Apologies if I missed it, but..

    The State rule for domestic travel to Victoria is that you can have been previously infected, rather than vaccinated. Apparently all that Djokovic has is "proof" that he's been infected.

    The Federal rule for entering Australia has no such exemption. You have to prove that you are unable to be vaccinated. It's quite clear that any State rules are in addition.

    "Proof that you cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons when coming to Australia
    If you are coming to Australia and have a medical contraindication recorded in the Australian Immunisation Register (AIR) you can show an Australian COVID-19 digital certificate to airline staff. You can otherwise show your immunisation history statement.

    If you do not have your medical contraindication recorded in the AIR you will need to show airline staff a medical certificate that indicates you are unable to be vaccinated with a COVID-19 vaccine because of a medical condition. The medical certificate must be in English and include the following information:

    your name (this must match your travel identification documents)
    date of medical consultation and details of your medical practitioner
    details that clearly acknowledge that you have a medical condition which means you cannot receive a COVID-19 vaccination (vaccination is contraindicated).
    Airlines are responsible for ensuring your proof meets these requirements.

    People who have received non-TGA approved or recognised vaccines should not be certified in this category and cannot be treated as vaccinated for the purposes of their travel.

    You should check any requirements, particularly quarantine and post-arrival testing requirements, in the state or territory to which you are travelling as this will impact your travel arrangements.

    If you are planning on traveling onwards to or through a different state or territory when you arrive in Australia, you need to check domestic travel restrictions. States and territories can apply their own travel restrictions.

    You are responsible for complying with travel restrictions and requirements that apply to you. Please note: proof that you cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons is separate to a Commissioner’s travel exemption."
    https://covid19.homeaffairs.gov.au/vaccinated-travellers#toc-6

    I'm sure they won't let him in. He might be able to sue his airline.

    My reading is the Federal has overrode the State in this one case for political reasons. Djokovic is getting special treatment. Special *adverse* treatment. It's a misuse of power imo but I'd think it has sufficient technical validity to stand. We'll see. It's potentially a big problem for Djokovic longer term because countries other than Oz might take a similar approach.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,394

    My elderly parents have been also contacted over this.
    I was wondering how they were going to get the tests done in time to allow treatment to start early enough.

    And that seems like a very sensible plan.

    take LFT test, if positive take PCR test and place in post. result next day go and collect anti-virals.
  • eek said:

    I was wondering how they were going to get the tests done in time to allow treatment to start early enough.

    And that seems like a very sensible plan.

    take LFT test, if positive take PCR test and place in post. result next day go and collect anti-virals.
    If I remember what my folks said over Whatsapp ( I didn't see them over Christmas), your test is sent via special priority post, with the plan being exactly this.
  • Ooh can we re-litigate the great burner phone debate?
    The combination of La Rayner and burner phones will cause various PB Tories to explode in a great ejaculation of rage and, well, something else.
  • kinabalu said:

    My reading is the Federal has overrode the State in this one case for political reasons. Djokovic is getting special treatment. Special *adverse* treatment. It's a misuse of power imo but I'd think it has sufficient technical validity to stand. We'll see. It's potentially a big problem for Djokovic longer term because countries other than Oz might take a similar approach.
    The Australian lawyer on the radio earlier was very clear on this: Federal always overrides State.

    Politicians will talk tough for political reasons, but the decision will have nothing to do with the politics.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,617
    edited January 2022

    I'm too busy to do more than occasionally dive in and out, but is much of the debate about Juries because of the Colson case?

    Juries can acquit for whatever reason they like. Its a demonstrable fact that the 4 tits pushed the statue into the water, but the jury have decided that it doesn't constitute criminal damage.

    Isn't that the whole point of a jury system? Or can we now expect Priti Vacant to try and abolish trial by jury? Mind you, with both mega cuts and Covid the legal system has defacto done so with so big a backlog...

    Your middle paragraph sums up my position entirely.
    I might have added a weary sigh, but that's all.

    *Edit* - Why the weary sigh, I ask myself. Clearly not because I'm keen for a big statue of a slaver in Bristol. Nor, if I'm honest, because I'd have rather the council had taken it down themselves - that is true, but doesn't elicit a weary sigh. The weary sigh is because the four tits are just so unbearably pleased with themselves. And you can't jail someone for that, no matter how much you'd like to.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,837

    The problem is that this Omicron picture is similar but *bigger*.
    Before we get ONS regional prevalences (tomorrow), reported cases per 100k will be an imperfect proxy, but they suggest the North is going past London's peak.

    The ONS figures for London that were reported suggested that infections were still increasing in the most recent week sampled, which is completely contrary to the test data, which show numbers plummeting in the corresponding week. Probably too early to show effects of mixing at Christmas and any post-Christmas changes of behaviour.

    Let's hope the decision-makers have access to better data than the public, but I wouldn't bet on it.

  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,103
    Dura_Ace said:

    Bacon is practically poison anyway. Leaving aside the atrocity of treating the animal like shit and killing it.
    There was a very bizarre post on here yesterday from someone saying that a good reason for leaving the EU was Australian beef which was so delicious it was worth ignoring their lower animal welfare standards.

    That I'm afraid is what we Remainers are dealing with!
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,430

    The problem is that this Omicron picture is similar but *bigger*.
    Before we get ONS regional prevalences (tomorrow), reported cases per 100k will be an imperfect proxy, but they suggest the North is going past London's peak.
    Hospitals there are buckling because it's worse.
    (2/2).

    https://twitter.com/PaulMainwood/status/1479075865237594114?s=20

    The NW has constantly been hard hit.

    So far.....

    image
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,766

    It was interesting if overly long. I'm assuming the demise of Britishness is a matter of some regret for the author? I thought the point that Britain is not a traditional country like most others was well made. Intriguing to speculate on who the person of Austro-Hungarian descent with the public profile who feared the same fate (as A-H) for the UK.

    Oddly half the accompanying photos were of Scottish subjects which didn't really reflect the space Scotland took up in the essay, or even really the bits of Scotland to which the author travelled.
    I would regret the passing of the Union. I actually have some empathy with those that mourned the loss of the Austro-Hungarian empire. I can see myself being that person.
  • The former Scottish National party MP Margaret Ferrier will stand trial in August accused of travelling from Glasgow to London in September 2020 knowing she had symptoms of coronavirus and wilfully exposing others to the risk of infection.

    Ferrier pleaded not guilty to the single charge on Thursday morning at Glasgow sheriff court.

    The Rutherglen and Hamilton West MP, who referred herself to the police and the parliamentary commissioner for standards , was immediately suspended from her party after the alleged rule-breaking came to light.

    She has clung to her position despite vociferous and ongoing calls for her to quit, including from the first minister and SNP leader, Nicola Sturgeon.


    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/jan/06/ex-snp-mp-margaret-ferrier-stand-trial-alleged-covid-breach?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,617

    So far.....

    image
    Hospitalisations in London appearsto have peaked and is declining.

    Hospitalisations in the North West appears to be surpassing last winter's peak.

    Which is quite surprising - the impression I got from London was that pretty much everyone had it, but it certainly doesn't feel like that here. 'A lot of it about', certainly. But no worse than any cold in any winter.

    But perhaps that's because I don't know that many old people, and it's considerably worse for them.
  • FF43 said:

    I would regret the passing of the Union. I actually have some empathy with those that mourned the loss of the Austro-Hungarian empire. I can see myself being that person.
    Mournful regret is quite a Scottish trait, I have a fair bit of it myself.
    I would regret your and others' regret, but I'm afraid the 2014 referendum and subsequent events have pretty much burnt out all regret I might have for the Union itself.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,967

    Agreed on all counts, which is why I don't eat it and buy it only after extremely pronounced lobbying.
    You’ve gone up 110% in my estimation OLB that you feed your kids bacon. You are a truly balanced one of them.

    Everything Dura Ace said is true - but it’s also true bacon is delicious. 😋
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,103
    Grant Shapps wants to bring in legislation to override juries!

    Who'd have thought.....
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,967
    Cookie said:

    Hospitalisations in London appearsto have peaked and is declining.

    Hospitalisations in the North West appears to be surpassing last winter's peak.

    Which is quite surprising - the impression I got from London was that pretty much everyone had it, but it certainly doesn't feel like that here. 'A lot of it about', certainly. But no worse than any cold in any winter.

    But perhaps that's because I don't know that many old people, and it's considerably worse for them.
    Younger v older population centres?

    Terrace Housing?

    Bingo? Whippets? Timothy Taylor’s Landlord?
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,766
    kjh said:

    OK I am going to ask what is probably an idiotic question but I'm struggling to get this gas prices issue. I understand why it happened in the first place but we have had it for a few months now and gas is a commodity type product and not (I believe) something that has a huge timeline in changing supply volumes so why is it still an issue? I appreciate the UK storage issue, but the price issue isn't unique to the UK.

    AIUI gas prices increased worldwide as Asia and Europe competed for LNG as the world restarted industrial boilers coming out of a Covid lull. Normally Europe would revert to Russian gas and leave the more expensive LNG to Asia in that situation. For reasons that are not quite clear, Western Europe is not buying Russian gas on the spot markets and only taking contracted amounts. Is that because Russia is deliberately withholding gas beyond what it is contracted to supply, or is it because the market price of that gas is too high and Western Europe is refusing to buy and instead is running down reserves?

    Despite not consuming much Russian gas the UK is in the same market as the rest of Europe for alternative supplies - Norwegian gas and LNG - and so pays the same prices.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,967

    Younger v older population centres?

    Terrace Housing?

    Bingo? Whippets? Timothy Taylor’s Landlord?
    Scandalous really Timothy Taylor’s Landlord got a whopping PPE contract
This discussion has been closed.