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Punters think the Ukraine invasion will help Johnson’s survival chances – politicalbetting.com

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  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    MaxPB said:

    I'm sorry SO, this is all a result of German short termism. You would count Germany as one of our real friends and a key ally. I wouldn't. They are nothing more than a mercantilist nation who would sell their nation's grandmothers to continue selling dishwashers to China. The coalition of willing democratic nations to take on authoritarianism globally is very small and it doesn't include Germany.
    Also their decision to close their nuclear powers stations, thus making the country reliant on Russian gas.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,800
    edited February 2022
    Cookie said:

    Farage is a puzzle though. There are two broad strands of anti-federalism - the libertarian strand (too many rules) and the - for want of a better term right now - nationalist (too many foreigners). Farage, from memory, started very much on the first, though he did harness a lot of the second. But then he moved on to a pro-Trump position - which if I were seeking to explain would do so only through him enjoying being a contrarian* - and then he's moved on to a pro-Putin position. Which I'd struggle to explain at all. Certainly it's not consistent with his initial too-many-rules anti-federalism.
    Perhaps someone's given him a big bag of money. I hear that can sometimes change a mind.

    *surely he couldn't be OUR contrarian?
    With 'controversialists' in politics and the media it can be hard to disentangle what they truly believe from what they judge to be the best way to generate money and influence and exposure for themselves.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296
    I know Starmer is utterly useless. Nonetheless his speech was head and shoulders more Churchillian than Johnson's. Mrs May too every inch the Statesman.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,454

    Have you been to Northern Ireland? Do you know why the schools there are segregated by religion?
    Yes of course. But that was my original point. I've just had a conversation with an Ukrainian builder who gave me the background. As you say what he described was something very similar to Northern Ireland but according to him who was born in 1975 there was no animosity between Ukrainian Russians and Ukrainians. They happened to have Russian schools and some of the older folk spoke only Russian.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,835

    Is that Schroeder on the left?
    And Francois Fillon to Schroeder's left. He's now on the board of Russia's largest petrochemical producer Sibur.

    https://www.reuters.com/markets/asia/former-french-pm-fillon-joins-board-russias-sibur-2021-12-24/
  • kinabalu said:

    With 'controversialists' in politics and the media it can be hard to disentangle what they truly believe from what they judge to be the best way to generate money and influence and exposure for themselves.
    Yea, I reckon a lot of the time they get a thrill out of being out of the mainstream. It makes them think that it makes them look cool or intelligent, when often they are neither. Corbyn and Farage both fit that kind of needy psychology
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    kle4 said:

    No fly zone looks tricky. No way to get that without force I'd assume.

    I'd never heard of SWIFT until a few weeks ago. Is it that big a deal?
    it is. How interbank payments are made
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    edited February 2022
    Roger said:

    Yes of course. But that was my original point. I've just had a conversation with an Ukrainian builder who gave me the background. As you say what he described was something very similar to Northern Ireland but according to him who was born in 1975 there was no animosity between Ukrainian Russians and Ukrainians. They happened to have Russian schools and some of the older folk spoke only Russian.
    By the 70s both sides in the Ukraine felt equally oppressed by the Moscow. Mostly.

    But there was also an element of "It was equal" for the Russians and "It was especially shit for us" for the Ukrainians.

    EDIT: Bit like you get Protestants who say their was never any trouble when they were growing up in the 50s....
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    Hmmm....

    image
    Yes which it is why I find it worrying that "in hospital" has done this



    I would have expected "In hospital" to have kept heading downwards.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    Andy_JS said:

    There's no evidence that Russia successfully exerted any influence on any British election/referendum or any American election.
    There is plenty of evidence that Russia influenced elections and referenda. What is missing is evidence that that influence changed any outcomes.
  • Roger said:

    Yes of course. But that was my original point. I've just had a conversation with an Ukrainian builder who gave me the background. As you say what he described was something very similar to Northern Ireland but according to him who was born in 1975 there was no animosity between Ukrainian Russians and Ukrainians. They happened to have Russian schools and some of the older folk spoke only Russian.
    There's also the point that a lot of Ukrainians speak Russian because it was the language of the Soviet Union. And in Kyiv, for example, there were a lot of people from other Republics (eg Georgia) and Russian is the language they had in common.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    TimT said:

    it is. How interbank payments are made
    If you have modern bank, with a decent phone app, you can look up the SWIFT details for your own bank account.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296
    Andy_JS said:

    There's no evidence that Russia successfully exerted any influence on any British election/referendum or any American election.
    It's the way you tell 'em!
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,918
    edited February 2022
    MaxPB said:

    No, it is Germany. Germany decided to allow NS2 to go ahead, Germany pushed the UK out of the EU, Germany shut down its nuclear power completely unnecessarily, Germany allowed itself to rely on piped gas from Russia and allowed for anti-LNG propaganda to deter opening any LNG terminals. German energy policy is an absolute disaster zone, it's worse than ours by some distance which should make you understand just how bad it is.

    Your automatic assumption that EU = good and UK = bad is the root cause of why you want to absolve Germany of this. They are the primary reason Putin is able to make this wild moves to annex another country. He knows the west is powerless to stop him because Germany controls the EU and he has got the sword of Damocles hanging over the German economy.

    Merkel was the worst peacetime leader in our living history. Everything she did is unravelling right now.
    You start to wonder how deliberate this was given her background.

    Paranoid nonsense, perhaps, but the outcome does look rather like the result of a long game, even if it is cockup and not conspiracy.
  • MaxPB said:

    No, it is Germany. Germany decided to allow NS2 to go ahead, Germany pushed the UK out of the EU, Germany shut down its nuclear power completely unnecessarily, Germany allowed itself to rely on piped gas from Russia and allowed for anti-LNG propaganda to deter opening any LNG terminals. German energy policy is an absolute disaster zone, it's worse than ours by some distance which should make you understand just how bad it is.

    Your automatic assumption that EU = good and UK = bad is the root cause of why you want to absolve Germany of this. They are the primary reason Putin is able to make this wild moves to annex another country. He knows the west is powerless to stop him because Germany controls the EU and he has got the sword of Damocles hanging over the German economy.

    Merkel was the worst peacetime leader in our living history. Everything she did is unravelling right now.

    I am not absolving Germany. I am just not blaming Germany entirely. I think the West as a whole has failed. Neither have I said EU = Good, UK = Bad. Clearly, that's what you want me to claim, but I won't because I don't believe it.

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    MaxPB said:

    No, it is Germany. Germany decided to allow NS2 to go ahead, Germany pushed the UK out of the EU, Germany shut down its nuclear power completely unnecessarily, Germany allowed itself to rely on piped gas from Russia and allowed for anti-LNG propaganda to deter opening any LNG terminals. German energy policy is an absolute disaster zone, it's worse than ours by some distance which should make you understand just how bad it is.

    Your automatic assumption that EU = good and UK = bad is the root cause of why you want to absolve Germany of this. They are the primary reason Putin is able to make this wild moves to annex another country. He knows the west is powerless to stop him because Germany controls the EU and he has got the sword of Damocles hanging over the German economy.

    Merkel was the worst peacetime leader in our living history. Everything she did is unravelling right now.
    It was a deliberate part of East Politics that by binding Germany and Russia together in terms of trade and making Germany utterly dependent on Russia., there could never be a conflict between them......
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383
    pigeon said:

    The Germans are going to be forced to pick a side here. The cancellation of Nord Stream 2 is an encouraging sign but it does nothing with regard to existing trade.

    The Poles and especially the Baltic States must be terrified right now. If Germany (and its fellow incrementalists heel draggers) won't back them by taking the pain on ceasing to buy Russian energy, then it'll hole both NATO and the EU below the water line.
    Well, it will make no difference at all if Germany were to cease buying Russian oil.

    Oil is fungible. If the Germans don't buy Russian oil, the Vietnamese or the Chinese or the Chileans will.

    All that happens is that Europe buy from Saudi Arabia instead of Russia. And the Chinese buy from Russia instead of Saudi Arabia.

    The only way you could make it work would be if *everybody* stopped buying Russian oil. And as Russia is 10% of world oil production, that would be a massive shock to oil prices - I'd reckon you could see them move to $180-200. (It would also be very bad news for natural gas prices, as US drilling would shift almost entirely over to oil to benefit from the high prices.)

    Natural gas is a different story. Western Europe could wean itself off Russian gas on a two or three year view. It would be expensive, but it could be done. It would, however, require a willingness to enter into long term LNG supply contracts, something that the UK in particular has been very unwilling to do.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Macron vs Pécresse must be very likely now.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383

    Is that Schroeder on the left?
    Yes.

    He was (maybe still is) Chairman of Nord Stream.
  • LDLFLDLF Posts: 162



    If Trump wins in 2024 NATO is done for and some kind of European alliance will have to replace it.

    The USA is the one country that could dissolve NATO if it wants to.
    American opponents of NATO don't see the point, as they would describe it, of paying for the defence of Europe, while being lectured on foreign policy by Europeans, who at the same time take Russian gas. It's not as obviously in America's interest as ours.

    But I still don't think there's enough consensus within to EU for a lasting, EU-wide military alliance. Maybe for a single war, but not the sort of alliance that would function beyond that for the long term in the way that NATO has.

    I could see more alliances btween individual European countries: things like an 'Intermarium' style alliance in the east, which are sort of already happening. But again these wouldn't be linked to the EU, they would be seperate treaties.

    Certainly no 'EU Army' as was referred to in the Leave campaign.
  • Anti-war protests in Russia - over 100 people arrested.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,813

    There's also the point that a lot of Ukrainians speak Russian because it was the language of the Soviet Union. And in Kyiv, for example, there were a lot of people from other Republics (eg Georgia) and Russian is the language they had in common.
    I think Russian speaking in the Ukraine long predates the Soviet Union. It was the language of the towns and of administration and of businesses; Ukrainian was the language of the countryside. There is some analogy with English in Wales (only a vague analogy though). In many cases, it doesn't make the speaker any less Ukrainian. Nationality in this case cannot be inferred from language.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    Alistair said:

    Yes which it is why I find it worrying that "in hospital" has done this



    I would have expected "In hospital" to have kept heading downwards.
    That would suggest

    - Longer term patients?
    - Our famous "found COVID in hospital" thing?
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,979

    You start to wonder how deliberate this was given her background.

    Paranoid nonsense, perhaps, but the outcome does look rather like the result of a long game, even if it is cockup and not conspiracy.
    Surely not a conspiracy, but her disastrous policies, combined with Schroeder's contemptible conduct, makes you wonder!
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,820

    I am not absolving Germany. I am just not blaming Germany entirely. I think the West as a whole has failed. Neither have I said EU = Good, UK = Bad. Clearly, that's what you want me to claim, but I won't because I don't believe it.

    So who, in your opinion, is to blame for inter European mistrust? What is the root cause of all the ructions within Europe and even within the EU? In 2015/16 Dave went to the Germans with a pretty small shopping list which if he'd been able to get would have kept the UK in the EU. Merkel told him to get fucked. That disrespect from Merkel to both the UK PM and the UK is the reason we left the EU. Not Boris, not the leave campaign, Merkel. Her inability to see long term consequences of her stupid decisions is the root cause of much ill in Europe.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383

    And Francois Fillon to Schroeder's left. He's now on the board of Russia's largest petrochemical producer Sibur.

    https://www.reuters.com/markets/asia/former-french-pm-fillon-joins-board-russias-sibur-2021-12-24/
    The Russians bought influence by giving politicians lucrative sinecures at the end of their careers.

    Something that should be banned.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    'I understand that all 11 Labour MPs who signed the Stop The War statement (which criticised Nato) have been written to by the Shadow Chief Whip and asked to withdraw their signatures.
    Sounds like if they refuse to do so, they will all lose the whip.'
    https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/1496898836522053634?s=20&t=TgIH0rTjBCX2y6R_A-15tQ
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,813
    kinabalu said:

    With 'controversialists' in politics and the media it can be hard to disentangle what they truly believe from what they judge to be the best way to generate money and influence and exposure for themselves.
    Very good point.

    He's gone from sort-of-leading the most successful campaign of political outsiders in the post-war period to being a Katie Hopkins of the political classes.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    % who support... (fieldwork 22-23 Feb)

    Further economic sanctions on Russian interests in the UK: 67%
    Sending more troops to NATO countries in Eastern Europe: 45% (net +15)
    Sending troops to Ukraine: 22%
    Air strikes on Russian forces in Ukraine: 18%

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1496840885023035392?s=20&t=TgIH0rTjBCX2y6R_A-15tQ

    BUT, Britons don't support sanctions on Russia if it hits their own finances

    % who support increased sanctions if it meant…
    Oil & gas shortages: 36%
    Cost of living increase: 35%
    Higher taxes to cover defence costs: 32%
    Significant energy price rise: 31%
    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1496840890438062086?s=20&t=TgIH0rTjBCX2y6R_A-15tQ
  • MaxPB said:

    So who, in your opinion, is to blame for inter European mistrust? What is the root cause of all the ructions within Europe and even within the EU? In 2015/16 Dave went to the Germans with a pretty small shopping list which if he'd been able to get would have kept the UK in the EU. Merkel told him to get fucked. That disrespect from Merkel to both the UK PM and the UK is the reason we left the EU. Not Boris, not the leave campaign, Merkel. Her inability to see long term consequences of her stupid decisions is the root cause of much ill in Europe.
    Juncker rather than Merkel, Max?
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,675
    rcs1000 said:

    The Russians bought influence by giving politicians lucrative sinecures at the end of their careers.

    Something that should be banned.
    How? I'm not defending it, but by definition they've ended their careers. How would you prevent them taking any job they want?

    What should be banned is any access to their former Government offices, so that they are not able to leverage privileged contacts.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    That would suggest

    - Longer term patients?
    - Our famous "found COVID in hospital" thing?
    Scotland have been fucking around with their health board level data formats so can't easily check if any particular health board has had a massive surge but my instinct is that it's option 2, somewhere has had an infection control breakdown.

    I go with this because mechanical ventilation/ICU figures (where I assume infection control is impeccable) are at the lowest level since June last year.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Labour MP Clive Lewis with a slightly controversial intervention.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    Andy_JS said:

    Labour MP Clive Lewis with a slightly controversial intervention.

    Subbing for Corbyn, clearly.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154
    TimT said:

    it is. How interbank payments are made
    It’s more important than just payments. It’s vital for blocking funds interbank between parties in business transactions, confirming assets, confirming actions such as Bank A guaranteeing to send x asset on x date if Y happens.

    So it would stop Russian entities even taking out positions with a promise to pay when it’s all over because the Swift messages will not be allowed to be sent confirming bank to bank.

    They won’t be able to issue/send SBLCs or other banking instruments that are vital in trade finance globally so even if they have a “friendly” counterpart willing to do business that counterpart will have to think long and hard about whether they will transact without their bank having the relevant Swift message type lodged with their own bank.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,820

    Juncker rather than Merkel, Max?
    No, Dave met Merkel first to get a heads of terms and she said his fairly reasonable shopping list was impossible so told him to water it down. He did so to an agreed level, then in the actual negotiation she essentially did the same again so the final agreement was a pile of nothing that wasn't legally binding in any treaty.

    Merkel is the root cause of all this. She's Germany's Boris. A good campaigner and election winner but absolutely terrible at governing and thinking beyond tomorrow's survival/elections.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Alba MP informs the House that Alex Salmond has stopped broadcasting on Russia Today.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    What can the government do about Russia Today's broadcasting licence?
  • I suppose the fact that the EU and not Remainers are now getting the blame for Brexit must count for something. Brexit is the fault of the people who advocated for it or voted for it, ultimately.
    Nope ultimately it is the fault of the people who advocated for us joining the stupid bloody thing in the first place and then lied repeatedly about its impact over the decades. Anything else is just victim blaming.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    HYUFD said:

    % who support... (fieldwork 22-23 Feb)

    Further economic sanctions on Russian interests in the UK: 67%
    Sending more troops to NATO countries in Eastern Europe: 45% (net +15)
    Sending troops to Ukraine: 22%
    Air strikes on Russian forces in Ukraine: 18%

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1496840885023035392?s=20&t=TgIH0rTjBCX2y6R_A-15tQ

    BUT, Britons don't support sanctions on Russia if it hits their own finances

    % who support increased sanctions if it meant…
    Oil & gas shortages: 36%
    Cost of living increase: 35%
    Higher taxes to cover defence costs: 32%
    Significant energy price rise: 31%
    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1496840890438062086?s=20&t=TgIH0rTjBCX2y6R_A-15tQ

    Life is cheap.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,550
    Wonder how many letters to Brady will be/have been withdrawn....
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    Alistair said:

    Scotland have been fucking around with their health board level data formats so can't easily check if any particular health board has had a massive surge but my instinct is that it's option 2, somewhere has had an infection control breakdown.

    I go with this because mechanical ventilation/ICU figures (where I assume infection control is impeccable) are at the lowest level since June last year.
    yes

    image
  • Nope ultimately it is the fault of the people who advocated for us joining the stupid bloody thing in the first place and then lied repeatedly about its impact over the decades. Anything else is just victim blaming.
    Well I suppose you can't leave something you haven't joined.
    Beyond that tautology, no.
  • MaxPB said:

    So who, in your opinion, is to blame for inter European mistrust? What is the root cause of all the ructions within Europe and even within the EU? In 2015/16 Dave went to the Germans with a pretty small shopping list which if he'd been able to get would have kept the UK in the EU. Merkel told him to get fucked. That disrespect from Merkel to both the UK PM and the UK is the reason we left the EU. Not Boris, not the leave campaign, Merkel. Her inability to see long term consequences of her stupid decisions is the root cause of much ill in Europe.

    This is about so much more than Brexit, what caused it and what has happened subsequently between the UK and the EU. Poland, Hungary and, to a lesser extent, Slovenia are currently moving swiftly towards authoritarianism. Separatism has set the agenda in Spain for the last seven years or so. The Balkans are a tinderbox. The US is on the verge of giving Republicans, who believe the outcome of the 2020 presidential election was fixed, a majority in Congress, quite possibly on a minority of the national vote. And so on.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    HYUFD said:

    'I understand that all 11 Labour MPs who signed the Stop The War statement (which criticised Nato) have been written to by the Shadow Chief Whip and asked to withdraw their signatures.
    Sounds like if they refuse to do so, they will all lose the whip.'
    https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/1496898836522053634?s=20&t=TgIH0rTjBCX2y6R_A-15tQ

    That would be quite a development. Looks like about a third of the socialist campaign group.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    HYUFD said:

    % who support... (fieldwork 22-23 Feb)

    Further economic sanctions on Russian interests in the UK: 67%
    Sending more troops to NATO countries in Eastern Europe: 45% (net +15)
    Sending troops to Ukraine: 22%
    Air strikes on Russian forces in Ukraine: 18%

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1496840885023035392?s=20&t=TgIH0rTjBCX2y6R_A-15tQ

    BUT, Britons don't support sanctions on Russia if it hits their own finances

    % who support increased sanctions if it meant…
    Oil & gas shortages: 36%
    Cost of living increase: 35%
    Higher taxes to cover defence costs: 32%
    Significant energy price rise: 31%
    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1496840890438062086?s=20&t=TgIH0rTjBCX2y6R_A-15tQ

    "I like all this good stuff, so long as someone else pays for it." Same as everything else. Most people are shits.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    Wonder how many letters to Brady will be/have been withdrawn....

    +1
  • Alistair said:

    What can the government do about Russia Today's broadcasting licence?

    "Question More"?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383
    I don't know if this is true, but I hope it is:

    https://twitter.com/mil_in_ua/status/1496875679606005763

    ⚡ A whole reconnaissance platoon of the 74th Motorized Rifle Brigade surrendered near Chernihiv.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,800
    MaxPB said:

    No, Dave met Merkel first to get a heads of terms and she said his fairly reasonable shopping list was impossible so told him to water it down. He did so to an agreed level, then in the actual negotiation she essentially did the same again so the final agreement was a pile of nothing that wasn't legally binding in any treaty.

    Merkel is the root cause of all this. She's Germany's Boris. A good campaigner and election winner but absolutely terrible at governing and thinking beyond tomorrow's survival/elections.
    Bit of Putin in the mix too perhaps?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,800
    Andy_JS said:

    +1
    An underestimate, I'd say. I bet at least 3.
  • Cookie said:

    I think Russian speaking in the Ukraine long predates the Soviet Union. It was the language of the towns and of administration and of businesses; Ukrainian was the language of the countryside. There is some analogy with English in Wales (only a vague analogy though). In many cases, it doesn't make the speaker any less Ukrainian. Nationality in this case cannot be inferred from language.
    Indeed. Left Bank Ukraine was fairly mixed with areas such as the Donbas having Russian miners and industrial workers moved in. The Black Sea coast was settled by the Russian Empire. But much of North West Ukraine has not been ruled by "Russia" since the breakup of Kievan Rus. Lviv was a Polish/Ukrainian-speaking city until WW2
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480
    edited February 2022
    rcs1000 said:

    I don't know if this is true, but I hope it is:

    https://twitter.com/mil_in_ua/status/1496875679606005763

    ⚡ A whole reconnaissance platoon of the 74th Motorized Rifle Brigade surrendered near Chernihiv.

    Ukrainian ambassador to the US claimed so earlier too.
  • Thread on the challenges facing the EU in agreeing a package:

    Senior EU officials keep talking up the prospects of a "massive" package of sanctions against 🇷🇺 for its invasion of 🇺🇦 as EU leaders prepare to gather tonight in Bxl at 8pm CET. But - at least as of now - there's a risk what's agreed will underwhelm 1/

    https://twitter.com/Mij_Europe/status/1496892887732297730
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,813
    pigeon said:

    That would be quite a development. Looks like about a third of the socialist campaign group.
    This could be the opportunity Starmer is looking for to weed out the far left.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/feb/24/russian-central-bank-buys-up-roubles-to-avert-stock-market-collapse-invasion-ukraine-fiancial-meltdown

    The Russian central bank has purchased millions of roubles to prevent the collapse of the Moscow stock exchange and prop up the currency after it plunged to an all-time low of 89.60 against the dollar.

    Did they consult Major and Lamont?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,106
    Andy_JS said:

    There's no evidence that Russia successfully exerted any influence on any British election/referendum or any American election.
    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/jul/08/revealed-leaveeu-campaign-met-russian-officials-as-many-as-11-times

    https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/brexit/2018/11/14/the-extent-of-russian-backed-fraud-means-the-referendum-is-invalid/

    https://www.csis.org/blogs/brexit-bits-bobs-and-blogs/did-russia-influence-brexit

  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,820
    kinabalu said:

    Bit of Putin in the mix too perhaps?
    Not really, Putin is a known factor. Our decision making on security and energy security should have that Putin factor in built at all times. Merkel decided not to and now innocent Ukrainians are paying the price.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    rcs1000 said:

    I don't know if this is true, but I hope it is:

    https://twitter.com/mil_in_ua/status/1496875679606005763

    ⚡ A whole reconnaissance platoon of the 74th Motorized Rifle Brigade surrendered near Chernihiv.

    How many in a platoon?
  • MangoMango Posts: 1,031



    This is about so much more than Brexit, what caused it and what has happened subsequently between the UK and the EU. Poland, Hungary and, to a lesser extent, Slovenia are currently moving swiftly towards authoritarianism. Separatism has set the agenda in Spain for the last seven years or so. The Balkans are a tinderbox. The US is on the verge of giving Republicans, who believe the outcome of the 2020 presidential election was fixed, a majority in Congress, quite possibly on a minority of the national vote. And so on.

    Not today's most important topic, but let's be accurate. Slovenia is not moving towards authoritarianism. It has a wretched authoritarian and crooked PM, who is hopefully seeing the final weeks of a very long and shitty political career. Even after appealing to the last vestiges of the now-aging religious right he will lose the next election, and Slovenia will remain a very fine, well-educated bastion of liberal democracy (and indeed a lot more democratic than here).

    Geopolitical importance: virtually zero. ;-)

  • Mango said:

    Not today's most important topic, but let's be accurate. Slovenia is not moving towards authoritarianism. It has a wretched authoritarian and crooked PM, who is hopefully seeing the final weeks of a very long and shitty political career. Even after appealing to the last vestiges of the now-aging religious right he will lose the next election, and Slovenia will remain a very fine, well-educated bastion of liberal democracy (and indeed a lot more democratic than here).

    Geopolitical importance: virtually zero. ;-)

    Good news on Slovenia. Thanks for the correction!
  • BIDEN HAS BEEN PRESENTED WITH MENU OF OPTIONS FOR CYBERATTACKS DESIGNED TO DISRUPT RUSSIA’S ABILITY TO SUSTAIN MILITARY OPERATIONS IN UKRAINE -NBC NEWS

    https://twitter.com/DeItaone/status/1496904283190661126?s=20&t=gHpSUJREi_yTKO50M-LY4g
  • kle4 said:

    How many in a platoon?
    In this country, 25 to 30. Sounds about right. The Ukrainians aren't sweeping up thousands, after all.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    Cookie said:

    This could be the opportunity Starmer is looking for to weed out the far left.
    Absolutely. The berks have played right into his hands.

    I know from sources that McDonnell had been half-expecting to be expelled for months and has been sounding out the potential for a independent campaign.

    A week ago I’d have said Keir needed to be careful to create a set of martyrs. But the Stop the War declaration was so batty, and now looks absolutely indecent in light of current events.
  • Error:520

    Russian hacking?
    No, just millions of people trying to access it, which come to think of it is what a Russian denial of service attack would look like. Error 520 is almost certainly coming from a CDN which handles most of the load, reporting an upstream glitch. Enough nerdspeak: just count to five and try again.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,356
    Mango said:

    Not today's most important topic, but let's be accurate. Slovenia is not moving towards authoritarianism. It has a wretched authoritarian and crooked PM, who is hopefully seeing the final weeks of a very long and shitty political career. Even after appealing to the last vestiges of the now-aging religious right he will lose the next election, and Slovenia will remain a very fine, well-educated bastion of liberal democracy (and indeed a lot more democratic than here).

    Geopolitical importance: virtually zero. ;-)

    Slovenia is a lot more democratic than the UK?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,820
    I think the best way to think of Putin is similar to a tiger behind a fence. As long as the fence is tall enough and sturdy we're safe enough and the tiger has no real means to cause harm but we all know there is the potential for it.

    What Merkel has done is take down that fence because the tiger hadn't done any harm for years and now that tiger has gone tiger.

    Is it the fault of the tiger or the fault of the idiot who blew up the fence?
  • Absolutely. The berks have played right into his hands.

    I know from sources that McDonnell had been half-expecting to be expelled for months and has been sounding out the potential for a independent campaign.

    A week ago I’d have said Keir needed to be careful to create a set of martyrs. But the Stop the War declaration was so batty, and now looks absolutely indecent in light of current events.
    Made it nice and easy for the whips, I agree.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    From linkedin, it was shared by a QC who has family in Ukraine. Contains links to NGOs you can donate money to, if you want to support the Ukranian army.

    https://www.linkedin.com/posts/ukrainian-arbitration-association_supportukraine-stoprussianaggression-unitedforukraine-activity-6902494451177263104-ehUr

  • BIDEN HAS BEEN PRESENTED WITH MENU OF OPTIONS FOR CYBERATTACKS DESIGNED TO DISRUPT RUSSIA’S ABILITY TO SUSTAIN MILITARY OPERATIONS IN UKRAINE -NBC NEWS

    https://twitter.com/DeItaone/status/1496904283190661126?s=20&t=gHpSUJREi_yTKO50M-LY4g

    Does he right or left click?
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    edited February 2022
    The thing that separates from Russia, China, and even Trump’s America is our democracy.

    One hopes that the next government cracks down on party funding and reversed the various illiberal measures put in place during Boris’s crooked reign.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    MaxPB said:

    I think the best way to think of Putin is similar to a tiger behind a fence. As long as the fence is tall enough and sturdy we're safe enough and the tiger has no real means to cause harm but we all know there is the potential for it.

    What Merkel has done is take down that fence because the tiger hadn't done any harm for years and now that tiger has gone tiger.

    Is it the fault of the tiger or the fault of the idiot who blew up the fence?

    Your last sentence shows the inadequacy of your analogy; a tiger could be excused, Putin can not.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    Does he right or left click?
    You mean, swipe left or right?
  • kle4 said:

    How many in a platoon?
    Wiki helpfully says a Russian motorised rifle platoon is around 30, or 3 APCs worth.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    MaxPB said:

    I think the best way to think of Putin is similar to a tiger behind a fence. As long as the fence is tall enough and sturdy we're safe enough and the tiger has no real means to cause harm but we all know there is the potential for it.

    What Merkel has done is take down that fence because the tiger hadn't done any harm for years and now that tiger has gone tiger.

    Is it the fault of the tiger or the fault of the idiot who blew up the fence?

    Much as I like an analogy it doesn't really work because the tiger cannot help the way it acts, whereas Putin can, even if the fence should have been kept in good condition.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383

    Alternatively the Europeans including the British could stop being so bloody self destructive and stop blocking the exploitation of our own gas reserves. There is still very large amounts of gas to be exploited in the UK, Netherlands and Denmark even without going near fracking but successive Governments are putting more and more obstacles in the way of extracting it. This ranges from the UK putting more barriers in the way of exploration and the development of new fields to Denmark and Ireland ending drilling for hydrocarbons completely. It makes bugger all difference to how much gas we ned to burn in Europe, it just means we have to rely more and more on getting it from places that not only use it as a geo-political tool against us but have almost non existent environmental and safety standards.

    It is, as I say, one of the most self destructive policies on the 21st century.
    The UK Government has also made a complete pigs ear of hydrocarbon taxation. Firms hate investing here because they're not just taking engineering, price, and geological risk... but taxation risk too.

    Almost every exec I've spoken to prefers the Norwegian model, because even though they take 80% of the profit on every barrel of oil, it's a system that encourages drilling, exploration and remediation of old wells.
  • The thing that separates from Russia, China, and even Trump’s America is our democracy.

    One hopes that the next government cracks down on party funding and reversed the various illiberal measures put in place during Boris’s crooked reign.

    Absolutely.
  • Your last sentence shows the inadequacy of your analogy; a tiger could be excused, Putin can not.
    also a bear would have been better than a tiger.
  • Interesting how Putin's invasion is apparently assisting his fellow Putinist, Boris Johnson.

    Who enjoys posturing like a Churchillian while acting in power like a Chamberlainite.

    In the finest true Tory tradition?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383

    Thread on the challenges facing the EU in agreeing a package:

    Senior EU officials keep talking up the prospects of a "massive" package of sanctions against 🇷🇺 for its invasion of 🇺🇦 as EU leaders prepare to gather tonight in Bxl at 8pm CET. But - at least as of now - there's a risk what's agreed will underwhelm 1/

    https://twitter.com/Mij_Europe/status/1496892887732297730

    That's the problem of having 28 countries in a bloc - some of whom hate Russia and some of whom are sympathetic to it - where unanimity is required.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,106
    The Russian central bank has purchased millions of roubles to prevent the collapse of the Moscow stock exchange and prop up the currency after it plunged to an all-time low of 89.60 against the dollar.

    In a scramble to prevent the invasion of Ukraine pushing Russia’s financial system into meltdown, officials in Moscow closed the stock exchange while the Bank of Russia mounted a rescue operation to put a floor under the skidding rouble.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    rcs1000 said:

    That's the problem of having 28 countries in a bloc - some of whom hate Russia and some of whom are sympathetic to it - where unanimity is required.
    Which are sympathetic to it?
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,626

    You have got to be fecking kidding me...



    The Independent
    @Independent
    Russia can compete in Eurovision despite Ukraine invasion, organisers say

    We need to stop funding Eurovision NOW.
  • rcs1000 said:

    The UK Government has also made a complete pigs ear of hydrocarbon taxation. Firms hate investing here because they're not just taking engineering, price, and geological risk... but taxation risk too.

    Almost every exec I've spoken to prefers the Norwegian model, because even though they take 80% of the profit on every barrel of oil, it's a system that encourages drilling, exploration and remediation of old wells.
    Yep this has been one of my bug bears for many years. The joy of the Norwegian system is that although the tax take is high it is remarkably consistent over the years. Basically in Norway when you are about to invest a couple of billion pounds in a field development you know that when it comes on stream in 8 or 10 years time the tax and legislation regime has a good chance of being the same as it is now. It allows for long term planning and investment. Unlike the UK which changes the rules far more often than it changes Governments.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    MaxPB said:

    I think the best way to think of Putin is similar to a tiger behind a fence. As long as the fence is tall enough and sturdy we're safe enough and the tiger has no real means to cause harm but we all know there is the potential for it.

    What Merkel has done is take down that fence because the tiger hadn't done any harm for years and now that tiger has gone tiger.

    Is it the fault of the tiger or the fault of the idiot who blew up the fence?

    You forgot, in your litany, the fiscal austerity that Germany effectively imposes on the European south so that German businesses can enjoy lower interest rates.

    At present, though, said austerity still retains the democratic consent of those countries (chiefly Italy and Greece).
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,106
    Biden to address the US in half an hour
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,918
    edited February 2022
    kle4 said:

    Much as I like an analogy it doesn't really work because the tiger cannot help the way it acts, whereas Putin can, even if the fence should have been kept in good condition.
    Maybe Putin also cannot help the way he acts. He is who he is.

    What is needed is for someone else to stop him.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,820
    edited February 2022


    Your last sentence shows the inadequacy of your analogy; a tiger could be excused, Putin can not.

    Which is a fair point, I'm talking about it from our perspective as the people on the other side of the fence from the tiger. The actions of Putin are not under our control, the actions of our defence against him are absolutely under our control. We've unilaterally disarmed ourselves and taken down defensive barriers like energy security. Knowing that Putin was likely to "go tiger" and that we'd have no real way of preventing him from doing so.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,227
    Is there a list of the 100 russian companies about anywhere ?
  • Made it nice and easy for the whips, I agree.
    Latest from Patrick Maguire:

    All but one of the Labour MPs who signed the Stop the War letter have now told the chief whip they have withdrawn their signatures

    https://twitter.com/patrickkmaguire/status/1496907720909275140?t=3O4Xe3aNzgIMKoJsxdyzKA&s=19
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296

    BIDEN HAS BEEN PRESENTED WITH MENU OF OPTIONS FOR CYBERATTACKS DESIGNED TO DISRUPT RUSSIA’S ABILITY TO SUSTAIN MILITARY OPERATIONS IN UKRAINE -NBC NEWS

    https://twitter.com/DeItaone/status/1496904283190661126?s=20&t=gHpSUJREi_yTKO50M-LY4g


    FFS is there a "Select All" option?
This discussion has been closed.