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The Barnet Bypass: Can the Tories hold on again? – politicalbetting.com

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  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    Brexit thinking did have a strand of "You lot have had it too easy in Europe, Britain needs the economic equivalent of a cold shower followed by a cross-country run. You'll hate it at the time, but it will be worth it when you're fit, buff and can pull Natalie Imbruglia."

    But it's not what the people voted for.
    Why would you shower before the run, not after?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,731

    Differently how? Even more of a disaster, or they think it went well?
    There’s this thing called Google. I just checked the website of Jamaica’s leading newspaper

    The Royal tour is notable by its low profile; the first story is buried under the sport, and reports of crime and inflation:


    ‘Wisdom in Trench Town's warm reception of royal visitors’

    https://www.jamaicaobserver.com/

    Not exactly rapturous enthusiasm, neither is it rabid republicanism
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,309

    @oleksiireznikov
    For the 1st time, meeting in 2+2 format. With @DmytroKuleba we discuss current issues & cooperation in political & defense directions between 🇺🇦-🇺🇸 with @SecDef & @SecBlinken.
    In the evening we’ll also be present at @POTUS speech on the russian war against Ukraine.
    Details later.


    image

    https://twitter.com/oleksiireznikov/status/1507656513011298306

    That's some battle rattle on ADM Grady. Respect.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674

    I would rather that since it would be England electing him that they suffered the consequence alone, but as I prefer the ceremonial model, yeah, bring it on. Johnson with only symbolic value is vastly preferable to him having actual executive power.
    Agreed. Johnson could make an amusing head of state and add to the gaiety of life. But I like the Swiss system, which elevates the institution rather than the person. The Presidency circulates every year around the Government, with Buggin's term deciding who hands out the medals and conducts the ceremonies this year. Many Swiss would struggle to tell you who the current President is, but all the ceremonies are performed with appropriate formality and pomp.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,273
    darkage said:

    Nevermind cancelling a whole century. Maybe we should just cancel our whole country. Or cancel the whole of civilisation, because the reality is that it is all built on slavery of various forms.

    The whole thing is pathetic and tragic.

    It's a Marxist anti-capitalist argument masquerading as as an anti-racist one.

    Central to Marxism is the idea of a bourgeoisie who own the means of production exploiting a proletariat who do all the work, and that capitalism would never deliver the goods. And that was a strong theme of the early industrial revolution. Slavery was an extreme example and, at the same time in the early 19th Century, we had indentured labour, penal servitude, transportation, cruel means of public execution, and economics driving non-slaves in the UK to work 6 days a week doing 14 hours a day in factories for little pay. There was certainly a racial dimension to it but the economic structure at the time was based on class divisions sinewed by religious belief of a natural order.

    We reformed. That's what led to modern day liberal democracy and a mixed market economy that did deliver the goods.

    Now, we still have a long way to go to help make our fellow non-white citizens feel wholly equal with the rest of us today - that is clearly the case. But the cultural and historical argument is being vociferously made today by Marxists because they think it a far more profitable route to undermine "The System" than relying upon revolution from a hitherto unreliable working class.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    Leon said:

    Brilliant detail in the Economist’s coverage of THAT rally in Moscow


    Putin was, apparently, wearing a ‘Lora Piano’ coat, made in Italy. Price: $14,000

    Man of the people. Stuff those oligarchs who can't do without caviar and fois gras.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,254

    Why would you shower before the run, not after?
    Brexit thinking was illogical too!
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,509

    Agreed. Johnson could make an amusing head of state and add to the gaiety of life. But I like the Swiss system, which elevates the institution rather than the person. The Presidency circulates every year around the Government, with Buggin's term deciding who hands out the medals and conducts the ceremonies this year. Many Swiss would struggle to tell you who the current President is, but all the ceremonies are performed with appropriate formality and pomp.
    Boris as King would be a hoot. Prince Philip on steroids.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255
    kjh said:

    ?.

    Why would the established church return to Rome. Why not just not have an established church? Churches should thrive or not in their own right.

    And why shouldn't a church wedding be restricted (if they want) to church goers. If you don't belong to a society/club why should you expect to benefit from it.

    Also why does it remove that right? If the church of England wants to provide it to residents of the parish, it can if it wishes.
    Its just typical HYUFD. When he doesn't have a valid argument to support his cause - which is most of the time - he just makes something up, no matter how ludicrous or stupid it is. One would think from the way he talks that Martin Luther and John Calvin had never existed. The CofE would just be another of the many protestant churches around the world.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674
    HYUFD said:

    So what, it must still be the established church. Otherwise by definition the established church returns to the Papacy and to Rome.

    Hence in many of the non Roman Catholic majority nations of Western Europe like Denmark and Norway the Lutheran Church remains the established church.

    Plus you end the Church of England as the established church you end the right of residents of the Parish to an automatic church wedding or funeral. Only regular churchgoers would keep that right
    Why do we need one church to be established? In Switzerland you indicate which church you belong to, and they get a small slice of income tax. If you say "none" IIRC you pay less, but as you say probably don't gret to use the church for weddings etc. Businesses are taxed too, which is controversial:

    https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/empty-coffers-_church-tax-issue-divides-swiss-catholics/36453132#:~:text=In most of Switzerland, individuals registered as church,collected from legal persons, which means essentially businesses.?msclkid=83138d49aced11ecb77dcd3e0f68a87e
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,339

    Why would you shower before the run, not after?
    That would be more sensible. But more sensible would be a less accurate metaphor for 2016 - now.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933

    It's a Marxist anti-capitalist argument masquerading as as an anti-racist one.

    Central to Marxism is the idea of a bourgeoisie who own the means of production exploiting a proletariat who do all the work, and that capitalism would never deliver the goods. And that was a strong theme of the early industrial revolution. Slavery was an extreme example and, at the same time in the early 19th Century, we had indentured labour, penal servitude, transportation, cruel means of public execution, and economics driving non-slaves in the UK to work 6 days a week doing 14 hours a day in factories for little pay. There was certainly a racial dimension to it but the economic structure at the time was based on class divisions sinewed by religious belief of a natural order.

    We reformed. That's what led to modern day liberal democracy and a mixed market economy that did deliver the goods.

    Now, we still have a long way to go to help make our fellow non-white citizens feel wholly equal with the rest of us today - that is clearly the case. But the cultural and historical argument is being vociferously made today by Marxists because they think it a far more profitable route to undermine "The System" than relying upon revolution from a hitherto unreliable working class.
    Depends which kind.
    Many traditional Marxists are dismissive of race as a factor of importance, and that racial, and other cleavages, are used to distract from class consciousness.
    See the RCP.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,317

    Hasn't happened with Germany.
    My wife's great grandparents were driven out of their home in Munich by the Nazis.
    A Nazi seized the (sizeable) house and all of the possessions, including sketches by Edvard Munch.
    Said Nazis descendants still live there and enjoy all possessions.
    I may have expressed myself badly, I was suggesting in my little alternative history that as with British slave owners, the state would have compensated those who had to hand back stolen Jewish property after the war.

    That sounds awful; if it doesn't invade the privacy of you and your wife can you name names - disinfectant of sunlight and all that? I'm aware that there are plenty of people that 'got away with it' post war but isn't that down to passivity and inaction rather than complicity of the German state (taking into account that there have been many twists and turns in what constitutes the post war German state)?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,731
    IanB2 said:

    Significantly worse, it seems. When it comes to reporting royal stuff I am not convinced we can rely on our print media to give a balanced account.
    Really?

    I just checked the website of the main Belizean paper. There, the Royal visit is bigger news (but still not major)



    ‘BELIZE CITY, Mon. Mar. 21, 2022– The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s three-day visit to Belize—the first stop in their Commonwealth Tour—has been deemed mostly a success, having gone smoothly even as it sparked debate in communities both on and offline. ‘


    https://amandala.com.bz/news/royals-begin-their-caribbean-tour-in-belize/

    I do not sense the guillotine is near. Most of the foaming outrage is British, and confined to Britain
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    Foxy said:

    Absolutely, and I am a little surprised how tone deaf the Palace has been to the issues. Perhaps if they still had Harry and Meghan in the room they might have addressed the issues a bit better. Not just the slavery one, but also the issues around post colonial development.
    Doesn't the Jamaican government play a pretty key role in organising a royal visit - agreeing the logistics, who and what get seen, the transport arrangements etc? So if there have been difficulties or poor optics or poor decisions part of the responsibility lies with them, surely? Jamaicans would - or should - understand the sensitivities of their history rather better than another royal prince and his actress wife.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933
    kjh said:

    Boris as King would be a hoot. Prince Philip on steroids.
    That would explain his muscly frame.

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,273
    Leon said:

    There’s this thing called Google. I just checked the website of Jamaica’s leading newspaper

    The Royal tour is notable by its low profile; the first story is buried under the sport, and reports of crime and inflation:


    ‘Wisdom in Trench Town's warm reception of royal visitors’

    https://www.jamaicaobserver.com/

    Not exactly rapturous enthusiasm, neither is it rabid republicanism
    I imagine indifference will be enough to kill it off.

    But, I doubt anything good of it will come for Jamaica as a result.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,531
    Dura_Ace said:

    That's some battle rattle on ADM Grady. Respect.
    He seems to have acquired a hell of a lot of extra fruit salad since his official picture in 2021!!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_W._Grady#/media/File:ADM_Christopher_W._Grady_(2).jpg
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010

    Its just typical HYUFD. When he doesn't have a valid argument to support his cause - which is most of the time - he just makes something up, no matter how ludicrous or stupid it is. One would think from the way he talks that Martin Luther and John Calvin had never existed. The CofE would just be another of the many protestant churches around the world.
    The C of E is NOT a primarily evangelical church like most Protestant churches.

    It is a Catholic Church so its authority would come more from the Pope the moment the Monarch ceased to be Supreme Governor. Indeed many Anglicans in England would become Roman Catholic at that point
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,440

    I didn't follow the Royal Caribbean tour closely. But what I saw of it made me think it was from 50 years ago. It was a stage-managed show that was patronising and condescending, where grateful 'natives' were corralled into showing their gratitude for...... I don't quite know what.

    In another world, I could imagine a certain Boris Johnson writing a coruscating account of the tour for a daily newspaper, full of rich metaphors to illustrate how such tours are out of kilter in the modern world, while trying to avoid racial epithets.

    If our post Brexit fate is to become a North Atlantic theme park that wasn't a bad taster!
  • I feel like the photo of Rishi at the petrol station has perfectly demonstrated his inability to do politics.

    How did he think that was a good idea!?!
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255
    edited March 2022

    Why do we need one church to be established? In Switzerland you indicate which church you belong to, and they get a small slice of income tax. If you say "none" IIRC you pay less, but as you say probably don't gret to use the church for weddings etc. Businesses are taxed too, which is controversial:

    https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/empty-coffers-_church-tax-issue-divides-swiss-catholics/36453132#:~:text=In most of Switzerland, individuals registered as church,collected from legal persons, which means essentially businesses.?msclkid=83138d49aced11ecb77dcd3e0f68a87e
    I don't like any system that forces you to pay more tax but there is a similar system in Norway. You pay a small tax which goes to the church/religion of your choice or you can choose to have it go to the Humanist society. If you don't designate anyone then it goes to local charities/welfare organisations.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205
    Leon said:

    Brilliant detail in the Economist’s coverage of THAT rally in Moscow


    Putin was, apparently, wearing a ‘Lora Piano’ coat, made in Italy. Price: $14,000

    Surely would have been better in a fleece gilet...
  • @HYUFD are you keeping well?
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255
    HYUFD said:

    The C of E is NOT a primarily evangelical church like most Protestant churches.

    It is a Catholic Church so its authority would come more from the Pope the moment the Monarch ceased to be Supreme Governor. Indeed many Anglicans in England would become Roman Catholic at that point
    I do love the way you just make this stuff up as though it has any basis in fact. Takes some front I must say.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,317
    Leon said:

    Brilliant detail in the Economist’s coverage of THAT rally in Moscow


    Putin was, apparently, wearing a ‘Lora Piano’ coat, made in Italy. Price: $14,000

    Tommy Hilfiger gilet, go fuck yourself.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,006

    Why do we need one church to be established? In Switzerland you indicate which church you belong to, and they get a small slice of income tax. If you say "none" IIRC you pay less, but as you say probably don't gret to use the church for weddings etc. Businesses are taxed too, which is controversial:

    https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/empty-coffers-_church-tax-issue-divides-swiss-catholics/36453132#:~:text=In most of Switzerland, individuals registered as church,collected from legal persons, which means essentially businesses.?msclkid=83138d49aced11ecb77dcd3e0f68a87e
    We don't of course need one church, or any, to be established. The reasons for where we are right now are Burkean not calculated, organic not logical. We are not a 'Year Zero' people but an evolved society.

    Soon a revolution of sorts will occur, probably in the monarchy and church. At the moment with regard to church, the maintaining of thousands of the most important listed buildings in England, and a treasure of global importance, is looked after by local committees of six old ladies and a dog. The county of Lincolnshire alone has over 600 of them. When the change comes the taxpayer will pick up that burden. The old ladies will breathe a sigh of relief and focus on the flower and coffee rota. They are already begin to give up the unequal struggle.

  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,731

    I do love the way you just make this stuff up as though it has any basis in fact. Takes some front I must say.
    Isn’t @HYUFD technically correct here? The CoE is a reformed branch of the Catholic Church, with a different dude in charge. That was the very English compromise, thrashed out to avoid further civil war and burnings
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    edited March 2022

    I don't like any system that forces you to pay more tax but there is a similar system in Norway. You pay a small tax which goes to the church/religion of your choice or you can choose to have it go to the Humanist society. If you don't designate anyone then it goes to local charities/welfare organisations.
    Often think this kind of forced tax but the taxpayer decides what it is spent on should be trialed here. As long as the overall tax take is not higher. A significant amount of what government spends today is fluff and gimmicks - not bad things per se but not what a government should be forcing taxpayers to fund if they dont want - Sport is an example as is churches , woke campaigns , some cultural spend etc - a few pence of income tax shoudl be able to be nominated to whatever the individual taxpayer deems most worthy from this sort of stuff
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    Foxy said:

    Surely would have been better in a fleece gilet...
    Not in the climate.

    They're for Italians to wear when it isn't really cold.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674

    It's a Marxist anti-capitalist argument masquerading as as an anti-racist one.

    Central to Marxism is the idea of a bourgeoisie who own the means of production exploiting a proletariat who do all the work, and that capitalism would never deliver the goods. And that was a strong theme of the early industrial revolution. Slavery was an extreme example and, at the same time in the early 19th Century, we had indentured labour, penal servitude, transportation, cruel means of public execution, and economics driving non-slaves in the UK to work 6 days a week doing 14 hours a day in factories for little pay. There was certainly a racial dimension to it but the economic structure at the time was based on class divisions sinewed by religious belief of a natural order.

    We reformed. That's what led to modern day liberal democracy and a mixed market economy that did deliver the goods.

    Now, we still have a long way to go to help make our fellow non-white citizens feel wholly equal with the rest of us today - that is clearly the case. But the cultural and historical argument is being vociferously made today by Marxists because they think it a far more profitable route to undermine "The System" than relying upon revolution from a hitherto unreliable working class.
    I agree with your historical view - and it makes you something of a Marxist in analysing past centuries (it was all recent history for Marx, after all) - and with your conclusion that we've substantially reformed but still have a long way to go in making black people feel they're treated entirely equally. I also think that the current government has done a good job in disposing of the idea that you can't be successsful in the Tory Party unless you're white - clearly, being politically reliable is sufficient.

    But I don't see why we shouldn't come more publicly to terms with what you describe historically, in much the same way as modern Germany has done with the Nazis. "We made a horrible mistake with dreadful consequences and we have only slowly and painfully rehabilitated ourselves". I nstead, we treat it as an interesting bit of history without much moral dimension, like the Glorious Revolution or the English Civil War.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154

    I didn't follow the Royal Caribbean tour closely. But what I saw of it made me think it was from 50 years ago. It was a stage-managed show that was patronising and condescending, where grateful 'natives' were corralled into showing their gratitude for...... I don't quite know what.

    In another world, I could imagine a certain Boris Johnson writing a coruscating account of the tour for a daily newspaper, full of rich metaphors to illustrate how such tours are out of kilter in the modern world, while trying to avoid racial epithets.

    I think everyone can take solace that it was a Royal Caribbean tour and not a P&O one.

    Clearly the latter would have resulted in the Governor General being sacked and replaced with Gavin Williamson.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,731

    Tommy Hilfiger gilet, go fuck yourself.
    When I watched that rally, I actually remember thinking, omg Putin is now a full on Fascist leader…. but that really is quite a nice coat. Worked well with the rollneck jumper, too
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    Leon said:

    Isn’t @HYUFD technically correct here? The CoE is a reformed branch of the Catholic Church, with a different dude in charge. That was the very English compromise, thrashed out to avoid further civil war and burnings
    HY's job isn't to be correct, technically or otherwise. He exists to exemplify for the rest of us the incorrectness of the reactionary wing of Tory membership.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205
    Cyclefree said:

    Doesn't the Jamaican government play a pretty key role in organising a royal visit - agreeing the logistics, who and what get seen, the transport arrangements etc? So if there have been difficulties or poor optics or poor decisions part of the responsibility lies with them, surely? Jamaicans would - or should - understand the sensitivities of their history rather better than another royal prince and his actress wife.
    By liason between Palace and Jamaica, I expect.

    Certainly Meghan and Harry dealt with post-colonial legacy rather well on their visit to South Africa. Much less stuffy too.

    https://youtu.be/SBVn3OAt9vg

  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    HYUFD said:

    The C of E is NOT a primarily evangelical church like most Protestant churches.

    It is a Catholic Church so its authority would come more from the Pope the moment the Monarch ceased to be Supreme Governor. Indeed many Anglicans in England would become Roman Catholic at that point
    The Anglicans who were likely to do that mostly did so already when the ordination of women went through.

    Those left would be not keen on a church that seems to be taking even longer than the CofE did to go down the same road.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,339

    I feel like the photo of Rishi at the petrol station has perfectly demonstrated his inability to do politics.

    How did he think that was a good idea!?!

    The photo ops worked for furlough and Eat Out, so he assumed that was brilliant image management rather than the popularity of giving people money.

    I'm trying to thing of sporting analogies... Someone talented but raw, gets catapulted to the top tier too young, does well on their first outing but then gets found out because they've not done the Wednesday nights away at Grimthorpe United or the bowling 30 overs on the trot at Basingstoke.
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    edited March 2022

    I feel like the photo of Rishi at the petrol station has perfectly demonstrated his inability to do politics.

    How did he think that was a good idea!?!

    i honestly think nobody in the real world cares much about the photo - which is a argument for him not doing it in the first place as well. In the end the tories will get booted out next time because they have not played up to the thing the public generally trust them with - money and the economy - what with record borrowing , NI hike (tax on jobs) the highest tax take in modern history , rampant inflation. The seem unable to tear away from big government spending which gives natural tories no reason to vote for the,m
  • @Stuartinromford hope you are keeping well
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,731

    The photo ops worked for furlough and Eat Out, so he assumed that was brilliant image management rather than the popularity of giving people money.

    I'm trying to thing of sporting analogies... Someone talented but raw, gets catapulted to the top tier too young, does well on their first outing but then gets found out because they've not done the Wednesday nights away at Grimthorpe United or the bowling 30 overs on the trot at Basingstoke.
    Rishi Sunak is the Emma Raducanu of politics. Discuss
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,541
    Cyclefree said:

    Doesn't the Jamaican government play a pretty key role in organising a royal visit - agreeing the logistics, who and what get seen, the transport arrangements etc? So if there have been difficulties or poor optics or poor decisions part of the responsibility lies with them, surely? Jamaicans would - or should - understand the sensitivities of their history rather better than another royal prince and his actress wife.
    A subtle of kind of paternalism perhaps. In all practical matters Jamaica basically is independent notwithstanding sharing a Head of State with us, and would surely need to sign off on anything that is planned for a royal tour rather than just do whatever some twonk at the Palace might have suggested. But we remove them from the equation entirely as if they are complete non entities and bystanders so that we in Britain can moralise, defend or criticise it all from what it means for us.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,317
    Leon said:

    When I watched that rally, I actually remember thinking, omg Putin is now a full on Fascist leader…. but that really is quite a nice coat. Worked well with the rollneck jumper, too
    Which leaves the really important question a begging, what shoes? I'm guessing Gucci or perhaps Ferragamo.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    IshmaelZ said:

    say what you like about flsoj, the odd phrase does cut through. They are trapped in piccaninny think. That Land Rover was a serious disaster.
    There are plenty of pictures of HMQ in similar vehicles from decades ago, which is why it looks a bit anachronistic now.

    But people are rushing to judgment. Whose Land Rover is it anyway? Probably the Jamaican government's. Who made the decision to use it? Etc etc.

    As for Harry and Meghan being more sensitive, give me a break. When they went round South Africa they were far too grand to use any of the local vehicles and had their own Land Rover transported over - much as Charles did with his Rolls when he visited Romania a few years ago. Harry can't even be arsed to come back for his grandfather's memorial service and take the opportunity to see his grandmother.
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850

    The photo ops worked for furlough and Eat Out, so he assumed that was brilliant image management rather than the popularity of giving people money.

    I'm trying to thing of sporting analogies... Someone talented but raw, gets catapulted to the top tier too young, does well on their first outing but then gets found out because they've not done the Wednesday nights away at Grimthorpe United or the bowling 30 overs on the trot at Basingstoke.
    uh like this quiz errm

    Gazza?

  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,254
    The Daily Star headline deserves a bit of spotlight.

    Absolute berk must walk the plank, says absolute berk who refuses to walk the plank.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,541

    I feel like the photo of Rishi at the petrol station has perfectly demonstrated his inability to do politics.

    How did he think that was a good idea!?!

    His PR for quite some time was seen as pretty slick. But even if he hadn't borrowed someone elses car etc, I can't really see what his team thought was being achieved. "Rishi mate, people won't understand the policy unless we show you know what a car is and how is is refueled".
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,273

    I agree with your historical view - and it makes you something of a Marxist in analysing past centuries (it was all recent history for Marx, after all) - and with your conclusion that we've substantially reformed but still have a long way to go in making black people feel they're treated entirely equally. I also think that the current government has done a good job in disposing of the idea that you can't be successsful in the Tory Party unless you're white - clearly, being politically reliable is sufficient.

    But I don't see why we shouldn't come more publicly to terms with what you describe historically, in much the same way as modern Germany has done with the Nazis. "We made a horrible mistake with dreadful consequences and we have only slowly and painfully rehabilitated ourselves". I nstead, we treat it as an interesting bit of history without much moral dimension, like the Glorious Revolution or the English Civil War.
    I am in no sense a Marxist. They would believe in a revolution leading to common ownership of the means of production, and an implicit rejection of virtually all other social and cultural ties that bind societies together as an obstacle to that and undesirable in and of themselves.

    I am able to recognise the need for reasoned reform without being a revolutionary, and preserving what's best of our cultural and social traditions at the same time.

    That makes me conservative.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Leon said:

    Rishi Sunak is the Emma Raducanu of politics. Discuss
    More the Nick Clegg of the 2020s.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,781

    I feel like the photo of Rishi at the petrol station has perfectly demonstrated his inability to do politics.

    How did he think that was a good idea!?!

    Don't know about you, but I quite often hang around petrol stations to fill up other people's cars. Doesn't everybody?
  • Leon said:

    Rishi Sunak is the Emma Raducanu of politics. Discuss
    Are you going to say she's a beautiful girl even though she's not even 18 like you did with Raducanu
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,339
    edited March 2022

    I don't like any system that forces you to pay more tax but there is a similar system in Norway. You pay a small tax which goes to the church/religion of your choice or you can choose to have it go to the Humanist society. If you don't designate anyone then it goes to local charities/welfare organisations.
    The certainly used to be something similar in Spain. As with political parties, it's not ideal but it may be necessary.

    As institutions, they are probably needed- we would all lose if they didn't exist. We need broad-based organisations doing political thinking and doing, and churches meet needs and touch places that others don't. But neither has enough activists to really keep them going. Then you end up with both parties and churches doing stuff that's not really in society's interests, because they need the money.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,541
    Leon said:

    Rishi Sunak is the Emma Raducanu of politics. Discuss
    Doesn't work - she has actually had an incredible achievement even if she never wins anything again. Sunak was chosen to be a patsy, splashed cash around whilst being more coherent than Boris and so got popular is all.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,509

    Don't know about you, but I quite often hang around petrol stations to fill up other people's cars. Doesn't everybody?
    Well at least he made someone happy; the car owner.
  • Don't know about you, but I quite often hang around petrol stations to fill up other people's cars. Doesn't everybody?
    I feel like the whole thing perfectly encapsulates how the Tory Party now are completely out of touch.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933

    The photo ops worked for furlough and Eat Out, so he assumed that was brilliant image management rather than the popularity of giving people money.

    I'm trying to thing of sporting analogies... Someone talented but raw, gets catapulted to the top tier too young, does well on their first outing but then gets found out because they've not done the Wednesday nights away at Grimthorpe United or the bowling 30 overs on the trot at Basingstoke.
    Rishi Sunak as Delle Alli?
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,513
    Leon said:

    Brilliant detail in the Economist’s coverage of THAT rally in Moscow


    Putin was, apparently, wearing a ‘Lora Piano’ coat, made in Italy. Price: $14,000

    Meanwhile Russian soldiers were getting frostbite because of lack of proper clothing.

    Amazing that Russia has once again all the requirements for a Marxist revolution.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,541
    Cyclefree said:

    There are plenty of pictures of HMQ in similar vehicles from decades ago, which is why it looks a bit anachronistic now.

    But people are rushing to judgment. Whose Land Rover is it anyway? Probably the Jamaican government's. Who made the decision to use it? Etc etc.

    As for Harry and Meghan being more sensitive, give me a break. When they went round South Africa they were far too grand to use any of the local vehicles and had their own Land Rover transported over - much as Charles did with his Rolls when he visited Romania a few years ago. Harry can't even be arsed to come back for his grandfather's memorial service and take the opportunity to see his grandmother.
    I am 150% sure that once Her Majesty passes on there is going to be so much shit flung between Harry and William. The accusations from the former are too serious to be bottled up, and he needs it to be relevant to boot, Charles will try not to get involved as King, but William can hardly not counter accusations so the briefings will be on.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,541

    I feel like the whole thing perfectly encapsulates how the Tory Party now are completely out of touch.
    I genuinely don't think parties need to be 'in touch' in order to do a good job, overall. Lack of understanding of normal people doesn't preclude doing right by them, nor does understanding them mean you do a good job. But at present the Tories are not offering much of either.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181

    Meanwhile Russian soldiers were getting frostbite because of lack of proper clothing.

    Amazing that Russia has once again all the requirements for a Marxist revolution.
    On the frostbite - Given that it was described as "50% have frostbitten feet", I was wondering if it was actually trench foot? A translation issue?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933

    uh like this quiz errm

    Gazza?

    Gazza was laid low by injury then the drink.
    But he had a long, distinguished career at the very top.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205
    Cyclefree said:

    There are plenty of pictures of HMQ in similar vehicles from decades ago, which is why it looks a bit anachronistic now.

    But people are rushing to judgment. Whose Land Rover is it anyway? Probably the Jamaican government's. Who made the decision to use it? Etc etc.

    As for Harry and Meghan being more sensitive, give me a break. When they went round South Africa they were far too grand to use any of the local vehicles and had their own Land Rover transported over - much as Charles did with his Rolls when he visited Romania a few years ago. Harry can't even be arsed to come back for his grandfather's memorial service and take the opportunity to see his grandmother.
    Sure, there is a lot of theatre that goes into a Royal visit, but theatre is there to tell a story. A story where costume, sets and setting all need to align. So which was the more effective story to tell in the modern age?

    I think though that the Palace flunkies were appalled by the informality and relaxed nature of Meghan and Harry in South Africa. I suspect that it was that rather than racism that drove the backbiting against her.

  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,156
    edited March 2022
    Leon said:

    Isn’t @HYUFD technically correct here? The CoE is a reformed branch of the Catholic Church, with a different dude in charge. That was the very English compromise, thrashed out to avoid further civil war and burnings
    Sure, that's the history, but it doesn't mean that if the Monarch was no longer head of the church the Pope would become so. Some other arrangement would be made.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,541

    Meanwhile Russian soldiers were getting frostbite because of lack of proper clothing.

    Amazing that Russia has once again all the requirements for a Marxist revolution.
    At least someone does - marxists have been waiting on one for a long time, it's amazing how committed they can be to thinking it is the answer.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,781
    edited March 2022
    dixiedean said:

    Rishi Sunak as Delle Alli?
    Oh, come on. I know Rishi's useless, but he's not that bad.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,469
    Morning all :)

    Another glorious day so the ground will be quickening at the horse race tracks. The return of Flat racing on grass at Doncaster before it goes away for a couple of weeks to allow for a brace of Nationals.

    I was once told by a punter not to have a bet on the flat before Royal Ascot - that may be a shade excessive but I'll leave today's card to others.

    Kempton stages a meeting on the Polytrack and I'm going there for my three to be sunk without trace.

    Today's Stodge Saturday Patent:

    2.05 Kempton: FELIX
    3,55 Kempton: TOMMY DE VITO
    4.30 Kempton: MY DUBAWI

    Good luck in all your punting endeavours today - fantastic card at Meydan. The Sheema Classic is the best race we'll see this side of Ascot. I think the best bet may be AL NEFUD in the first.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674

    I am in no sense a Marxist. They would believe in a revolution leading to common ownership of the means of production, and an implicit rejection of virtually all other social and cultural ties that bind societies together as an obstacle to that and undesirable in and of themselves.

    I am able to recognise the need for reasoned reform without being a revolutionary, and preserving what's best of our cultural and social traditions at the same time.

    That makes me conservative.
    Yes, I was teasing you. But I think you agree with the analysis of the 18th century, though not with the conclusions. I agree with your penultimate sentence, though I'm not sure it is well-represented by Mr Johnson and the current party. What is your view of them? (Genuine non-teasing question.)
  • Hope you are keeping well @NickPalmer
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,731

    Meanwhile Russian soldiers were getting frostbite because of lack of proper clothing.

    Amazing that Russia has once again all the requirements for a Marxist revolution.
    Russian median salary is about $6000 per annum. So Putin was wearing a coat that costs twice as much as the average Russian makes in a year

    Quite the czar, indeed

    Apparently Putin’s personal wristwatch collection is worth £700,000

    Salaries for Russian politicians must be REALLY high
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,616
    edited March 2022
    Morning all.

    Meanwhile Russian soldiers were getting frostbite because of lack of proper clothing.

    Amazing that Russia has once again all the requirements for a Marxist revolution.
    So the Italian Luxory Goods for Oligarchs industry *did* get a carve out from the sanctions? :smile:

    (New carved back in, I believe.)
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,273

    Yes, I was teasing you. But I think you agree with the analysis of the 18th century, though not with the conclusions. I agree with your penultimate sentence, though I'm not sure it is well-represented by Mr Johnson and the current party. What is your view of them? (Genuine non-teasing question.)
    I think Boris is a morally bankrupt tosspot.

    But, I don't think he's Putin either.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181
    On the imperial thing. It was interesting to see a number of people who were uncomfortable with describing the Russian and Chinese Empires as such, when we were discussing them. Before Russia invaded Ukraine.

    Someone mentioned Orban earlier - he is of course hanging out with Hungarian Irredentists, who describe themselves as Greater Hungarian Nationalists*. Yes, they want a much bigger Hungary - essentially, their thing is that we-was-robbed when the Austro-Hungarian Empire went out of business. They have a thing for drawing maps of all the land that should be in Hungary.

    So yes, Orban is a fan of a number of the things that Putin is - just a milder implementation. So far.

    *Easily identified by worshipping Horthy, minimising the participation in the Holocaust hy Hungary and wanting large chunks of other peoples countries.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,616
    edited March 2022
    kle4 said:

    I am 150% sure that once Her Majesty passes on there is going to be so much shit flung between Harry and William. The accusations from the former are too serious to be bottled up, and he needs it to be relevant to boot, Charles will try not to get involved as King, but William can hardly not counter accusations so the briefings will be on.
    What's this Landrover thing, and why is it an issue?

    (It sounds like people with no argument to make getting furious as a figleaf.)

    And what is this "trapped in picaninny-land" thing?

    That sounds like another figleaf by someone wanting mud to sling.

    But do correct me.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674

    Often think this kind of forced tax but the taxpayer decides what it is spent on should be trialed here. As long as the overall tax take is not higher. A significant amount of what government spends today is fluff and gimmicks - not bad things per se but not what a government should be forcing taxpayers to fund if they dont want - Sport is an example as is churches , woke campaigns , some cultural spend etc - a few pence of income tax shoudl be able to be nominated to whatever the individual taxpayer deems most worthy from this sort of stuff
    The Norwegian system seems fair enough, and I like the idea. Curiously, I believe it was common in Eastern Europe under communism and it still persists in places. There are two snags, though. First it squeezes out things that almost any rational person would think desirable but aren't remotely sexy - improving prisoner rehabilitation, say. Worse, it makes charities spend a lot of their money on "nominate us for your tax money!" campaigns. On a visit to Poland, I found the train covered in adverts from rival charities, as it was the time of year when people make the choice.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181
    edited March 2022
    Leon said:

    Russian median salary is about $6000 per annum. So Putin was wearing a coat that costs twice as much as the average Russian makes in a year

    Quite the czar, indeed

    Apparently Putin’s personal wristwatch collection is worth £700,000

    Salaries for Russian politicians must be REALLY high
    No no.

    That's not how the MafiaRussian State works.

    Putin doesn't own the coat or the watch. It's just that he has really generous friends who lend him things.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,156

    The Norwegian system seems fair enough, and I like the idea. Curiously, I believe it was common in Eastern Europe under communism and it still persists in places. There are two snags, though. First it squeezes out things that almost any rational person would think desirable but aren't remotely sexy - improving prisoner rehabilitation, say. Worse, it makes charities spend a lot of their money on "nominate us for your tax money!" campaigns. On a visit to Poland, I found the train covered in adverts from rival charities, as it was the time of year when people make the choice.
    A problem easily solved by banning advertising.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331
    dixiedean said:

    Gazza was laid low by injury then the drink.
    But he had a long, distinguished career at the very top.
    Indeed, and was at the heart of England’s near-misses at glory in both 1990 and 1996.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674

    Hope you are keeping well @NickPalmer

    You too, Horse?
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022

    On the imperial thing. It was interesting to see a number of people who were uncomfortable with describing the Russian and Chinese Empires as such, when we were discussing them. Before Russia invaded Ukraine.

    Someone mentioned Orban earlier - he is of course hanging out with Hungarian Irredentists, who describe themselves as Greater Hungarian Nationalists*. Yes, they want a much bigger Hungary - essentially, their thing is that we-was-robbed when the Austro-Hungarian Empire went out of business. They have a thing for drawing maps of all the land that should be in Hungary.

    So yes, Orban is a fan of a number of the things that Putin is - just a milder implementation. So far.

    *Easily identified by worshipping Horthy, minimising the participation in the Holocaust hy Hungary and wanting large chunks of other peoples countries.

    Which lands does Orban have his eye on? Ukraine is much bigger than Hungary so I doubt he'd fair better there than the Russians have.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181

    You too, Horse?
    How's the plague? Did you get an oximeter?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,789
    Leon said:

    When I watched that rally, I actually remember thinking, omg Putin is now a full on Fascist leader…. but that really is quite a nice coat. Worked well with the rollneck jumper, too
    Yes he has a good wardrobe, doesn't he. Low key, no bling, but quality.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Foxy said:

    Are you actually saying that Non-Conformist churches have returned established authority to Rome?

    I would need a large bucket of popcorn to hear you explain that to Mr Paisley!
    Not to mention every Presbyterian in Scotland. And every single historian of Scots history.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331
    dixiedean said:

    Rishi Sunak as Delle Alli?
    A more apt comparison!
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    edited March 2022

    Are you going to say she's a beautiful girl even though she's not even 18 like you did with Raducanu
    I am not sure what you are saying there but Raducanu is 19 and born on the 13 November 2002 in Toronto, Canada
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181
    edited March 2022

    Which lands does Orban have his eye on? Ukraine is much bigger than Hungary so I doubt he'd fair better there than the Russians have.
    It varies by looney nationalist to loony nationalist.....

    image

    https://kafkadesk.org/2020/05/11/neighbours-react-to-orbans-geater-hungary-controversy/
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,587

    On the imperial thing. It was interesting to see a number of people who were uncomfortable with describing the Russian and Chinese Empires as such, when we were discussing them. Before Russia invaded Ukraine.

    Someone mentioned Orban earlier - he is of course hanging out with Hungarian Irredentists, who describe themselves as Greater Hungarian Nationalists*. Yes, they want a much bigger Hungary - essentially, their thing is that we-was-robbed when the Austro-Hungarian Empire went out of business. They have a thing for drawing maps of all the land that should be in Hungary.

    So yes, Orban is a fan of a number of the things that Putin is - just a milder implementation. So far.

    *Easily identified by worshipping Horthy, minimising the participation in the Holocaust hy Hungary and wanting large chunks of other peoples countries.

    My old Welsh heart beats a little faster whenever I see Humphrey Llwyd's map:

    https://mappingwelshmarches.ac.uk/maps/1-humphrey-llwyd/

    For a start we'd gain another country cricket ground, albeit perpetually waterlogged at Worcester.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205

    No no.

    That's not how the MafiaRussian State works.

    Putin doesn't own the coat or the watch. It's just that he has really generous friends who lend him things.
    So, like our own Prime Minister?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited March 2022
    HYUFD said:

    As by definition the main Christian authority in this country outside of God would automatically be the Pope again as it was before the Reformation if the Monarch ceased to be Supreme Governor of the Church of England.

    I personally value our Parish system and the fact everyone can get a Church wedding or funeral even if they rarely go to Church, it is part of what makes England great. Lose that and the Church of England would become more closed off from the community around it. It would of course have to be removed if the Church of England was no longer the established church as it would no longer have any obligation or connection to the community around it except its worshippers and some help for the poor and homeless via Christian charity
    "country". Not mine, pal, and I'm as much of a UK subject as you are.

    That's part of the problem - there never has been any attempt to spread the coverage in Parliament, or better abolish the C of E's establishment altogether. It's a massively outdated privilege for a small and declining sect.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    Foxy said:

    So, like our own Prime Minister?
    Do you really think Boris wears a suit that costs twice the average yearly wage?
    Twice the average weekly wage may be an over estimate.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    It varies by looney nationalist to loony nationalist.....

    image

    https://kafkadesk.org/2020/05/11/neighbours-react-to-orbans-geater-hungary-controversy/
    The blurb on that map suggests it is part of an Alt History project: a game or a novel perhaps.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181
    Carnyx said:

    "country". Not mine, pal, and I'm as much of a UK subject as you are.

    That's part of the problem - there never has been any attempt to spread the coverage in Parliament, or better abolish the C of E's establishment altogether. It's a massively outdated privilege for a small and declining sect.
    The purpose of the Establishment of the Church of England is to avoid too much religion getting into the thing.

    At least one candidate for Archbishop of Cantebury was rejected, politically, on the basis that he was a bit too much of a God Botherer
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    My old Welsh heart beats a little faster whenever I see Humphrey Llwyd's map:

    https://mappingwelshmarches.ac.uk/maps/1-humphrey-llwyd/

    For a start we'd gain another country cricket ground, albeit perpetually waterlogged at Worcester.
    That's fascinating - never seen it before. The Ironbridge would have had a customs barrier in the middle.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181

    The blurb on that map suggests it is part of an Alt History project: a game or a novel perhaps.
    Yes - but it is fairly typical of the maps the Greater Hungarian chaps draw - the greatest extent of the Hungarian Kingdom they can find. Some of them moderate it to places with Hungarian names....
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    Another thing on Putin and his $14000 Italian coat. It's rather like the Jihadis wearing trainers and drinking Coke. If it weren't for the nukes we'd be laughing at him.

    It also points to the complete incoherence of Russia's current political position. Under communism there was unity against the decadent west. So now the west remains decadent but please let us have all your best products, schools for our kids etc. This is why it can't become a gigantic North Korea - please compare North Korea 1950 to Russia 2022! As long as Putin is in power in Russia people will leave the country and that growing diaspora will still have connections to friends and family at home in this modern world of communications. The genie cannot be put back into the bottle.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,339

    @Stuartinromford hope you are keeping well

    Radiant, Young Sir, Radiant.

    And you?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited March 2022

    The purpose of the Establishment of the Church of England is to avoid too much religion getting into the thing.

    At least one candidate for Archbishop of Cantebury was rejected, politically, on the basis that he was a bit too much of a God Botherer
    But if it was disestablished then it wouldn't matter any more would it? No Bishs in the HoL, and the C of E would be as relevant and as irrelevant as, say, the Congregationalists or the Free Church of Scotland (Continuing).

    [edit] So that seems a circular argument - you need establishment ti mitigate the dangerous moral initiatives that might reesult from establishment ...
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    YouTube ad:

    'We've received a lot of messages in the last week. We're not linked to that company. We're both called P+O but that's where the similarity ends.'

    I wonder if P+O Ferries might actually be in line for damages on that basis?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181

    Another thing on Putin and his $14000 Italian coat. It's rather like the Jihadis wearing trainers and drinking Coke. If it weren't for the nukes we'd be laughing at him.

    It also points to the complete incoherence of Russia's current political position. Under communism there was unity against the decadent west. So now the west remains decadent but please let us have all your best products, schools for our kids etc. This is why it can't become a gigantic North Korea - please compare North Korea 1950 to Russia 2022! As long as Putin is in power in Russia people will leave the country and that growing diaspora will still have connections to friends and family at home in this modern world of communications. The genie cannot be put back into the bottle.

    During the "Communist" period in Russia, one of the perks of being at the top was access to Western products.

    If you were in the elite, you went to different hospitals, equipped with Western equipment and medicines. There were, in fact, three grades of hospital/clinic. The top ones, the middle ones, and the low end. Access could be said to work on the basis of

    Inner Party -> Top
    Outer Party -> Middle
    Proles -> Low end

    This happened across a range of things. IIRC several Soviet leaders had suits from Saville Row.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181
    ydoethur said:

    YouTube ad:

    'We've received a lot of messages in the last week. We're not linked to that company. We're both called P+O but that's where the similarity ends.'

    I wonder if P+O Ferries might actually be in line for damages on that basis?

    I am reminded of the comedy of Accenture. Arthur Anderson forced Anderson Consulting to change their name - they claimed that it was damaging their brand, Anderson Consulting became Accenture just before Arthur Anderson fell down and went boon over Enron.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Andersen#Demise
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    During the "Communist" period in Russia, one of the perks of being at the top was access to Western products.

    If you were in the elite, you went to different hospitals, equipped with Western equipment and medicines. There were, in fact, three grades of hospital/clinic. The top ones, the middle ones, and the low end. Access could be said to work on the basis of

    Inner Party -> Top
    Outer Party -> Middle
    Proles -> Low end

    This happened across a range of things. IIRC several Soviet leaders had suits from Saville Row.
    There were shops in Moscow that didn't accept Roubles, only hard (western) currency, or at least there were in 1986 when I was there.
This discussion has been closed.