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TACTICAL VOTING AT THE 1997 GENERAL ELECTION – politicalbetting.com

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  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,341
    edited March 2022
    Leon said:

    A slightly ominous paragraph in that news report (linked prior) on Covid in Hong Kong

    “A senior Chinese official overseeing Hong Kong affairs, Xia Baolong, who has been helping coordinate Beijing’s response to help Hong Kong contain the outbreak, was cited by the China News Agency on Saturday as saying the situation was still severe and told residents to prepare mentally for a “long-term war”.”

    Hmm. One of the *good* things about Omicron is that it is so infectious it burns out quickly. By infecting everyone fast. Why should this be a “long term war”?

    But perhaps the Chinese official is just steeling the people for a lot of dying

    Even though it spreads quickly, UK got Omicron 4 months ago and still plenty around and we are now in mode of COVID isn't going away for many many years. I read thats more China bracing for the fact COVID will become widespread in China and once that is the case you have to prepare for it to be there for the long term.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    kle4 said:

    You're playing the martyr and it is unconvincing. Many people are suspicious or cautious of overly positive news as put out by Ukraine, even as they hope it to be true. Certainly some take an optimistic view but it is not as universal as you pretend.

    The issue is that just as no positive story about Ukraine is automatically to be accepted as factual, that doesn't make any story positive about Russia's position automatically factual by default, yet the article you posted did do that in several points (though not all the way through, certainly).

    On the contrary, you seem to be getting angry at people pointing out a few instances where the suggestion of an 'alternative situation' was made without evidence.

    So you are getting angry at people doing the very thing you claim to want them to do, which is think a bit more about information that is posted. People have thought about the article you shared and had some critical comments, and you are now whining about them doing so.

    Should people also be wary of information putting out nothing but pro-Ukrainian messaging without sufficient evidence to support it? Sure they should. But what does that have to do with being wary of elements of that article which were nothing but supposition (and the bit I highlighted was paritcularly weird supposition about a troop build up being corroboration about an assault plan, without even considering alternative explanation of it being in response to the earlier troop build up by Russia)?
    I'm certainly not getting angry about anything; this is PB. As I have said I liked that article because it asks some awkward questions and posits a view that is rarely heard.

    Neither am I playing the martyr. I find it interesting to see the reactions on here which in turn have been quite emotional.

    We have already had one "truth" overturned. @another_richard joining in the criticism of "my article" said that *of course* Kharkiv hasn't been surrounded whereas the MOD seems to think it has been.

    So a very brief and small illustration of my point.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,148
    TOPPING said:

    I like that article because it posits an alternative view of what might be happening, not because I think it is what is happening.

    Or shall we discuss the difference between "surrounded" and "assessed encirclement".
    If you want to give us the benefit of your knowledge of the technical difference between that use of words, then that would be of genuine use.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,413
    I usually side with Tom more than Jerry, but what an odd meme of choice since it would show Russia as the bullying aggressor in this case.

    The head of the Russian space agency followed this meme up with the tweet: “A brief description of the current geopolitical situation in the language of a cartoon, since our Western colleagues do not know or understand anything more serious than comics.”
    https://twitter.com/b_judah/status/1502383213339099139?cxt=HHwWhoCyudLkxNkpAAAA
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited March 2022

    What are you saying? You think western media is falsely claiming that Kharkiv is not encircled? Why would they do that?

    You can be sure that - if/when the Russians manage to encircle Kyiv - the western media will be competing to be the first to breathlessly report the fact. They won't be claiming to have just driven in from Bila Tserkva and denying the encirclement exists.
    PB poster @another_richard said it hadn't been encircled.
    .
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578
    TOPPING said:

    That's fair enough. My gut feel is that Russia having launched the invasion has a plan somewhere and nothing I have seen so far has shown this to have demonstrably failed. That is just a gut feel and hence informs my caution when people on here post a 30-second video of two T-72s doing a pirouette on some street somewhere and taking that as proof of an imminent Russian defeat.

    But I also from Day One said that if Russia does occupy the whole of Ukraine then we are back to an Afghan situation and that seems absolutely bonkers but then perhaps Putin is absolutely bonkers. Because if nothing else we all know how that ended.

    As for not control of the air I think that article was interesting both on Ukraine and Russia air power limitations (he asks for example about the famous and untouched Russian convoy). I have no idea why it wasn't targeted but it wasn't. He also poses some other interesting questions which contradict the PB orthodoxy and hence why everyone is furious at me for posting it and calling it "my article".

    It is a very strange phenomenon on PB but perhaps not surprising, given PB's nature.
    I don’t think many people are furious at you although I’m probably speaking for myself. It’s good to get two sides because, as you say, both sides exaggerate. However, I was more surprised because, even from a cursory reading, it was clear from the language it was coming from a pro-Russian standpoint although, as others have said, done quite well.

    My view is that I don’t think the Western intelligence agencies would be sending so many signals that Russia is suffering so badly if it wasn’t true or they thought that. They would be coming up with more nuanced terms.

    More to the point, Russian actions seem to confirm this. Asking for Syrian mercenaries is quite a desperate move. It doesn’t suggest things are well .
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,077
    TOPPING said:

    LOL. Talking of church doctrine. I posted an article which goes against the PB military strategists' view of what is happening in Ukraine and all hell broke loose.

    The guy may or may not get stuff right or wrong but people are queuing up to say how ridiculous it is. Fair enough - I believe you yourself have written on confirmation bias. It is a much better story to hear that Russia is suffering setback after setback rather than slowly but surely achieving its war aims.

    I do indeed say "no one can know anything" but you misunderstand what this means, perhaps understandably, given your flitting around the various key issues of the day before becoming expert on all of them. My point is that snippets from twitter or indeed journalists can't stitch together the overall progress of the war, nor gain any insight in what the hell Putin wants to do and/or how successful he is doing it.

    Posting a picture of a Russian platoon coming under fire and then saying: "ah ha, proof if proof be needed..." is just absurd but it is what most people on PB have been doing since the invasion began. Most recently everyone was amazed that Ukraine hadn't been conquered in a fortnight.
    The bits about the air position, and that a lot of the Ukrainians wandering around with state of the art multi-$million NATO anti-tank kit end up firing them at lorries and jeeps, were the most credible bits. Spoiled by the egregious pro-Russian bias later on.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,341

    Tories plan big expansion of wind farms ‘to protect national security’

    https://twitter.com/guardiannews/status/1502989186131017737

    That will really piss off their base, no wonder Farage has pivoted to net zero is bollocks manta.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    kle4 said:

    I usually side with Tom more than Jerry, but what an odd meme of choice since it would show Russia as the bullying aggressor in this case.

    The head of the Russian space agency followed this meme up with the tweet: “A brief description of the current geopolitical situation in the language of a cartoon, since our Western colleagues do not know or understand anything more serious than comics.”
    https://twitter.com/b_judah/status/1502383213339099139?cxt=HHwWhoCyudLkxNkpAAAA

    The fate of the cat (Russia) at the end of the cartoon is surely not what he wants? Unless he is into some... interesting personal stuff....
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,697

    I hope so. The petty one-upmanship has been depressing. Our inability to accept the EU as been good for anything or its senior politicians doing anything worthwhile. Some of the press seem to think Macron is as big an enemy as Putin and we have continued to see the petulant war of words and lack of grace from ministers.

    For me the king turd remains our disgusting policy towards the Ukrainian women and children fleeing the war. Refusing to grant them safe haven is bad enough, branding them a "security threat" thanks to the Irish government showing the humanity that we cannot is beyond belief.
    The government didn’t brand women & children a “security threat”

    MI6 said that abandoning the visa policy created a “security threat”.

    Facts matter
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,751

    That will really piss off their base, no wonder Farage has pivoted to net zero is bollocks manta.
    Not necessarily, if clothed in the security language of the article and accompanied in a boost to defence. “Accept a shit view to beat the Russians” will appeal to some Tories.
  • TresTres Posts: 2,810
    HYUFD said:

    Trump has now said the US 'can't stand by over Ukraine.' Suggesting he might take a harder line than Biden

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10582503/Trump-says-let-situation-Ukraine-continue-slams-paper-tiger-NATO.html
    Nah Trumpites still hate Ukraine because Hunter Biden had a laptop. To suggest otherwise is wishful thinking.

    I see @carolecadwalla tweeting about Russians and Brexit again. Here's a reminder of what she told a court under sworn oath in her evidence:
    "I have never said that Russian money went into the Brexit campaign. I have always stressed that there is no evidence to suggest it did."


    https://twitter.com/EuroGuido/status/1502951577975410692

    is Guido still bragging about how proud he is of his Russian connections?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    At least you've given up making up a moral equivalence between this and Iraq like you were for the first week of the invasion.

    That was pure "А у вас негров линчуют"
    Putin lives in a world where might is right as evidenced by the Iraq invasion and hence thought he'd have a bit of it himself.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,278
    "6m ago
    12:51
    A New York Times journalist has been killed near Kyiv, the region’s head of police has confirmed.

    Award-winning video journalist Brent Renaud, 51, was shot when Russian forces opened fire on a car near Irpin.

    Another journalist with him at the time has been taken to hospital for treatment after the attack."

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2022/mar/13/ukraine-news-russia-war-ceasefire-broken-humanitarian-corridors-kyiv-russian-invasion-live-vladimir-putin-volodymyr-zelenskiy-latest-updates-live
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    Leon said:

    “PB military strategists”. The sneering tone is the giveaway

    Status anxiety
    There is a turning point in any discussion with you when you start insulting your interlocutor as you realise you are talking bollocks and lo this moment has arrived.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,341
    edited March 2022

    I see @carolecadwalla tweeting about Russians and Brexit again. Here's a reminder of what she told a court under sworn oath in her evidence:
    "I have never said that Russian money went into the Brexit campaign. I have always stressed that there is no evidence to suggest it did."


    https://twitter.com/EuroGuido/status/1502951577975410692

    Carole Conspiracy is determine to bankrupt herself. I am surprised the Guardian haven't got rid of her as must be costing a fortune in legal.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,708
    TOPPING said:

    That's fair enough. My gut feel is that Russia having launched the invasion has a plan somewhere and nothing I have seen so far has shown this to have demonstrably failed.

    You don't think they planned to capture Kiev in the first 2-3 days?
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,751
    kle4 said:

    I usually side with Tom more than Jerry, but what an odd meme of choice since it would show Russia as the bullying aggressor in this case.

    The head of the Russian space agency followed this meme up with the tweet: “A brief description of the current geopolitical situation in the language of a cartoon, since our Western colleagues do not know or understand anything more serious than comics.”
    https://twitter.com/b_judah/status/1502383213339099139?cxt=HHwWhoCyudLkxNkpAAAA

    There are alternative launch systems now, so perhaps it’s time to tell them to piss off from the ISS and leave the Russian space agency with nothing but it’s unrealistic future plans.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566

    Even though it spreads quickly, UK got Omicron 4 months ago and still plenty around and we are now in mode of COVID isn't going away for many many years. I read thats more China bracing for the fact COVID will become widespread in China and once that is the case you have to prepare for it to be there for the long term.
    Yes. Perhaps it is the beginning of the end for Zero Covid in China and this is an early straw in the wind
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,674
    ydoethur said:

    It also reminds us to take those surveys in the Crimea showing 90% satisfaction with being ruled by Russia with a very large ladleful of salt.
    Perhaps, though the fact that Russia went through Crimea like a dose of salts, and they seem to have encountered very little discontent since indicates to me that Crimea was different, and perhaps they thought it would all be like Crimea, or at least more like Crimea.

    I know very little about the area but I believe a lot of Russians holiday in Crimea. Perhaps they are more in touch with the place through that, and Crimeans are more used to Russians. A bit like the British invading Benidorm.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,413
    biggles said:

    Not necessarily, if clothed in the security language of the article and accompanied in a boost to defence. “Accept a shit view to beat the Russians” will appeal to some Tories.
    I'm unconvinced by that. People are really angry right now about Russia, and perhaps that will be more sustained than usual, but ultimately people really really really really don't like things being built near their nice villages.

    It seems much mroe likely to me that people would agree with proposal, up to the point it happens near them. I'm all fo rit, but there are plenty of better sites somewhere else, will be the cry.

    A good rule of thumb, even if you are not generally against NIMBY's as a concept, is that there are none so unreasonable in the face of development proposals as those who live in the rural shires. I've long since ceased being surprised what they will object to.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,341
    edited March 2022
    Andy_JS said:

    "6m ago
    12:51
    A New York Times journalist has been killed near Kyiv, the region’s head of police has confirmed.

    Award-winning video journalist Brent Renaud, 51, was shot when Russian forces opened fire on a car near Irpin.

    Another journalist with him at the time has been taken to hospital for treatment after the attack."

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2022/mar/13/ukraine-news-russia-war-ceasefire-broken-humanitarian-corridors-kyiv-russian-invasion-live-vladimir-putin-volodymyr-zelenskiy-latest-updates-live

    I am surprised the likes of the BBC haven't pulled their journalists out of Kyiv, as clear the Russians will shortly just be shelling the hell out of it.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited March 2022

    You seem to be somewhere between blustering and backtracking.
    I don't want to bang on about it, OK I do, but our exchange proves my point. You said, as clear as day, and in an effort to show what rubbish I (actually the article I posted) was saying, that Kharkiv was not surrounded. There, you said, this proves that you are talking rubbish.

    But then it turns out that Kharkiv is, according to the MOD, indeed surrounded.

    You perhaps wanted to believe that the article was wrong but it turns out that you were wrong. How many other instances of this are there I wonder in PB's assessment of the situation in Ukraine.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,751

    The fate of the cat (Russia) at the end of the cartoon is surely not what he wants? Unless he is into some... interesting personal stuff....
    Yup. All this requires is for a few of his replies to show the full version, which isn’t so great for Tom.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    kle4 said:

    You're presenting yourself as Cassandra in the face of the unreasonable masses, yet you are yourself being very defensive about people criticising some of the views posited in the article. I genuinely don't get it, since if you aren't seeking to defend every point made in it (and they seem to be of varying quality) and just putting it up as an interesting counterpoint, why object to people questioning it, which despite your protestations you do appear to be doing, despite that questioning being something you presumably want people to do more of.
    I haven't been defensive about it at all. I have been interested in how vituperative people have been in dismissing it all out of hand. Likewise, I haven't, because I don't know, dismissed or accepted any or all of it. Some of what it says sounds sensible and as @IanB2 notes some seems wildly "pro-Russian" although that is again seen through our prism.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566
    TOPPING said:

    There is a turning point in any discussion with you when you start insulting your interlocutor as you realise you are talking bollocks and lo this moment has arrived.
    You are behaving quite strangely. I’m curious as to why. Perhaps it is just your broken collar bone making you dyspeptic

  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,148
    TOPPING said:

    I don't want to bang on about it, OK I do, but our exchange proves my point. You said, as clear as day, and in an effort to show what rubbish I (actually the article I posted) was saying, that Kharkiv was not surrounded. There, you said, this proves that you are talking rubbish.

    But then it turns out that Kharkiv is, according to the MOD, indeed surrounded.

    You perhaps wanted to believe that the article was wrong but it turns out that you were wrong. How many other instances of this are there I wonder in PB's assessment of the situation in Ukraine.
    It's possible the MoD are wrong, of course. Multiple reports contradict their assessment of encirclement.

    I have it down at the moment as an interesting anomaly, rather than proof of the mendacity of western media.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    You don't think they planned to capture Kiev in the first 2-3 days?
    I have no idea.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566

    Perhaps, though the fact that Russia went through Crimea like a dose of salts, and they seem to have encountered very little discontent since indicates to me that Crimea was different, and perhaps they thought it would all be like Crimea, or at least more like Crimea.

    I know very little about the area but I believe a lot of Russians holiday in Crimea. Perhaps they are more in touch with the place through that, and Crimeans are more used to Russians. A bit like the British invading Benidorm.
    Crimea IS different. It was Russian for 200 years until Kruschev gifted it to Ukraine for reasons of commie politicking.

    In any peace, Ukraine probably would - probably should - accept the loss of Crimea
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    Leon said:

    You are behaving quite strangely. I’m curious as to why. Perhaps it is just your broken collar bone making you dyspeptic

    As I said when you are drowning your posts tend to focus exclusively on the person you are discussing with rather than the issues under discussion.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    biggles said:

    There are alternative launch systems now, so perhaps it’s time to tell them to piss off from the ISS and leave the Russian space agency with nothing but it’s unrealistic future plans.
    The Russian Space program is dead. Stick a fork in it. It is done.

    Even before this it was reaching the end - OneWeb was changing providers, and their booked launches were getting thinner and thinner.

    They used to have 3 things going for them

    1) Cheapest launches
    2) Reliable
    3) Good business partners

    They don't have 1, 2 or 3 anymore. In fact, on 3, they have burnt their bridges.

    Moral of the story. Don't spit on the table in front of Elon Musk. It's the Third Classic Mistake.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566
    TOPPING said:

    As I said when you are drowning your posts tend to focus exclusively on the person you are discussing with rather than the issues under discussion.
    Er, OK

    Tell you what, you’re completely right and everyone else is wrong. There. Now we can move on
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited March 2022

    It's possible the MoD are wrong, of course. Multiple reports contradict their assessment of encirclement.

    I have it down at the moment as an interesting anomaly, rather than proof of the mendacity of western media.
    IT'S NOT MENDACITY OF THE WESTERN MEDIA.

    Ahem.

    It's not mendacity of the Western Media. It is the fog of war which prevents any clear picture of the overall "success" or otherwise of the campaign. Which is my point.

    The article posited some thoughts which several people on here have dismissed as ridiculous and this example was one. @another_richard said it's absurd, the article shows Kharkiv as surrounded whereas it is not surrounded (he implied). But the MOD thinks it is surrounded and hence my point is that all the "obvious untruths" of the article aren't necessarily so obviously untrue.
    .
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    TOPPING said:

    I have no idea.
    Then why send paratroops in to capture airports etc?

    1) The Russian plan was for paratroops to hold these advanced positions for weeks
    2) The Russian plan was to rapidly advance to these positions
    3) The Russian plan was to reinforce via air, but decided not to. After they had sent in the paratroops.

    ?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    Leon said:

    Er, OK

    Tell you what, you’re completely right and everyone else is wrong. There. Now we can move on
    Quite a banal rhetorical device but I'll take it because lunch beckons.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    TOPPING said:

    That's fair enough. My gut feel is that Russia having launched the invasion has a plan somewhere and nothing I have seen so far has shown this to have demonstrably failed. That is just a gut feel and hence informs my caution when people on here post a 30-second video of two T-72s doing a pirouette on some street somewhere and taking that as proof of an imminent Russian defeat.

    But I also from Day One said that if Russia does occupy the whole of Ukraine then we are back to an Afghan situation and that seems absolutely bonkers but then perhaps Putin is absolutely bonkers. Because if nothing else we all know how that ended.

    As for not control of the air I think that article was interesting both on Ukraine and Russia air power limitations (he asks for example about the famous and untouched Russian convoy). I have no idea why it wasn't targeted but it wasn't. He also poses some other interesting questions which contradict the PB orthodoxy and hence why everyone is furious at me for posting it and calling it "my article".

    It is a very strange phenomenon on PB but perhaps not surprising, given PB's nature.
    Most of pb.com's analysis of the origins of the war seems to have all the subtlety of George's diagnosis of the causes
    of the First World War.

    Lieutenant George St Barlaigh: The war started because of the Villainous Hun and his Empire Building.
    Captain Edmund Blackadder: George, the British Empire presently covers a quarter of the globe, while the German Empire consist of a small sausage factory in Tangyanika.

    Most of pb.com's analysis of the progress of the war seems to be equally primitive.

    Lieutenant George St Barlaigh: When are we going to give Fritz a taste of our British spunk?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Then why send paratroops in to capture airports etc?

    1) The Russian plan was for paratroops to hold these advanced positions for weeks
    2) The Russian plan was to rapidly advance to these positions
    3) The Russian plan was to reinforce via air, but decided not to. After they had sent in the paratroops.

    ?
    Also no idea. Really, I am not a military stragegist focusing on Russia/Ukraine.

    Everyone else on here obviously is but I am not so I can't help you.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,321

    Most of pb.com's analysis of the origins of the war seems to have all the subtlety of George's diagnosis of the causes
    of the First World War.

    Lieutenant George St Barlaigh: The war started because of the Villainous Hun and his Empire Building.
    Captain Edmund Blackadder: George, the British Empire presently covers a quarter of the globe, while the German Empire consist of a small sausage factory in Tangyanika.

    Most of pb.com's analysis of the progress of the war seems to be equally primitive.

    Lieutenant George St Barlaigh: When are we going to give Fritz a taste of our British spunk?
    The irony being that George was essentially right.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566
    TOPPING said:

    Quite a banal rhetorical device but I'll take it because lunch beckons.
    Well done, Captain Sensible
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,266

    I am surprised the likes of the BBC haven't pulled their journalists out of Kyiv, as clear the Russians will shortly just be shelling the hell out of it.
    These war correspondents are brave people imo.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083

    Most of pb.com's analysis of the origins of the war seems to have all the subtlety of George's diagnosis of the causes
    of the First World War.

    Lieutenant George St Barlaigh: The war started because of the Villainous Hun and his Empire Building.
    Captain Edmund Blackadder: George, the British Empire presently covers a quarter of the globe, while the German Empire consist of a small sausage factory in Tangyanika.

    Most of pb.com's analysis of the progress of the war seems to be equally primitive.

    Lieutenant George St Barlaigh: When are we going to give Fritz a taste of our British spunk?
    The German military thought process at the start of WWI was quite interesting

    1) If we don't invaded Belgium, we can't successfully attack France.
    2) Therefore we must invaded Belgium.
    3) Britain won't interfere, because if they do we might lose the war.

    They actually got to the stage of believing that since violating Belgium neutrality was vital to Germany winning the war, it was a crime for Belgium to resist.

    The sane thing would have been to consider (1). If it was impossible to invaded France across only the Franco-German frontier, the reverse was true - especially for the smaller French army.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083

    These war correspondents are brave people imo.
    Given what happened to that news crew the other day - car shot up, hit on the body armour etc.... This was sadly inevitable.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566
    This is quite big


    #BREAKING China places 17 million residents of Shenzhen under Covid lockdown: govt

    https://twitter.com/afp/status/1502972209811369985?s=21

    Shenzen is huge, and economically highly significant. I fear we could be seeing half of China going into lockdown. Not great for a battered global economy
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,321

    Given what happened to that news crew the other day - car shot up, hit on the body armour etc.... This was sadly inevitable.
    To misquote Hornblower, a shell doesn't stop to ask whether somebody is an enemy soldier, a reporter, or a wholly innocent civilian.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,341
    edited March 2022
    Leon said:

    This is quite big


    #BREAKING China places 17 million residents of Shenzhen under Covid lockdown: govt

    https://twitter.com/afp/status/1502972209811369985?s=21

    Shenzen is huge, and economically highly significant. I fear we could be seeing half of China going into lockdown. Not great for a battered global economy

    Crickey.....Shenzhen locked down for any period of time = world shortages of anything electronic incoming.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,697
    @TOPPING position this morning reminds me of this doggerel (by a MI6 station commander that I knew in his old age)

    *On the dangers of intelligence*

    He kept an open mind so long
    That everything fell out
    And true and false
    And right and wrong
    Were scrambled into doubt

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    TOPPING said:

    Also no idea. Really, I am not a military stragegist focusing on Russia/Ukraine.

    Everyone else on here obviously is but I am not so I can't help you.
    Maybe

    4) For political reasons, someone in Russias military wanted the Russian paratroops to fail.

    reminds me of the story of a war-game of Sea Lion being played at Sandhurst. When asked what the hell he was doing, the player of the part of Herman Goering said that he was playing to advance the cause of Herman Goering in the Nazi hierarchy, rather than just win the battle.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566

    Crickey.....Shenzhen locked down for any period of time = world shortages of anything electronic incoming.
    Yes. Really not good

    World’s fourth largest port. A massive cog in the Chinese economic machine
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,341
    edited March 2022

    These war correspondents are brave people imo.
    I actually meant the non-war correspondents that Sky and BBC sent over the past 2 weeks. Also, in recent years, they have been very wary about sending people to be actually there when the hardcore fighting is going on.

    That has been left to the likes of Vice News to be actually embedded people in Syria, Iraq, Eastern Ukraine and although Vice News can have some tiresome left wing bent on social issues (making the Guardian look right wing), their coverage of those conflicts has been top notch.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,077
    Leon said:

    Crimea IS different. It was Russian for 200 years until Kruschev gifted it to Ukraine for reasons of commie politicking.

    In any peace, Ukraine probably would - probably should - accept the loss of Crimea
    TBf, it’s always been a melting pot, owing to its geography. Stalin simplified things by forcibly deporting a large proportion of its population to thousands of miles away.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,077
    edited March 2022
    Now the buildup to the big Flyball final…

    After the singing of Sweet Caroline, all set for the likely showdown between UK champions Focus and European champions, from Belgium, the Roadrunners. But four teams enter the contest…
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,341
    edited March 2022
    Leon said:

    Yes. Really not good

    World’s fourth largest port. A massive cog in the Chinese economic machine
    I am not sure they will be able to repeat what they did in Xi'an, where they made a special exemption for the Samsung factory and made the employees isolate among themselves. Just far too much factories and interlinked economy in which if you started to make a special exemption for one, you would need to basically doing it for the whole area.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    kle4 said:

    I usually side with Tom more than Jerry, but what an odd meme of choice since it would show Russia as the bullying aggressor in this case.

    The head of the Russian space agency followed this meme up with the tweet: “A brief description of the current geopolitical situation in the language of a cartoon, since our Western colleagues do not know or understand anything more serious than comics.”
    https://twitter.com/b_judah/status/1502383213339099139?cxt=HHwWhoCyudLkxNkpAAAA

    If true, that is extraordinary, and goes a long way to explaining how the West has misplayed Russia since South Ossetia/Abkhazia and the how Putin misjudged Ukraine and the West now.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,341
    Don't panic Captain Manning.....

    New COVID19 cases in U.K. hit record high! 221,000 cases per day and still rising - Scotland the worst hit but affects every region.

    https://twitter.com/timspector/status/1502996099392540678?s=20&t=hOVHCuyEnwt_koaeKgQu4A
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    Leon said:

    This is quite big


    #BREAKING China places 17 million residents of Shenzhen under Covid lockdown: govt

    https://twitter.com/afp/status/1502972209811369985?s=21

    Shenzen is huge, and economically highly significant. I fear we could be seeing half of China going into lockdown. Not great for a battered global economy

    Shenzen îs also home to China's genomics factory, BGI.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,751
    kle4 said:

    I'm unconvinced by that. People are really angry right now about Russia, and perhaps that will be more sustained than usual, but ultimately people really really really really don't like things being built near their nice villages.

    It seems much mroe likely to me that people would agree with proposal, up to the point it happens near them. I'm all fo rit, but there are plenty of better sites somewhere else, will be the cry.

    A good rule of thumb, even if you are not generally against NIMBY's as a concept, is that there are none so unreasonable in the face of development proposals as those who live in the rural shires. I've long since ceased being surprised what they will object to.
    Fair. Depressing, but fair.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,077
    edited March 2022
    Focus v the Magnets from Bolton - first round to Focus

    And two. Focus go through to the final round.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,751
    edited March 2022

    The Russian Space program is dead. Stick a fork in it. It is done.

    Even before this it was reaching the end - OneWeb was changing providers, and their booked launches were getting thinner and thinner.

    They used to have 3 things going for them

    1) Cheapest launches
    2) Reliable
    3) Good business partners

    They don't have 1, 2 or 3 anymore. In fact, on 3, they have burnt their bridges.

    Moral of the story. Don't spit on the table in front of Elon Musk. It's the Third Classic Mistake.
    The OneWeb thing was bonkers. At least look the other way, let it launch, and get paid in FX. India must now be licking its lips. Plus the economic of our impending domestic launch vehicles for micro sats just changed.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566

    I am not sure they will be able to repeat what they did in Xi'an, where they made a special exemption for the Samsung factory and made the employees isolate among themselves. Just far too much factories and interlinked economy in which if you started to make a special exemption for one, you would need to basically doing it for the whole area.
    “China has instituted new COVID-19 restrictions that included URGING THE PUBLIC NOT TO LEAVE BEIJING and closing schools in Shanghai while the leader of Hong Kong warned that its coronavirus outbreak has yet to reach its peak.”

    (My capitals)

    https://twitter.com/ksatnews/status/1503000427813609472?s=21

    It looks bad. I think it is bad
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,077
    edited March 2022
    Next up, course record holders the Runners v Aces High

    The Runners surely will take this. Runners in red.

    Runners take the first, a crossover fault by the Aces. Aces pushing their changeovers to try and beat the Runners’ speed.

    And two to the Runners…so it’s the final round everyone has been waiting for. Runners just break the course record yet again!!

    The atmosphere would do the Sheffield crucible proud.

    But first the third place runoff…
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,266

    I actually meant the non-war correspondents that Sky and BBC sent over the past 2 weeks. Also, in recent years, they have been very wary about sending people to be actually there when the hardcore fighting is going on.

    That has been left to the likes of Vice News to be actually embedded people in Syria, Iraq, Eastern Ukraine and although Vice News can have some tiresome left wing bent on social issues (making the Guardian look right wing), their coverage of those conflicts has been top notch.
    I was defining war correspondents as journos corresponding from an, er, active war situation.

    Struggling to comprehend your last sentence: "...tiresome left wing bent..." - sounds like a practical impossibility to me. ;-)
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,037
    OT Sainsbury's sitrep. Masks down to 20-30 per cent but perhaps the weekend gets a different demographic than weekdays (more school-age children for a start). Went Sunday because it is Cheltenham this week. Goods rearranged on shelves and those helpful signs that say what is in each aisle have been removed. To put the tin lid on it, my support bubble's car broke down (or rather would not unlock the doors) which is why I can also report Sainsbury's has done away with the courtesy minicab phone.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,161

    Swansea is the test-bed - powers a mere 150,000 homes. The prize is the lagoons built after that - Cardiff lagoon would power 1.6m homes. As would half a dozen others. The (admittedly, more technically challenging) Bridgewater lagoon would be nearer to 3m homes.

    A million here, a million there - soon you are talking serious numbers....
    Best wishes with your ventures.

    If these projects ensure HMG investment in Hinkley Point is diverted elsewhere I couldn't be happier. @Mexicanpete reporting from inside the 30km blast zone.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,341
    edited March 2022

    I was defining war correspondents as journos corresponding from an, er, active war situation.

    Struggling to comprehend your last sentence: "...tiresome left wing bent..." - sounds like a practical impossibility to me. ;-)
    Vice News certainly give it a bloody good go. Which is a shame, because as I say their reporting from active war zones over the past 5+ years has been far superior to any of the major news outlets.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,321
    TimT said:

    If true, that is extraordinary, and goes a long way to explaining how the West has misplayed Russia since South Ossetia/Abkhazia and the how Putin misjudged Ukraine and the West now.
    I would have said it's extraordinary more because the implication is NATO while hobbled for now will eventually come to Ukraine's aid, kick Russia's arse and keep it tied up to be booted by anyone who wishes for all eternity.

    So he's effectively just tweeted high treason.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,266

    Vice News certainly give it a bloody good go. Which is a shame, because as I say their reporting from active war zones over the past 5+ years has been far superior to any of the major news outlets.
    I was joking of course.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    TimT said:

    If true, that is extraordinary, and goes a long way to explaining how the West has misplayed Russia since South Ossetia/Abkhazia and the how Putin misjudged Ukraine and the West now.
    The essence of Greater X Nationalism is that country X is (1) persecuted and (2) a Great Power and (3) deserves the right to build a pyramid of skulls.

    Because history.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566


    I've given up on covid now - I can only cope with one Horse of the Apocalypse at a time.
    But, as they say, Covid has not given up on you

    If China locks down it’s hard to see the world avoiding a terrible recession, what with European war as well. Great
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,341
    edited March 2022

    I was joking of course.
    I know. So was I (to some extent)

    I think Vice News provides some super interesting content. The sister channel Vice less so.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,077
    edited March 2022
    One up to the Aces for the third place trophy….a fault by the Magnets, but then a fault by Aces, the fifth dogs get sent in…Magnets pull through with their extra dog. Evens.

    And Aces win the decider, the faster team. Looks like a dropped ball by the Magnets as well.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2022/03/13/ukraine-news-russia-war-latest-putin-zelensky-kyiv/

    Phosphorus bombs on civilians, almost-NATO base bombed. Looks like deliberate pushing of the envelope.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    biggles said:

    Fair. Depressing, but fair.
    Pay rent to the shire landlords for placing the windmills on their land. That'll win them over.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    ydoethur said:

    I would have said it's extraordinary more because the implication is NATO while hobbled for now will eventually come to Ukraine's aid, kick Russia's arse and keep it tied up to be booted by anyone who wishes for all eternity.

    So he's effectively just tweeted high treason.
    That point has been made around the InterWebs already....

    The combination of being both bully & victim is a common one in Greater X Nationalism.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,200
    More No10 lack of security.

    https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/russian-owned-megahertz-downing-street-media-refit_uk_604e42c0c5b672fce4ed8649?ncid=tweetlnkukhpmg00000001

    Of course the real threat is Russian sleepers masquerading as Ukrainian refugees rather than those who already have easy access to the PM, No 10 tech and the highest levels of our government.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    edited March 2022
    TimT said:

    Pay rent to the shire landlords for placing the windmills on their land. That'll win them over.
    Landowners love wind farms. They get paid a rent and get to use about 95% of the land for other things.....

    It is quite noticeable that in Texas they are more popular than having the pump jacks. Oil can make a mess of the land, runs out etc etc. The wind money rolls in much more smoothly. Apart from the odd freeze up, of course.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,321
    Leon said:

    But, as they say, Covid has not given up on you

    If China locks down it’s hard to see the world avoiding a terrible recession, what with European war as well. Great
    One silver lining - oil and gas prices would if not plummet at least lose the significant upward pressure we're facing right now.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,077
    edited March 2022
    So the British title holders meet the Belgians….Focus from Selby are going to have to push their changeovers here….


    Very close on the first three legs but the Belgian’s faster dog sneaked it on the final leg. And yet another course record falls - its now 14.71 seconds!!

    False start by the Runners - Focus just have to finish clean.

    And it’s one apiece! The decider….

    Slow start by the Belgians…but a fault by Focus….they pushed it and crossed the starting line early…the Belgians just need to finish clean, and they have.

    The first European team to make the final at Crufts takes the trophy!

    After the presentation, a break for everyone to refresh and eat before the evenings show climax….
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,853
    edited March 2022
    TOPPING said:

    Everyone has their favourite article on the conflict and this one is I think pretty good.

    https://www.intellinews.com/eastern-ukraine-has-almost-completely-fallen-but-putin-now-needs-a-peace-fast-237784/?source=ukraine

    TL;DR we don't know much but what we do know doesn't necessarily align with Western media reports.

    He makes some good points. Lot of "I told you so", which is always irritating if somone else does it, especially when he got his core prediction wrong - that Putin wouldn't invade. FWIW I suspect he underestimates: firstly the degree to which Putin has failed in his war aim of dealing with the "Ukraine Problem", which makes any negotiation difficult for him; secondly that Ukrainian nationalism is a thing in East Ukraine, which would make it difficult for Russia to occupy that part of Ukraine as well.

    I'm no military strategist, but even I can see the existential risk to the Ukrainian army (green squares) on this map. The Russians can head north from Crimea and cut off the bulk of the Ukrainian Army (the green squares) and grab all of east Ukraine including Kharkiv and possibly Kyiv. I don't see an equivalent risk to the Russian positions. Of course the Russians haven't done this yet and hopefully never will.



    source: @JominiW







  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,243
    TOPPING said:

    That's fair enough. My gut feel is that Russia having launched the invasion has a plan somewhere and nothing I have seen so far has shown this to have demonstrably failed. That is just a gut feel and hence informs my caution when people on here post a 30-second video of two T-72s doing a pirouette on some street somewhere and taking that as proof of an imminent Russian defeat.

    But I also from Day One said that if Russia does occupy the whole of Ukraine then we are back to an Afghan situation and that seems absolutely bonkers but then perhaps Putin is absolutely bonkers. Because if nothing else we all know how that ended.

    As for not control of the air I think that article was interesting both on Ukraine and Russia air power limitations (he asks for example about the famous and untouched Russian convoy). I have no idea why it wasn't targeted but it wasn't. He also poses some other interesting questions which contradict the PB orthodoxy and hence why everyone is furious at me for posting it and calling it "my article".

    It is a very strange phenomenon on PB but perhaps not surprising, given PB's nature.
    But there is masses of information coming from both Western intelligence agencies and independent verification sources to show that, assuming the Russians did have a plan, it has gone seriously wrong. That is also clear from their own actions. Current Western estimates are that, in terms of equipment losses the Russians have lost around 2/3rds of the Ukrainian claims. This is without any reliance on twitter or the Ukrainians themselves.

    So I am afraid that, to a large extent, you have been indulging in straw man arguments.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,650

    The essence of Greater X Nationalism is that country X is (1) persecuted and (2) a Great Power and (3) deserves the right to build a pyramid of skulls.

    Because history.
    It's to be discouraged.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,697
    Leon said:

    Crimea IS different. It was Russian for 200 years until Kruschev gifted it to Ukraine for reasons of commie politicking.

    In any peace, Ukraine probably would - probably should - accept the loss of Crimea
    It wasn’t a gift - it was a trade for part of the Donblas basin
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,751

    Landowners love wind farms. They get paid a rent and get to use about 95% of the land for other things.....

    It is quite noticeable that in Texas they are more popular than having the pump jacks. Oil can make a mess of the land, runs out etc etc. The wind money rolls in much more smoothly. Apart from the odd freeze up, of course.
    Will they keep my lawn mown if they can have a quiet corner?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,761
    Leon said:

    “China has instituted new COVID-19 restrictions that included URGING THE PUBLIC NOT TO LEAVE BEIJING and closing schools in Shanghai while the leader of Hong Kong warned that its coronavirus outbreak has yet to reach its peak.”

    (My capitals)

    https://twitter.com/ksatnews/status/1503000427813609472?s=21

    It looks bad. I think it is bad
    Yes, bad for China. Bad for the world. But good for oil prices.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,266
    When we come to consider the cost of rebuilding Ukraine after this terrible business is over, would it be appropriate and legal to use those frozen Russian assets, including the Russian National Wealth Fund?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    kinabalu said:

    It's to be discouraged.
    Greater X Nationalism is to Nationalism what National Socialism is to Socialism.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,243

    When we come to consider the cost of rebuilding Ukraine after this terrible business is over, would it be appropriate and legal to use those frozen Russian assets, including the Russian National Wealth Fund?

    Appropriate? Yes.
    Legal? Probably not.

    It would be a political decision and I can see it being tied up in court for years.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,697

    When we come to consider the cost of rebuilding Ukraine after this terrible business is over, would it be appropriate and legal to use those frozen Russian assets, including the Russian National Wealth Fund?

    Yes.

    And then we get to argue about reparations for the next 30 years
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Russia's negotiator Slutsky says there's been "significant progress in the negotiations" and he expects there may be a signed deal in the next 2 to 3 days. https://ria.ru/20220313/progress-1777935859.html
    This is a notable development in light of the growing awareness at the Kremlin of the decrepit state of the RU army & the blunders of the pre-invasion intel. If confirmed by UA side, this would likely mean a truce on Zelenskys' terms.


    https://twitter.com/christogrozev/status/1503005194090688514
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083

    Appropriate? Yes.
    Legal? Probably not.

    It would be a political decision and I can see it being tied up in court for years.
    Most of the money will go in direct claims - the airliners that the Russians have effectively seized from Irish leasing companies, the OneWeb launches they paid for, the defaults on Russian bonds...
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,077
    So the Belgians lift the 2022 Flyball trophy.

    They’ll be celebrating in Zonhoven tonight!
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,901
    Whatever happened to the Belarus invasion?
    False report? Mutiny?
    Still hasn't barked.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566

    Russia's negotiator Slutsky says there's been "significant progress in the negotiations" and he expects there may be a signed deal in the next 2 to 3 days. https://ria.ru/20220313/progress-1777935859.html
    This is a notable development in light of the growing awareness at the Kremlin of the decrepit state of the RU army & the blunders of the pre-invasion intel. If confirmed by UA side, this would likely mean a truce on Zelenskys' terms.


    https://twitter.com/christogrozev/status/1503005194090688514

    Sweet Jesus, make it true
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    biggles said:

    Will they keep my lawn mown if they can have a quiet corner?
    Now I have a vision of you plugging your electric mower into a 200 meter tall wind turbine.... in the corner of a suburban garden.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,200

    When we come to consider the cost of rebuilding Ukraine after this terrible business is over, would it be appropriate and legal to use those frozen Russian assets, including the Russian National Wealth Fund?

    Almost certainly.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,083
    Leon said:

    Sweet Jesus, make it true
    I will be interested to see what the Russian side tries to hang on the agreement - sanction lifted, of course. Probably a demand that Nord Stream 2 is started up....
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264

    Russia's negotiator Slutsky says there's been "significant progress in the negotiations" and he expects there may be a signed deal in the next 2 to 3 days. https://ria.ru/20220313/progress-1777935859.html
    This is a notable development in light of the growing awareness at the Kremlin of the decrepit state of the RU army & the blunders of the pre-invasion intel. If confirmed by UA side, this would likely mean a truce on Zelenskys' terms.


    https://twitter.com/christogrozev/status/1503005194090688514

    I'll believe it when I see it. As things stand Russia could probably annex Kherson on top of LDR/DPR, and are making a bit of progress around Irpin.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566
    Also hopeful. Senior Ukrainian aide

    “To clarify. At the negotiations, the RF not putting ultimatums, but carefully listens to our proposals. 🇺🇦 will not give up any of the positions. Our demands are - the end of the war and the withdrawal of RF troops. I see the understanding and there is a dialogue.”

    https://twitter.com/podolyak_m/status/1502982017667026945?s=21

    🙏🙏🙏🙏
This discussion has been closed.