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The Ukraine invasion could impact on the French election – politicalbetting.com

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  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    rcs1000 said:

    Sam Kronke at Arsenal?
    Usmanov.

    Happy to answer your questions of things you don’t know Robert, football must be a chink in your armour of knowledge 😌

    Which result do you look for 5pm UK time on Saturdays then?
  • No Mosely didn't say that, the Governments of the last thirty years have said this.

    Mosely is one of the few people who doesn't sell exercise as a get thin quick strategy.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,834
    Leon said:

    Is that Netflix? Sounds watchable
    It is also on BBC2 on Sundays at 7pm
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,396
    Leon said:

    That *looks* pretty significant? But who knows
    Is that the sound of tectonics moving or just a one off moment after which all concerned will be doing Ivan Denisovich?
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,148
    dixiedean said:

    The English players leaving to play abroad was a very short period. And relatively few at their peak did.
    There were usually more foreign players in England than English players abroad by some distance after the overseas ban was lifted in 78-79.
    I guess I was at an impressionable age when Platt and Gazza were off in Italy.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,752

    A minor poker ethical conundrum (if that's not a contradiction in terms) - Pokerstars has suspended all Russian players, but is not refunding their balances; they are going to sit on them "until the situation changes". There's a vigorous dispute running on Twitter - "keep war criminals out" vs "victimising ordinary players".

    What are the rights and wrongs of that? I think they're entitled to decide who they want as customers, in the same way as a pub landlord can decline to serve someone with dodgy-looking mates, and as pressures on Russia go it's a pretty minor one. But I'd have thought they're on shaky legal ground to retain (and presumably earn interest) on cash given them for a service they aren't providing. Refunding the money might actually be difficult with the collapse of foreign exchange with Russia, though, and I don't fancy the chance of any Russian player trying to sue.

    Yes, agreed.
    Up to them who their customers are - though I really don't think it much benefits anyone to exclude them, just as I'm not sure it benefits anyone to stop selling Netflix to Russians, but that's a separate issue. But not letting them have their money is a bit dodgy.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    Arsenal supporters?
    Shhhhh 😆 don’t let my GF see this post. My girlfriend and her Dad are Arsenal fans (though he has never lived in London) he took us to two games, like watching paint dry, they lost both to nil and got proper beaten up by their opponents
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,905
    edited March 2022
    Leon said:

    Lyonshall (plus various numbers and symbols!) is one of my go-to passwords

    I was lucky enough to grow up in Herefordshire, I didn't really appreciate its beauty until almost too late - age 17, when I got my first motorbike, and was truly mobile. But then I went for it. Zipping around the lanes and hills of the Marches, up to Hergest Ridge, down to Hay Bluff, over to Craswall, the Olchon, down to Tintern, over to Rhayader, Symond's Yat, Kilpeck. Eardisley, Grosmont, Garway, it is sublime sublime sublime

    Back then, tho, the food was rubbish. Now it is gorgeous. Great chefs using the amazing local Anglo-Welsh produce

    All it lacks is the sea, but then, that is probably why it is still unspoiled and relatively untouristed. It is still oddly remote and hard to reach. No motorways
    When I got a bit too fed up of urban Oxford I'd get the first train to Hereford and head out on a bicycle to Hay, over the Bluff, across to Symonds Yat then back for the last train home. Sometimes further into Wales with a tent to pitch it somewhere in the Beacons or further north towards Rhayader. Some of the best countryside for that in the land. The timber buildings, the orchards and the open hills.

    It was pretty quiet then (30 years ago, eek) but the roads are no doubt a lot busier today. Perhaps it wouldn't be quite as fun now (and no doubt Hay Bluff would be more of a struggle!)
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398

    A minor poker ethical conundrum (if that's not a contradiction in terms) - Pokerstars has suspended all Russian players, but is not refunding their balances; they are going to sit on them "until the situation changes". There's a vigorous dispute running on Twitter - "keep war criminals out" vs "victimising ordinary players".

    What are the rights and wrongs of that? I think they're entitled to decide who they want as customers, in the same way as a pub landlord can decline to serve someone with dodgy-looking mates, and as pressures on Russia go it's a pretty minor one. But I'd have thought they're on shaky legal ground to retain (and presumably earn interest) on cash given them for a service they aren't providing. Refunding the money might actually be difficult with the collapse of foreign exchange with Russia, though, and I don't fancy the chance of any Russian player trying to sue.

    This is a bad decision. Doing this suggests that the conflict in Ukraine is driven by prejudice against Russians.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    NZ: National is now outpolling Labour in both major polls.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,543

    When I got a bit too fed up of urban Oxford I'd get the first train to Hereford and head out on a bicycle to Hay, over the Bluff, across to Symonds Yat then back for the last train home. Sometimes further into Wales with a tent to pitch it somewhere in the Beacons or further north towards Rhayader. Some of the best countryside for that in the land. The timber buildings, the orchards and the open hills.

    It was pretty quiet then (30 years ago, eek) but the roads are no doubt a lot busier today. Perhaps it wouldn't be quite as fun now (and no doubt Hay Bluff would be more of a struggle!)
    I did a couple of trips out there last autumn, in bright sunshine, and - happily - it was no busier than I remember it 30 years ago (like you). Perhaps it is thronged in summer, but I doubt it. The roads are too narrow, there isn't the infrastructure, it is simply a quiet yet exquisite corner of the UK - and long may it remain so

    It was actually rather fantastic - to come back to a place fearing it may have been despoiled, but in truth it was much better. Hereford has become a slightly chic city (incredibly), and the countryside is now dotted with excellent eateries. Yet almost zero crowds, as always

    Yay
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited March 2022

    A minor poker ethical conundrum (if that's not a contradiction in terms) - Pokerstars has suspended all Russian players, but is not refunding their balances; they are going to sit on them "until the situation changes". There's a vigorous dispute running on Twitter - "keep war criminals out" vs "victimising ordinary players".

    What are the rights and wrongs of that? I think they're entitled to decide who they want as customers, in the same way as a pub landlord can decline to serve someone with dodgy-looking mates, and as pressures on Russia go it's a pretty minor one. But I'd have thought they're on shaky legal ground to retain (and presumably earn interest) on cash given them for a service they aren't providing. Refunding the money might actually be difficult with the collapse of foreign exchange with Russia, though, and I don't fancy the chance of any Russian player trying to sue.

    Pokerstars are absolute scummy operator these days, so doesn't surprise me at all. See how they screwed over those who were part of the Supernova Elite programme. And constant misleading (to less experience players) game types and promotions, where more often than not more dodgy info than a Lib Dem bar chart, resulting in more rake / less promo money back.

    Nothing like the original owners, who even when banned from the US, managed to get all the money to the players (as well as buying Full Tilt and paying the balances for that operator as well).
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,752
    Leon said:

    Lyonshall (plus various numbers and symbols!) is one of my go-to passwords

    I was lucky enough to grow up in Herefordshire, I didn't really appreciate its beauty until almost too late - age 17, when I got my first motorbike, and was truly mobile. But then I went for it. Zipping around the lanes and hills of the Marches, up to Hergest Ridge, down to Hay Bluff, over to Craswall, the Olchon, down to Tintern, over to Rhayader, Symond's Yat, Kilpeck. Eardisley, Grosmont, Garway, it is sublime sublime sublime

    Back then, tho, the food was rubbish. Now it is gorgeous. Great chefs using the amazing local Anglo-Welsh produce

    All it lacks is the sea, but then, that is probably why it is still unspoiled and relatively untouristed. It is still oddly remote and hard to reach. No motorways
    I've had a few weekends away in Herefordshire. Chosen entirely arbitrarily in trying to find a house which could accommodate 11 families (my friends from school and their families) - we did a couple of years in Lyonshall and one in the Wye Valley. Absolutely lovely. Very little there in terms of Things To Do, but the countryside is some of the most joy-inspiring in England. Lovely little pubs, pleasant walks, and three days of utter happiness.

    Ooh, and while we're on about the marches, a word for my second favourite stone circle: Mitchell's Fold, in South West Shropshire, just on the border with Wales. Best viewed on a freezing dusk; England soft to one side, Wales hard to the other.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,216
    kle4 said:

    His colleague Karadzic is apparently serving his time in a British prison. I would be happy for Putin to share a cell with him and Charles Taylor.
    Would having to listen to Karadzic’s poetry for the rest of Putin’s life be a fitting or cruel & unusual punishment?
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,074

    Usmanov.

    Happy to answer your questions of things you don’t know Robert, football must be a chink in your armour of knowledge 😌

    Which result do you look for 5pm UK time on Saturdays then?
    Sold his minority share nearly 4 years ago.
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,576

    Shhhhh 😆 don’t let my GF see this post. My girlfriend and her Dad are Arsenal fans (though he has never lived in London) he took us to two games, like watching paint dry, they lost both to nil and got proper beaten up by their opponents
    Back in the day I went to see Arsenal v Spurs at the old Highbury Stadium one Boxing Day. There were no advance tickets - you just queued in the street and paid at the turnstile. Liam Brady was playing for Arsenal, I don't remember anyone else (as I'm not particularly interested in football...) But the home crowd was vicious - chanting old Mosleyite marching songs from the 1930s. Even though I lived and/or worked in the area for another 30 years I was never tempted to return.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,543

    Good, ol’ BBC, but I think it’s a CNN production originally.
    Ta. Will check. I love cookery programmes with a bit of travel, or vice versa. I could watch them endlessly
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,672

    Pokerstars are absolute scummy operator these days . See how they screwed over those who were part of the Supernova Elite programme.

    Nothing like the original owners, who even when banned from the US, managed to get all the money to the players (as well as buying Full Tilt and paying the balances for that operator as well).
    Yes, I always wondered what happened to the Elite people - one moment they were guaranteed lifelong benefits, the next they just weren't. How was that even legal?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,898

    I guess I was at an impressionable age when Platt and Gazza were off in Italy.
    Yes. That was the relatively short time. About a decade. Lineker at Barca. More ended up at Rangers. There had been ones before. Laurie Cunningham at Real. John Charles, Keegan. Jimmy Greaves for a short time. But they were very much the exception not the rule.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    Leon said:

    Lyonshall (plus various numbers and symbols!) is one of my go-to passwords

    I was lucky enough to grow up in Herefordshire, I didn't really appreciate its beauty until almost too late - age 17, when I got my first motorbike, and was truly mobile. But then I went for it. Zipping around the lanes and hills of the Marches, up to Hergest Ridge, down to Hay Bluff, over to Craswall, the Olchon, down to Tintern, over to Rhayader, Symond's Yat, Kilpeck. Eardisley, Grosmont, Garway, it is sublime sublime sublime

    Back then, tho, the food was rubbish. Now it is gorgeous. Great chefs using the amazing local Anglo-Welsh produce

    All it lacks is the sea, but then, that is probably why it is still unspoiled and relatively untouristed. It is still oddly remote and hard to reach. No motorways
    PB pedant alert:

    ... apart from the M50.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,074
    edited March 2022

    And I stand by that, the average person is something like 500 calories over. Every year obesity gets worse which would support that statement.
    Calories in/calories out. Eating absolutely loads while doing mad exercise is one of life's great pleasures.

    Otherwise, sleep enough so you don't crave sugar rush to bear tiredness. Drink water to keep stomach full, and carb up before you do your weekly shop (makes crisps look much less appetising).
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited March 2022

    Yes, I always wondered what happened to the Elite people - one moment they were guaranteed lifelong benefits, the next they just weren't. How was that even legal?
    I am surprised there wasn't some sort of class action law suit. I am guessing in the small print there was enough wiggle room that allowed them to do, as a lot of the lost benefits were future ones. I presume there was some sort of get out that said benefits may change in the future. There had been some previous fiddling around the edges e.g. a one point it wasn't just the huge cash back, there were some free big live tournament entries, and I think they got removed a couple of years before they just took an axe to it.

    I know a couple of people who were regular SNE. One who achieved SNE in a single 1 month. Crypto people now.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,543
    Cookie said:

    I've had a few weekends away in Herefordshire. Chosen entirely arbitrarily in trying to find a house which could accommodate 11 families (my friends from school and their families) - we did a couple of years in Lyonshall and one in the Wye Valley. Absolutely lovely. Very little there in terms of Things To Do, but the countryside is some of the most joy-inspiring in England. Lovely little pubs, pleasant walks, and three days of utter happiness.

    Ooh, and while we're on about the marches, a word for my second favourite stone circle: Mitchell's Fold, in South West Shropshire, just on the border with Wales. Best viewed on a freezing dusk; England soft to one side, Wales hard to the other.
    OK, I'll bite: what is your favourite stone circle?

    Given your background I'm going to have a guess: Castlerigg

    If so, good choice. Certainly in my top 10 of GLOBAL stone circles
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022

    A minor poker ethical conundrum (if that's not a contradiction in terms) - Pokerstars has suspended all Russian players, but is not refunding their balances; they are going to sit on them "until the situation changes". There's a vigorous dispute running on Twitter - "keep war criminals out" vs "victimising ordinary players".

    What are the rights and wrongs of that? I think they're entitled to decide who they want as customers, in the same way as a pub landlord can decline to serve someone with dodgy-looking mates, and as pressures on Russia go it's a pretty minor one. But I'd have thought they're on shaky legal ground to retain (and presumably earn interest) on cash given them for a service they aren't providing. Refunding the money might actually be difficult with the collapse of foreign exchange with Russia, though, and I don't fancy the chance of any Russian player trying to sue.

    I don't really like the blanket demonising of all Russians. There might be some justification if it was likely to produce a positive effect in Russia there could be some justification but it could certainly be just as easily counterproductive.

    Let's not forget this is a country in which it is very hard to dissent against the government.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192

    Brexit, or perhaps more specifically the Brexit chosen by Boris, has hit exports by 15% ongoing.

    Strangely it even seems to be denting exports *outside* the EU, perhaps because it’s buggered some manufacturers ability to get parts etc.

    https://twitter.com/johnspringford/status/1501966414080532481?s=21

    Brexit really is a piece of cr*p. But hey! Blue Passports!!!!!!!!
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited March 2022
    Its worth noting that Pokerstars (unlike when they were banned in US) aren't some single operator, they are part of the massive Flutter which also includes Paddy Power, Betfair, Sky Bet.

    Maybe that's the problem that as such a large operator they can't be seen to be moving large amount of money to Russia at this time. However, I don't know, as paying balances out is the absolute normal when a betting operator closes or merges.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,070

    “"We need to leave NATO," Melenchon pointed out.

    That’s a good find HY! 🙂 have you got TASS on speed dial. I didn’t actually go looking for quote from TASS, the Russian news agency, I thought maybe people would disbelieve it on here, can we be sure he did actually say that, even if it was just what we wanted to hear, can we trust TASS, I checked BBC and French press for same thing.

    The next bit, "I would first and foremost like to restore our military sovereignty. France, who has nuclear deterrent forces, should be independent and should not depend on the US in terms of arms production," Melenchon added. That makes him sound very much the French Nationalist? That line might actually be popular with a lot of the French electorate? Especially post AUKUS double dealing? It doesn’t prove Melenchon is pro Putin because De Gaulle was not Pro Kremlin when he took France out NATO. France only rejoined NATO in 2009, when de gaule took them out they were out 44 years, so it’s not such a wild proposition for the French electorate out NATO as for UK? Especially with this Ukraine situation playing in this French election.
    “"Why do we have to protect Ukraine’s borders?" Melenchon said. As it turned out, we didn’t, as last evening on PB showed we are watching Putin place Ukraine borders where he wants, without UK and France defending them, leaving Melenchon position very little different than the UK governments now, and probably just a tad more honest and straight speaking about it ☹️

    All I’m saying is, as political bettors, we shouldn’t view French election as though it was English. The fact they have been out NATO those 44 years recently shows they are different, far more independent minded and nationalist than the English. And a lot of very local factors could play a part in French election this year, I’ll give you one example, there’s a lot of clear yellow between Macron on one side and the Yellowjacket candidates Melenchon and Le Pen regarding credit crunch, pension age, unfair tax system.
    De Gaulle didn't leave NATO - he opted the French military out of the integrated command structure, but France remained a part of NATO.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Leon said:

    OK, I'll bite: what is your favourite stone circle?

    Given your background I'm going to have a guess: Castlerigg

    If so, good choice. Certainly in my top 10 of GLOBAL stone circles
    Scorhill stone circle near Chagford
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,794

    NZ: National is now outpolling Labour in both major polls.

    Making a pregnant single mother beg the Taliban not to kill her seems to have done it for St Jacinda.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    De Gaulle didn't leave NATO - he opted the French military out of the integrated command structure, but France remained a part of NATO.
    Not as the headlines on Google search tells it. Joined 49, left 66, rejoined 2009
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,148
    edited March 2022

    PB pedant alert:

    ... apart from the M50.
    Which is only two lanes and always emptier than the M74.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,096
    edited March 2022

    I don't really like the blanket demonising of all Russians. There might be some justification if it was likely to produce a positive effect in Russia there could be some justification but it could certainly be just as easily counterproductive.

    Let's not forget this is a country in which it is very hard to dissent against the government.
    I agree. Quite apart from not tainting all Russians with Putins crimes, in the end it is very likely that it is other Russians that depose Putin. We should not make them our enemies.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,473
    Leon said:

    OK, I'll bite: what is your favourite stone circle?

    Given your background I'm going to have a guess: Castlerigg

    If so, good choice. Certainly in my top 10 of GLOBAL stone circles
    Top 10 list of stone circles! LOL
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,070
    edited March 2022

    Not as the headlines on Google search tells it. Joined 49, left 66, rejoined 2009
    It's still wrong though. :-)

    They were part of the integrated planning for WWIII all through those years, paying into the various common funds, providing tons of staff at NATO headquarters etc etc.

    EDIT: One thing about NATO that seems to get missed is that it is a very variable geometry alliance - there are some minima requirements to be a member, but after that then nature of the relationship a country has with NATO is quite flexible.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    “ By Ella Griffith, Sky News producer in Lille, northern France
    We have spent the day at a hotel on the outskirts of Lille.
    It is one of several where refugees, hoping to make it to Britain, are staying.
    There are 50 people here, and they were brought here because of a visa application centre being set up by the Home Office, 70 miles from Calais.
    It was where Foreign Secretary Liz Truss told MPs it would be.
    The Home Office said it would be opening today.
    Despite insistence from Home Offices sources, however, that a centre in Lille does exist, we have not found anyone here who has been able to access it or even knows where it is.
    Now, it's emerged that a centre will be opening in Arras, 40 miles from here, on Friday.”

    Is there a chance, eventually at some point, some Ukraine Refugees will actually defeat the UK government and find a way into Britain?
  • Eabhal said:

    Calories in/calories out. Eating absolutely loads while doing mad exercise is one of life's great pleasures.

    Otherwise, sleep enough so you don't crave sugar rush to bear tiredness. Drink water to keep stomach full, and carb up before you do your weekly shop (makes crisps look much less appetising).
    Well said.

    I've been bulking for the last year or so - just finished - and have put on about 15KG of muscle. It's been a pleasurable experience being able to eat lots.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,543
    IshmaelZ said:

    Scorhill stone circle near Chagford
    Scorhill is definitely atmospheric. Not a top tenner, tho

    If I had to choose one in Dartmoor it would be Grey Wethers. Apparently humble, yet exceedingly eerie when you get there

    http://www.stone-circles.org.uk/stone/greywethers.htm
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,534
    MaxPB said:

    Maybe the fans and the PL should have thought about what they were getting involved with when they allowed Oligarchs and other corrupt state affiliated operations to buy into the league. Chelsea fans always knew this day would come, I'm sure Newcastle and Man City fans realise it too. The sooner we get the dodgy money out of the league the better. If that means Chelsea, Newcastle and Man City go bankrupt then that's their problem. No sympathy.
    As far as Chelsea is concerned, if they’re looking for sympathy, they’ll find it in the dictionary between shit and syphilis.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited March 2022

    Well said.

    I've been bulking for the last year or so - just finished - and have put on about 15KG of muscle. It's been a pleasurable experience being able to eat lots.
    15kg of MUSCLE...are you sure? How many PEDs have you been taking....your pee must be like the colour of a rusty pipe.
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,576

    I don't really like the blanket demonising of all Russians. There might be some justification if it was likely to produce a positive effect in Russia there could be some justification but it could certainly be just as easily counterproductive.

    Let's not forget this is a country in which it is very hard to dissent against the government.
    We should be trying to win the hearts and minds of the Russian people - not polarising the situation by cutting them off. Most of them want to be part of the connected, civilised world - even the oligarchs and their families. We need to separate the Putin-Lavrov clique from the rest, not drive them together into the same corner.
  • BigRichBigRich Posts: 3,492
    MaxPB said:

    Making a pregnant single mother beg the Taliban not to kill her seems to have done it for St Jacinda.
    I think its partly the realisation that all the lockdowns and isolation only delayed the pandemic not stopped it, as NZ now has the 4th or 5th highest case rate in the would, and is very short on test kits/capacity.

    Mostly though it might be the economy, NZ I think now has one of the highest rates of inflation in the developed would.
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,576
    Leon said:

    Scorhill is definitely atmospheric. Not a top tenner, tho

    If I had to choose one in Dartmoor it would be Grey Wethers. Apparently humble, yet exceedingly eerie when you get there

    http://www.stone-circles.org.uk/stone/greywethers.htm
    Circles are old hat. Carnac has a stone bowling alley!
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    Eabhal said:

    Sold his minority share nearly 4 years ago.
    30%. Sold to kronky Aug 18.

    Otherwise what sort of sanctions would Arsenal have on them today?
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264
    BigRich said:

    I think its partly the realisation that all the lockdowns and isolation only delayed the pandemic not stopped it, as NZ now has the 4th or 5th highest case rate in the would, and is very short on test kits/capacity.

    Mostly though it might be the economy, NZ I think now has one of the highest rates of inflation in the developed would.
    And unlike Australia, which has high CoL, even higher wages, NZ has the brilliant combo of higher CoL and rubbish wages.
  • solarflaresolarflare Posts: 3,901
    edited March 2022
    Leon said:

    OK, I'll bite: what is your favourite stone circle?

    Given your background I'm going to have a guess: Castlerigg

    If so, good choice. Certainly in my top 10 of GLOBAL stone circles
    It's the ones not on this globe that really impress me.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited March 2022
    Chameleon said:

    And unlike Australia, which has high CoL, even higher wages, NZ has the brilliant combo of higher CoL and rubbish wages.
    I have never been to NZ, thanks COVID. But we had some friends over from there pre-COVID and I was shocked when they went around the super market amazed at how cheap our food was, and that especially meat like lamb is just eye wateringly expensive there.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,393

    Would having to listen to Karadzic’s poetry for the rest of Putin’s life be a fitting or cruel & unusual punishment?
    I cannot tell good poety from bad poetry, so hard to say.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    Chameleon said:

    And unlike Australia, which has high CoL, even higher wages, NZ has the brilliant combo of higher CoL and rubbish wages.
    Inflation is 5.9%

    Jacinda has always been crap, and she’s running out of road now that the cost of living is an issue.

    The new National guy has promised tax cuts, too. Keir Starmer, take note.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited March 2022
    A witty remark seen on social media (those who have spent a lot of time in the US will get it).

    "Whoever keeps those Arizona iced teas at $0.99 should be in charge of inflation"
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,543
    kjh said:

    Top 10 list of stone circles! LOL
    Mate, I could do a top 50! I love megaliths, if I go anywhere and find out there is some mysterious ancient stone monument nearby, I practically orgasm

    And now you've set me off. Here are my top ten megalithic monuments of the world


    10. Newgrange, Ireland
    9. Avebury, England
    8. Carnac, France
    7. Castlerigg, England
    6. Uragh, Ireland
    5. Callanish, Scotland
    4. Ggantija, Malta
    3. Brodgar, Orkney
    2. Stonehenge, England
    1. Gobekli Tepe, Turkey




    And I have seen them all
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    edited March 2022

    I have never been to NZ, thanks COVID. But we had some friends over from there pre-COVID and I was shocked when they went around the super market amazed at how cheap our food was, and that especially meat like lamb is just eye wateringly expensive there.
    UK has some of the cheapest food in the developed world thanks to a mix of farm subsidies and a very competitive supermarket sector.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    This thread has been shut down like a NZ cafe....
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,534

    I'm certainly backing Oak Furniture Land FC's promotion push
    You won’t be pining for Chelsea, then?
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    Back in the day I went to see Arsenal v Spurs at the old Highbury Stadium one Boxing Day. There were no advance tickets - you just queued in the street and paid at the turnstile. Liam Brady was playing for Arsenal, I don't remember anyone else (as I'm not particularly interested in football...) But the home crowd was vicious - chanting old Mosleyite marching songs from the 1930s. Even though I lived and/or worked in the area for another 30 years I was never tempted to return.
    “ chanting old Mosleyite marching songs from the 1930s “

    Flipping eck alphabet. No wonder a Putin Nazi chose them. Fever Pitch alright for all wrong reasons.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    You won’t be pining for Chelsea, then?
    Yew cannot be serious? Walnut believe it.

    Cedar I did there? Elm on fire tonight.
  • 15kg of MUSCLE...are you sure? How many PEDs have you been taking....your pee must be like the colour of a rusty pipe.
    About 0.25kg a week, you can gain about 0.5kg in early training (which I am in).

    Yes I am pretty sure. We can round it down to 10kg if you'd like but I am still as lean as I was because I've bulked so slowly.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    edited March 2022

    This thread has been shut down like a NZ cafe....

    Nor has this thread left NATO, just opted out the integrated command structure for a variable geometric relationship.

    Perfectly normal Gallic behaviour. Do not be alarmed.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    NZ: National is now outpolling Labour in both major polls.

    This seemed eminently avoidable for Jacinda. The utter cock up with omicron there: trying useless restrictions like vaxports that have failed everywhere and leaning on extreme isolation rules was just stupid. Overall NZ has had an excellent pandemic but recency bias has probably done for her.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,074
    edited March 2022
    Leon said:

    Mate, I could do a top 50! I love megaliths, if I go anywhere and find out there is some mysterious ancient stone monument nearby, I practically orgasm

    And now you've set me off. Here are my top ten megalithic monuments of the world


    10. Newgrange, Ireland
    9. Avebury, England
    8. Carnac, France
    7. Castlerigg, England
    6. Uragh, Ireland
    5. Callanish, Scotland
    4. Ggantija, Malta
    3. Brodgar, Orkney
    2. Stonehenge, England
    1. Gobekli Tepe, Turkey




    And I have seen them all
    This might be mis-remembered nonsense: On Orkney there are two standing stones with holes in them, miles apart.

    If you line them both up it directs you down the entrance tunnel to Maes Howe. Which is also aligned with the setting sun on the solstice, bathing the chamber in light.

    It doesn't work any more as the axis of the earth had shifted since then.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182

    About 0.25kg a week, you can gain about 0.5kg in early training (which I am in).

    Yes I am pretty sure. We can round it down to 10kg if you'd like but I am still as lean as I was because I've bulked so slowly.
    What’s your regime?
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    Eabhal said:

    This might be mis-remembered nonsense: On Orkney there are two standing stones with holes in them, miles apart.

    If you line them both up it directs you down the entrance tunnel to Maes Howe. Which is also aligned with the setting sun on the solstice, bathing the chamber in light.

    It doesn't work any more as the axis of the earth had shifted since then.
    With the dawning of the Piscean age. Nods sagely.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,148
    Leon said:

    Scorhill is definitely atmospheric. Not a top tenner, tho

    If I had to choose one in Dartmoor it would be Grey Wethers. Apparently humble, yet exceedingly eerie when you get there

    http://www.stone-circles.org.uk/stone/greywethers.htm
    One time we walked up to the Grey Wethers in fog. Seeing the stones emerge gradually was quite something.
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