Howdy, Stranger!

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

The French election – the fight to be in the final two – politicalbetting.com

123457»

Comments

  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,597
    malcolmg said:

    He needs to be locked up in a dark room and key thrown away.
    I would keep the key and throw creepy Alyn Smith away.
  • philiphphiliph Posts: 4,705
    Pro_Rata said:

    That's rather too sweeping.

    Chemicals always = bad
    Using double the land to grow the same crops and fertilise with less controllable portions of poo always = good

    There's a million nuances in between and "most natural" and "best for environment" cannot be treated as synonyms.
    Sweeping can be a feature if brief.
    There are numerous alternatives to traditional fertilizers commercially available to agriculture and horticulture now.
    Cost of product and cost of application varies. Some add increases of disease resistance to certain crops reducing need for fungicide.
    If this encourages more innovation and research into an already burgeoning industry in alternatives it is nothing but positive.
  • MISTYMISTY Posts: 1,594
    kamski said:

    It's actually a very easy problem to solve - just limit the size of donations. Russian oligarchs buying influence of course is dodgy, but they are mostly probably buying influence in favour of the super-rich, like other big donors.
    We underestimate the difference between the way property rights are traditionally regarded in Britain versus most other countries.

    You could argue that Britain, essentially, has centuries of upholding the rights of the property owner.

    Wealthy people who live in regimes where everything you have can be taken off you by the government or its agents if they want it, notice this stuff.


  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,213
    This thread has stopped broadcasting in the UK
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,094

    I know about the court case, but this is about his accepting Putin's shilling.
    He sells them his programmes, unlike the Tories and many others who get it for favours rendered. Big difference, are you actually saying that no member of the public should ever have any interaction with any Russian business, yet are happy that teh Tories are getting wheelbarrows from them and selling them golden passports. Strange thinking.
  • They’re asking for “banning” not “referring to OFCOM” - which is what Dorries has done.
    Yes. And on what grounds would OFCOM withdraw its license and thus ban it? Because it is in breach of its license terms! Which is what they will now go after. And frankly seems self-evident if the stuff people are reporting on Twitter is true.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,536
    Cookie said:

    There was a distinction between serfs and peasants, though, no? Serfdom had - surely - been abolished by the twentieth century? Serfs were basically slaves, albeit slaves who had the privileges of being able to be subject to taxes and conscription.

    I've read a couple of histories of Russia, though some time ago now, so I may be misremebering. They may as well have been subtitled '1000 years of sheer unrelenting bloody misery for everyone'.
    Serfdom was abolished in 1861, but the final part of it - the redemption payments for the land peasants worked - was only finally cancelled in 1906.

    So it did just about make it to the 20th century.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468

    Agree that it’s simplistic to associate differences in excess deaths with any one single NPI - but it’s increasingly clear that there have been more excess deaths in Scotland than England - The Times suggesting that poorer underlying health may be an important factor:

    Scotland has experienced the highest number of extra deaths from all causes during the pandemic compared with other parts of the UK, according to Times analysis. New calculations show the rise in the number of people who died, compared with the five years before the pandemic, was significantly greater in Scotland than England.

    With an average of 23.9 excess deaths per million people every week since the spring of 2020, the surge in mortality was worse than Wales on 22.9, England on 18.6 and Northern Ireland on 18.8. As mortality rates and hospital admissions from Covid are lower north of the border, it is thought that people dying from other illnesses are behind the toll.


    Which makes one wonder whether greater focus on control of COVID in Scotland will be helpful in the long run.

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/c0ae0e80-8935-11ec-a837-0153f5f4adaf?shareToken=80aa1914a8bcc96a2fc6cce092529c56
    You clearly did not understand my post. I am talking about what, at an epistemological level, can be known and what is completely beyond the possibility of being known, rather than theorized.

    We simply cannot tell whether the difference is due to the measures taken, or is simply random, or is simply due to the sensitivity of the system to initial conditions. This is simply not possible to discern, no matter the data or the quality of the analysis.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,675
    edited February 2022
    From the Guardian blog:

    One of the most powerful speeches in the debate came from Liam Byrne, the Labour former chief secretary to the Treasury, who mocked Liz Truss’s claim in interviews this morning that the Russians who have given money to the Conservative party are not linked to the Putin regime in Moscow. (See 9.32am.) Saying that he intended to offer the Tories a vetting service, Byrne listed seven donors who he implied were suspect.

    Lubov Chernukhin

    Byrne said Chernukin had donated £2.1m to the Tories. He said her husband Vladimir (the fomer Russian deputy finance minister) received £8m from Suleiman Kerimov, who was sanctioned by the US Treasury in 2018. Byrne said the transfer to Vladimir came on 29 April 2016 “mysteriously just before a donation of £1.9m to the Conservative party”.

    Alexander Temerko

    Byrne said Temerko was someone who had “forged a career at the top of the arms industry” and who had connections at the highest levels in the Kremlin. Byrne said Temerko was a deputy chairman of the Yukos oil comany but “somehow mysteriously escaped the purge of is colleagues”. He has donated £747,000 to the party, Byrne said.

    Viktor Fedotov

    Byrne said Temerko had been working very closely with Fedotov, who was a director of Aquind and a former head of a subsidiary of Lukoil. In the Pandora Papers Fedotov was revealed as man who made fortunes in the company in the mid 2000s “around the time it was alleged to be syphoning funds from the Russian state monopoly company Transneft”, Byrne said.

    Dmitry Leus

    Byrne said Leus had donated £54,000. According to Daily Mail, Leus was found guilty of money laundering and jailed in Russia in 2004, Byrne said. Byrne said that Leus said the prosecution was politcally motivated, and the conviction was overturned. Byrne went on:

    Here is the mystery. He also donated to the Prince’s Foundation. The Prince’s Foundation has decided to return Mr Leus’s money. The Conservative party, you will be amazed to hear, has not.

    Mohamed Amersi

    Byrne said Amersi and his wife had given £793,000 to the Conservative party. He said Amersi had reportedly been involved in “one of the biggest corruption scandals in Europe”, which involved $220m being paid to a Gibraltar-based company owned by the daughter of the president of Uzbekistan. Byrne said Amersi says his donations came from UK profits. But the FT said he received £4m from a company he knew was secretly owned by a powerful Russian, President Putin’s telecoms minister, Byrne said.

    Murtaza Lakhani

    Byrne said Lakhani’s firm, Mercentile and Maritime, has donated £500,000 to the party. Byrne said Bloomberg has reported that Lakhani made made large parts of his fortune by channelling $6bn from Russian oil giant Rosneft to Kurdistan.

    David Burnside

    Byrne said Burnside’s firm has donated £200,000 to the party. Byrne, a former Ulster Unionist MP, boasts of his links to senior figures in the Kremlin and has introduced several to senior Tory figures, Byrne said.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    It is my eldest's 29th birthday today.

    Never in my wildest dreams would I have imagined that at much the same age as I was when he came along, he would be looking at the obliteration of a nation state by an aggressive power in Europe.

    Awful. Truly awful.

    I have such happy memories of Kiev.

    It does feel, in the past few years, as if we are returning to a world of authoritarian aggression and democratic weakness more familiar to my parents and grand-parents when young.

    I really fear that if Putin is successful in Ukraine he will not stop there.



This discussion has been closed.