The election day betting moves to a 2022 Johnson exit – politicalbetting.com
Above s the latest betting chart on the year of Johnson’s exit. As can be seen the prices have drifted a touch during polling day and now 2022 is just favourite.
Fantastic news, I've often said we should limit the number of grammar school educated people at the elite universities.
Talented grammar school pupils should not be sidelined for the sake of improving diversity, elite universities have been told.
Professor Stephen Toope, the vice-chancellor of Cambridge, has said the university might introduce figures on grammar school recruitment because focusing on intake from state schools as a whole was not an effective indicator of wealth or social class.
Toope, a Canadian who leaves Cambridge this September, told The Times Education Commission on Tuesday that “substituting more grammar school students for students from independent schools” would not “accomplish widening participation goals”.
Just visiting my parents up in Enfield, it's completely dead on the roads. Loads of people out walking and the bars/restaurants are packed. Discretionary spending on petrol/visits has definitely tanked in suburban north London. For now the bars, pubs and restaurants are doing roaring trade.
Speaking of race, the 2021 census results are due out at some stage.
It appears that “White British” has dropped from 78% since 2010 to 70%.
Is that just because the British bit has declined, e.g. "White Scottish" has grown?
We will never know (unless they actually manage to finish the census up here).
The Scottish census has been a spectacular disaster and will have serious consequences for policy-making as the census returns are so important for providing the raw data on which decisions are made.
Sturgeon, largely for political reasons, decided to unlink it from the rUK census. More here, if you find this sort of thing interesting:
Speaking of race, the 2021 census results are due out at some stage.
It appears that “White British” has dropped from 78% since 2010 to 70%.
Is that just because the British bit has declined, e.g. "White Scottish" has grown?
We will never know (unless they actually manage to finish the census up here).
According to the ONS, the population of England and Wales was 84.2% White in 2019, 78.4% white British. That's a very slight decline on 2010. I doubt if it will have altered much in two years.
Speaking of race, the 2021 census results are due out at some stage.
It appears that “White British” has dropped from 78% since 2010 to 70%.
Is that just because the British bit has declined, e.g. "White Scottish" has grown?
We will never know (unless they actually manage to finish the census up here).
The Scottish census has been a spectacular disaster and will have serious consequences for policy-making as the census returns are so important for providing the raw data on which decisions are made.
Sturgeon, largely for political reasons, decided to unlink it from the rUK census. More here, if you find this sort of thing interesting:
Re: today's elections what is basic timetable for results? For example, will they start counting in Northern Ireland tonight OR wait until Friday?
Am guessing that returns from local elections in Britain will start trickling in around midnight? Specifically, what about London?
ALSO what are some good links for live blogs & results reporting?
Thanks in advance for your aid & assistance for your fellow PBer(s)!
N. Ireland is Friday. It's STV, a long count with multiple rounds, so needs a full day.
Same as in Republic. Sensible way to do it, election one day, counting the next.
Yours truly has observed plenty of elections, where election workers & administrators put in a full Election Day, and then some - and then work some more processing ballots & counting votes into the wee hours. NOT optimum from efficiency standpoint.
Whereas on the Emerald Isle, having the count the following day gives workers AND observers the opportunity to get a decent night's sleep between plunging into the vote counting bright-eyed and bushy-tailed.
I've been a counting agent, most recently for the EU referendum, in Luton. And, you're right, everyone is exhausted, and ballot papers are constantly being put into the wrong pile. You have to concentrate really hard.
I've done lots of counts, and I can't say I've really noticed a big difference in errors between a daytime beginning and a count through the night approach. As for workers working in the day and then the count, certainly in my area they don't let people do both now, except for the electoral services staff themselves (as opposed to presiding officers/count staff), so if it happens elsewhere just stop that, and the tirednes is really not an issue.
But really it's just the tradition I like, that normal people can mostly wake up and know the results straight away, that the political volunteers face the drama of a day's volunteering and then a wait through the night. I think one night of being a bit bleary eyed is not onerous (and the candidates themselves are usually not there from the start, and get some shut eye). For Locals a large number won't be around for all night anyway, as there's relatively quick turnaround most of the time (parishes can be more awkward and time costing)
So whilst there is a convenience aspect to waiting to the next day, I don't think it is as huge as supposed (certainly if people are talking about errors), in which case it's a matter of preference rather than actual superiority.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
Re: today's elections what is basic timetable for results? For example, will they start counting in Northern Ireland tonight OR wait until Friday?
Am guessing that returns from local elections in Britain will start trickling in around midnight? Specifically, what about London?
ALSO what are some good links for live blogs & results reporting?
Thanks in advance for your aid & assistance for your fellow PBer(s)!
N. Ireland is Friday. It's STV, a long count with multiple rounds, so needs a full day.
Same as in Republic. Sensible way to do it, election one day, counting the next.
Yours truly has observed plenty of elections, where election workers & administrators put in a full Election Day, and then some - and then work some more processing ballots & counting votes into the wee hours. NOT optimum from efficiency standpoint.
Whereas on the Emerald Isle, having the count the following day gives workers AND observers the opportunity to get a decent night's sleep between plunging into the vote counting bright-eyed and bushy-tailed.
I've been a counting agent, most recently for the EU referendum, in Luton. And, you're right, everyone is exhausted, and ballot papers are constantly being put into the wrong pile. You have to concentrate really hard.
I've done lots of counts, and I can't say I've really noticed a big difference in errors between a daytime beginning and a count through the night approach. As for workers working in the day and then the count, certainly in my area they don't let people do both now, except for the electoral services staff themselves (as opposed to presiding officers/count staff), so if it happens elsewhere just stop that, and the tirednes is really not an issue.
But really it's just the tradition I like, that normal people can mostly wake up and know the results straight away, that the political volunteers face the drama of a day's volunteering and then a wait through the night. I think one night of being a bit bleary eyed is not onerous (and the candidates themselves are usually not there from the start, and get some shut eye). For Locals a large number won't be around for all night anyway, as there's relatively quick turnaround most of the time (parishes can be more awkward and time costing)
So whilst there is a convenience aspect to waiting to the next day, I don't think it is as huge as supposed (certainly if people are talking about errors), in which case it's a matter of preference rather than actual superiority.
It's why we shouldn't bother with e.g. GE exit polls. Total anti-climax when they're right and you essentially know the result minutes after the polls close. Meh.
Speaking of race, the 2021 census results are due out at some stage.
It appears that “White British” has dropped from 78% since 2010 to 70%.
Is that just because the British bit has declined, e.g. "White Scottish" has grown?
We will never know (unless they actually manage to finish the census up here).
The Scottish census has been a spectacular disaster and will have serious consequences for policy-making as the census returns are so important for providing the raw data on which decisions are made.
Sturgeon, largely for political reasons, decided to unlink it from the rUK census. More here, if you find this sort of thing interesting:
Speaking of race, the 2021 census results are due out at some stage.
It appears that “White British” has dropped from 78% since 2010 to 70%.
Is that just because the British bit has declined, e.g. "White Scottish" has grown?
We will never know (unless they actually manage to finish the census up here).
The Scottish census has been a spectacular disaster and will have serious consequences for policy-making as the census returns are so important for providing the raw data on which decisions are made.
Sturgeon, largely for political reasons, decided to unlink it from the rUK census. More here, if you find this sort of thing interesting:
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
Speaking of race, the 2021 census results are due out at some stage.
It appears that “White British” has dropped from 78% since 2010 to 70%.
Is that just because the British bit has declined, e.g. "White Scottish" has grown?
We will never know (unless they actually manage to finish the census up here).
According to the ONS, the population of England and Wales was 84.2% White in 2019, 78.4% white British. That's a very slight decline on 2010. I doubt if it will have altered much in two years.
It's actually a pretty high percentage, especially compared to places like the US. Most of the White Irish and White Other will become White British in a generation, and the Mixed Race group is increasingly similar in culture with White British. You can see this with the England football team when you see interviews with people like Trent Alexander-Arnold, who is as Scouse as Steven Gerrard.
Speaking of race, the 2021 census results are due out at some stage.
It appears that “White British” has dropped from 78% since 2010 to 70%.
Is that just because the British bit has declined, e.g. "White Scottish" has grown?
We will never know (unless they actually manage to finish the census up here).
The Scottish census has been a spectacular disaster and will have serious consequences for policy-making as the census returns are so important for providing the raw data on which decisions are made.
Sturgeon, largely for political reasons, decided to unlink it from the rUK census. More here, if you find this sort of thing interesting:
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
There can't be many people with experience of what they're looking for. They might be inundated with applications from yoga teachers.
If we thought UK politics was bad, across the pond it’s really bad. Democrat commentators now starting to ask why Dem administrations have done nothing to codify Roe v Wade in law for decades.
Here’s the brilliantly named Krystal Ball, with an eight-minute evisceration of cynical Washington politics.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
If we thought UK politics was bad, across the pond it’s really bad. Democrat commentators now starting to ask why Dem administrations have done nothing to codify Roe v Wade in law for decades.
Here’s the brilliantly named Krystal Ball, with an eight-minute evisceration of cynical Washington politics.
If we thought UK politics was bad, across the pond it’s really bad. Democrat commentators now starting to ask why Dem administrations have done nothing to codify Roe v Wade in law for decades.
Here’s the brilliantly named Krystal Ball, with an eight-minute evisceration of cynical Washington politics.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
That’s more than a little worrying.
Not convinced that Mobilisation really helps. Too slow, too inexperienced and lacking in equipment.
One thing that I learned today is that Russian soldiers can legally refuse to enter Ukraine unless war is declared, and apparently some have done.
Said last post that Malmesbury would be a positive addition to Boeing board of directors.
And while my comments had a bit of a barb, am sincere in saying the above.
Note that Boeing recently threw bean-counting CEO (successor to Stonecipher the REAL culprit IMHO) and put in an engineer, definitely a change for better.
As for moving HQ to DC area from Chicago, cozier lobby opportunities no doubt a factor. But wonder IF other factors also, such as property investments and tax considerations, are also in play?
And am wondering, just how sound in pure business terms, was moving from Seattle to Chicago in the first place. As real impetus appeared to be - from Seattle's perspective - corporate desire to NOT be too tied to Washington State? Part and parcel with moving significant share of Boeing's aircraft production to South Carolina - with mixed results re: quality control if not (apparent) cost reduction.
If we thought UK politics was bad, across the pond it’s really bad. Democrat commentators now starting to ask why Dem administrations have done nothing to codify Roe v Wade in law for decades.
Here’s the brilliantly named Krystal Ball, with an eight-minute evisceration of cynical Washington politics.
I was wondering about this earlier. However, it did occur to me that when in the 1970s there was an attempt to pass the Equal Rights Amendment - which should have been pretty uncontroversial - it failed, even with an extended deadline. So it's difficult to see how an amendment enshrining the right to abortion would have passed. And realistically a constitutional amendment would have been needed here as otherwise the Supreme Court would have found some other excuse to reverse. This is about raw power and naked bigotry, not law.
So it is a bit harsh to blame the Dems. Could they have done more? Probably. Would it have made the slightest difference? Not likely.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
Boeing is moving its corporate headquarters from Chicago to Virginia suburbs of Washington, DC.
Considerable schadenfreude in Seattle, the FIRST city betrayed by Boeing's bean-counting, no-brains leadership.
All the better to lobby from ?
Who knows with these fools, it's not exactly difficult to lobby from anywhere these days.
The cozy lunch is a bit hard to do over Zoom. Plus you don't want to say a various things with microphones about....
Perhaps you should be on the Boeing board of directors, as you are so knowlegable?
Actually, think you'd be an improvement, even if all you know is what you glean from the web!
Still wondering what has happened to the firm that made the B-17, B-52, B-707 and 747 ...
Management to maximise short term shareholder profits happened. A.K.A "Eating the seed corn"
Replacing the engineers on the board, with accountants and MBAs, moving the HQ out of Seattle, doing deals with the regulator to let them certify their own aircraft…
If we thought UK politics was bad, across the pond it’s really bad. Democrat commentators now starting to ask why Dem administrations have done nothing to codify Roe v Wade in law for decades.
Here’s the brilliantly named Krystal Ball, with an eight-minute evisceration of cynical Washington politics.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
That’s more than a little worrying.
Not convinced that Mobilisation really helps. Too slow, too inexperienced and lacking in equipment.
One thing that I learned today is that Russian soldiers can legally refuse to enter Ukraine unless war is declared, and apparently some have done.
Not really a choice for those from the poorest Russian regions - and certainly not for the press ganged conscripts from the Donbas.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
That’s more than a little worrying.
Worrying for Putin. Consensus seems to be if they mobilise, they risk revolution. If they don’t they can keep the war far away, but risk defeat. Putin is fucked one way or the other. It’s either:
- military defeat in Ukraine, - Coup / revolution - Nuclear wipeout in WW3
Rangers looking good but not Leicester or West Ham.
West Ham were doomed the moment the Premier League agreed to move their game with Man City to 14:00 on the Sunday before the final. The PL have managed to inconvenience four sets of supporters for no reason. Even if they had made the final, it would still have been the reserves against Man City.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
That’s more than a little worrying.
Worrying for Putin. Consensus seems to be if they mobilise, they risk revolution. If they don’t they can keep the war far away, but risk defeat. Putin is fucked one way or the other. It’s either:
- military defeat in Ukraine, - Coup / revolution - Nuclear wipeout in WW3
Has revolution really been raised as a serious prospect? I know regimes tend to look pretty solid even if they would fall over if pushed, but his grip seems tighter than ever and the prospect of tens of thousands of dead troops doesn't seem to be causing much difficulty, particularly if those who like to present as 'realists' looking for a way to give Putin something he can call a win (like the corridor to Crimea) win out.
Rangers looking good but not Leicester or West Ham.
West Ham were doomed the moment the Premier League agreed to move their game with Man City to 14:00 on the Sunday before the final. The PL have managed to inconvenience four sets of supporters for no reason. Even if they had made the final, it would still have been the reserves against Man City.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
That’s more than a little worrying.
Not convinced that Mobilisation really helps. Too slow, too inexperienced and lacking in equipment.
One thing that I learned today is that Russian soldiers can legally refuse to enter Ukraine unless war is declared, and apparently some have done.
Has any major power formally declared war since WW2?
Speaking of race, the 2021 census results are due out at some stage.
It appears that “White British” has dropped from 78% since 2010 to 70%.
Is that just because the British bit has declined, e.g. "White Scottish" has grown?
We will never know (unless they actually manage to finish the census up here).
According to the ONS, the population of England and Wales was 84.2% White in 2019, 78.4% white British. That's a very slight decline on 2010. I doubt if it will have altered much in two years.
Isam is going to have very badly lost his bet with me on the number of Muslims in the UK.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
That’s more than a little worrying.
Not convinced that Mobilisation really helps. Too slow, too inexperienced and lacking in equipment.
One thing that I learned today is that Russian soldiers can legally refuse to enter Ukraine unless war is declared, and apparently some have done.
Has any major power formally declared war since WW2?
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
There can't be many people with experience of what they're looking for. They might be inundated with applications from yoga teachers.
"I mobilized my fellow bar patrons in Pskov for littering campaign. In just a week, we increased litter by 258 percent!"
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
That’s more than a little worrying.
Not convinced that Mobilisation really helps. Too slow, too inexperienced and lacking in equipment.
One thing that I learned today is that Russian soldiers can legally refuse to enter Ukraine unless war is declared, and apparently some have done.
Yes, it’s a two-edged sword for them.
Do they really want tens of thousands of barely-trained reservists with insufficient equipment, on the battlefield as cannon fodder? Tens of thousands more grieving wives and mothers?
Do they have sufficient industrial capacity to make military vehicles? We think they can only turn out a handful of tanks a week in total, when they’re losing a dozen a day to NLAWs.
Interesting point about the legality of war. There were some stories of deserters early in the war, soldiers who thought they were doing exercises in Belarus, who didn’t expect to be heading for Kiev to shoot at their cousins.
Rangers looking good but not Leicester or West Ham.
West Ham were doomed the moment the Premier League agreed to move their game with Man City to 14:00 on the Sunday before the final. The PL have managed to inconvenience four sets of supporters for no reason. Even if they had made the final, it would still have been the reserves against Man City.
Rangers looking good but not Leicester or West Ham.
West Ham were doomed the moment the Premier League agreed to move their game with Man City to 14:00 on the Sunday before the final. The PL have managed to inconvenience four sets of supporters for no reason. Even if they had made the final, it would still have been the reserves against Man City.
Scandalous decision.
They'll probably swap them back now to suit Sky!
Typical anti Liverpool bias from the PL as usual.
Klopp asks to reschedule the Newcastle and the PL tell him to eff off, but for a match West Ham won't be playing, the PL reschedule it.
Colin McEvedy (in the Penguin Atlas of African History) says this: "Thanks to geneticists, we can now quantify the differences between human populations and it turns out that all the non-African races of mankind -- Europeans and middle-Easterners, Chinese and Japanese, Indians and Indonesians, Polynesians, Amerindians and Australian Aborigines -- have very similar genetic constitutions."
In contrast, because the population of sub-Saharan Africa was so much larger (about a 1000 times) when the out-of-Africa group left, "present-day sub-Saharan Africans have retained this rich genetic inheritance and different groups are as different from each other as they are from extra-African humankind."
Wisely, McEvedy does not call any of these groups "races", since that is a sure way to attract trouble, if you are within 100 miles (or more) of a modern university.
For instance, the American Anthropological Association has been arguing about whether they are doing science for decades. So far as this outsider can tell, the anti-scientists are winning.
Just got in from knocking-up (GOTV to our American friends). On such a beautiful May evening why would anyone not exercise their democratic rights? Highlight was meeting a voter logged as soft Conservative who thought all politicians were wimps and wanted a strong national leader like Oliver Cromwell.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
That’s more than a little worrying.
Not convinced that Mobilisation really helps. Too slow, too inexperienced and lacking in equipment.
One thing that I learned today is that Russian soldiers can legally refuse to enter Ukraine unless war is declared, and apparently some have done.
Has any major power formally declared war since WW2?
Just got in from knocking-up (GOTV to our American friends). On such a beautiful May evening why would anyone not exercise their democratic rights? Highlight was meeting a voter logged as soft Conservative who thought all politicians were wimps and wanted a strong national leader like Oliver Cromwell.
Speaking of race, the 2021 census results are due out at some stage.
It appears that “White British” has dropped from 78% since 2010 to 70%.
Is that just because the British bit has declined, e.g. "White Scottish" has grown?
We will never know (unless they actually manage to finish the census up here).
According to the ONS, the population of England and Wales was 84.2% White in 2019, 78.4% white British. That's a very slight decline on 2010. I doubt if it will have altered much in two years.
Isam is going to have very badly lost his bet with me on the number of Muslims in the UK.
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
Just got in from knocking-up (GOTV to our American friends). On such a beautiful May evening why would anyone not exercise their democratic rights? Highlight was meeting a voter logged as soft Conservative who thought all politicians were wimps and wanted a strong national leader like Oliver Cromwell.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
That’s more than a little worrying.
Worrying for Putin. Consensus seems to be if they mobilise, they risk revolution. If they don’t they can keep the war far away, but risk defeat. Putin is fucked one way or the other. It’s either:
- military defeat in Ukraine, - Coup / revolution - Nuclear wipeout in WW3
Has revolution really been raised as a serious prospect? I know regimes tend to look pretty solid even if they would fall over if pushed, but his grip seems tighter than ever and the prospect of tens of thousands of dead troops doesn't seem to be causing much difficulty, particularly if those who like to present as 'realists' looking for a way to give Putin something he can call a win (like the corridor to Crimea) win out.
It sound like Putin is going for a military version of - "We are losing money on every sale. But we will make up for it in the volume."
Rangers looking good but not Leicester or West Ham.
West Ham were doomed the moment the Premier League agreed to move their game with Man City to 14:00 on the Sunday before the final. The PL have managed to inconvenience four sets of supporters for no reason. Even if they had made the final, it would still have been the reserves against Man City.
One common explanation in the Seattle area for Boeing's problems is that the merger with McDonnell Douglas brought in bad values. (I have no idea whether that theory has any truth to it, but it is certain that some top managers paid no attention to explicit warnings from their engineers and programmers.)
Just got in from knocking-up (GOTV to our American friends). On such a beautiful May evening why would anyone not exercise their democratic rights? Highlight was meeting a voter logged as soft Conservative who thought all politicians were wimps and wanted a strong national leader like Oliver Cromwell.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
That’s more than a little worrying.
Worrying for Putin. Consensus seems to be if they mobilise, they risk revolution. If they don’t they can keep the war far away, but risk defeat. Putin is fucked one way or the other. It’s either:
- military defeat in Ukraine, - Coup / revolution - Nuclear wipeout in WW3
Has revolution really been raised as a serious prospect? I know regimes tend to look pretty solid even if they would fall over if pushed, but his grip seems tighter than ever and the prospect of tens of thousands of dead troops doesn't seem to be causing much difficulty, particularly if those who like to present as 'realists' looking for a way to give Putin something he can call a win (like the corridor to Crimea) win out.
"Tighter than ever". For dictators it's sometimes like metal. It can be very strong, but brittle.
This is the direction Putin is going with his repression, stronger but brittler. At some point, brittle snaps.
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
Just got in from knocking-up (GOTV to our American friends). On such a beautiful May evening why would anyone not exercise their democratic rights? Highlight was meeting a voter logged as soft Conservative who thought all politicians were wimps and wanted a strong national leader like Oliver Cromwell.
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
Despite the Kremlin spox saying full-scale mobilization rumors are “nonsense,” Russian state agencies (from the post office to the tax inspectors) have started flooding online job portals with listings for “mobilization experts.” https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
That’s more than a little worrying.
Not convinced that Mobilisation really helps. Too slow, too inexperienced and lacking in equipment.
One thing that I learned today is that Russian soldiers can legally refuse to enter Ukraine unless war is declared, and apparently some have done.
Has any major power formally declared war since WW2?
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
A lot of people ostensibly opposed to Russian victory but emphasising a quick peace (seemingly at any cost) probably make something like the below point. You know the sort, the ones who think arming Ukraine is a bad thing because it prolongs the fight, and fighting is bad as it gives them false hope.
The authors of this miserable diatribe finally come up with a statement so awful that it would take a new long compound German word to capture just how cynical and patronising it is. They manage to accept that Russia is the aggressor, but claim: “Even legitimate resistance to an aggressor is at some point an intolerable disproportion.
Strongly suspect the chance of Johnson leaving in 2022 will be barely affected by the locals but significantly affected by the upcoming by-elections. But time will tell.
Just got in from knocking-up (GOTV to our American friends). On such a beautiful May evening why would anyone not exercise their democratic rights? Highlight was meeting a voter logged as soft Conservative who thought all politicians were wimps and wanted a strong national leader like Oliver Cromwell.
How many voters did you knock up today?
Wa-hey! That sounds TERRIBLY rude!
He has started well, but I don’t think Screaming Eagles can keep it up all night.
One common explanation in the Seattle area for Boeing's problems is that the merger with McDonnell Douglas brought in bad values. (I have no idea whether that theory has any truth to it, but it is certain that some top managers paid no attention to explicit warnings from their engineers and programmers.)
Kind of.
It's misses out quite a bit of blame for long term Boeing employees - it's a handy externalisation of the problem.
It's more about the corporate culture that can't accept that they are fucking up.
They took the out sourcing paradigm to the limit and beyond. They tried to turn Boeing into a hedge fund that owned some IP and paid other people too make planes. They lost control and understanding of their business. And they never learn to do modern software.
There was a hilarious leaked email (have to find it) about SpaceX, NASA and Boeings failures in the Commercial Crew program. The author of the email took the success of SpaceX to prove that the problem was with the horribly unfair Commercial Crew program. Because otherwise Boeing would have won. By Divine Right, as the greatest aerospace company ever.
When you reach the stage where your failures are evidence of your genius.....
Just got in from knocking-up (GOTV to our American friends). On such a beautiful May evening why would anyone not exercise their democratic rights? Highlight was meeting a voter logged as soft Conservative who thought all politicians were wimps and wanted a strong national leader like Oliver Cromwell.
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
A lot of people ostensibly opposed to Russian victory but emphasising a quick peace (seemingly at any cost) probably make something like the below point. You know the sort, the ones who think arming Ukraine is a bad thing because it prolongs the fight, and fighting is bad as it gives them false hope.
The authors of this miserable diatribe finally come up with a statement so awful that it would take a new long compound German word to capture just how cynical and patronising it is. They manage to accept that Russia is the aggressor, but claim: “Even legitimate resistance to an aggressor is at some point an intolerable disproportion.
I cannot express how angry those words you bolded make me. It does not even have the courage of "If I am threatened, I will surrender." It is "I, from the luxury and comfort of my couch, which I never believe will be subjected to bombs and bullets, tell you you must surrender so that my ordered life can continue."
Strongly suspect the chance of Johnson leaving in 2022 will be barely affected by the locals but significantly affected by the upcoming by-elections. But time will tell.
Looks like a 'weigh the votes' kind of place - no need to stay up?
Going to see how Hannah does (she's standing again) as we're friends. She is making slow but steady progress. Honestly, I don't think she'll win, but maybe she can close the gap. She suspects turnout will be down slightly (no PCC voting this time), and is hoping to squeeze the CON vote a bit more. Let's wait and see......
Looks like a 'weigh the votes' kind of place - no need to stay up?
Going to see how Hannah does (she's standing again) as we're friends. She is making slow but steady progress. Honestly, I don't think she'll win, but maybe she can close the gap. She suspects turnout will be down slightly (no PCC voting this time), and is hoping to squeeze the CON vote a bit more. Let's wait and see......
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
A lot of people ostensibly opposed to Russian victory but emphasising a quick peace (seemingly at any cost) probably make something like the below point. You know the sort, the ones who think arming Ukraine is a bad thing because it prolongs the fight, and fighting is bad as it gives them false hope.
The authors of this miserable diatribe finally come up with a statement so awful that it would take a new long compound German word to capture just how cynical and patronising it is. They manage to accept that Russia is the aggressor, but claim: “Even legitimate resistance to an aggressor is at some point an intolerable disproportion.
The last sentence is simply unanswerable fact. There is certainly a point at which supporting any cause, however just, becomes too high a price to pay. The level of that price is different for different countries. For Turkey, the price is zilch. But they're getting no stick whatsoever. Germany seems prepared to do a lot more than Turkey, but less than the UK. The UK has a little more wiggle room, as we're less dependent on Russian energy, which is great, but over all, it doesn't make me feel terribly comfortable that the current Government is so quick to set aside the national interest to earn some meaningless backslapping in the counsels of the world.
Strongly suspect the chance of Johnson leaving in 2022 will be barely affected by the locals but significantly affected by the upcoming by-elections. But time will tell.
It's a good time to lay his exit in 2022.
I'm actually backing a 2022 exit.
There was a great big red flag recently.
The PM has a majority of nearly 80 and he could't whip his side to stop Labour's amendment on investigating the PM.
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
A lot of people ostensibly opposed to Russian victory but emphasising a quick peace (seemingly at any cost) probably make something like the below point. You know the sort, the ones who think arming Ukraine is a bad thing because it prolongs the fight, and fighting is bad as it gives them false hope.
The authors of this miserable diatribe finally come up with a statement so awful that it would take a new long compound German word to capture just how cynical and patronising it is. They manage to accept that Russia is the aggressor, but claim: “Even legitimate resistance to an aggressor is at some point an intolerable disproportion.
The last sentence is simply unanswerable fact.
If you're going to be tortured and killed whether you fight or whether you give in without a fight, it is not 'unanswerable fact' that it is 'intolerable disproportion' to at least take some of the mofos with you. And that is clearly what is happening in Ukraine.
If we thought UK politics was bad, across the pond it’s really bad. Democrat commentators now starting to ask why Dem administrations have done nothing to codify Roe v Wade in law for decades.
Here’s the brilliantly named Krystal Ball, with an eight-minute evisceration of cynical Washington politics.
Without getting out my matchsticks, don't think that Dem admins since Roe v Wade have had the votes in Congress to codify it into FEDERAL law.
On state level, numbers of states - including WA State - have done just that.
With the possible exception of the very start of Carter's term I think it highly unlikely that the Dems every had a veto proof majority in favour of codifying Roe. Obama's incredibly brief window of a veto proof majority (due to death and delayed seating of some of the Dems making up the majority) was used to land Obamacare and there was almost certainly a number of anti-Roe senators amongst that 60 so no actual chance of passing it.
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
A lot of people ostensibly opposed to Russian victory but emphasising a quick peace (seemingly at any cost) probably make something like the below point. You know the sort, the ones who think arming Ukraine is a bad thing because it prolongs the fight, and fighting is bad as it gives them false hope.
The authors of this miserable diatribe finally come up with a statement so awful that it would take a new long compound German word to capture just how cynical and patronising it is. They manage to accept that Russia is the aggressor, but claim: “Even legitimate resistance to an aggressor is at some point an intolerable disproportion.
The last sentence is simply unanswerable fact. There is certainly a point at which supporting any cause, however just, becomes too high a price to pay. The level of that price is different for different countries. For Turkey, the price is zilch. But they're getting no stick whatsoever. Germany seems prepared to do a lot more than Turkey, but less than the UK. The UK has a little more wiggle room, as we're less dependent on Russian energy, which is great, but over all, it doesn't make me feel terribly comfortable that the current Government is so quick to set aside the national interest to earn some meaningless backslapping in the counsels of the world.
Yes, you've made it quite clear where you stand, or roll over.
Strongly suspect the chance of Johnson leaving in 2022 will be barely affected by the locals but significantly affected by the upcoming by-elections. But time will tell.
It's a good time to lay his exit in 2022.
Agreed. I might wait for a couple of days and do exactly that. The Clown is going nowhere.
Need a few volunteers to help with data collection tonight - most importantly seat winners but also ideally vote totals for more detailed graphics and analysis down the line.
Strongly suspect the chance of Johnson leaving in 2022 will be barely affected by the locals but significantly affected by the upcoming by-elections. But time will tell.
It's a good time to lay his exit in 2022.
I'm actually backing a 2022 exit.
There was a great big red flag recently.
The PM has a majority of nearly 80 and he could't whip his side to stop Labour's amendment on investigating the PM.
They may have close to the 54 votes for the challenge, but do the rebels have the 180 votes required to force him out?
We saw the same with Mrs May in 2018, who was challenged but won comfortably.
The last sentence is simply unanswerable fact. There is certainly a point at which supporting any cause, however just, becomes too high a price to pay. The level of that price is different for different countries. For Turkey, the price is zilch. But they're getting no stick whatsoever. Germany seems prepared to do a lot more than Turkey, but less than the UK. The UK has a little more wiggle room, as we're less dependent on Russian energy, which is great, but over all, it doesn't make me feel terribly comfortable that the current Government is so quick to set aside the national interest to earn some meaningless backslapping in the counsels of the world.
Genuine question - what do you think is the UK's national interest with respect to Ukraine-Russia? Because I think it's Reagan's idea of lobbing one in the mens room in the Kremlin.
If we thought UK politics was bad, across the pond it’s really bad. Democrat commentators now starting to ask why Dem administrations have done nothing to codify Roe v Wade in law for decades.
Here’s the brilliantly named Krystal Ball, with an eight-minute evisceration of cynical Washington politics.
Without getting out my matchsticks, don't think that Dem admins since Roe v Wade have had the votes in Congress to codify it into FEDERAL law.
On state level, numbers of states - including WA State - have done just that.
With the possible exception of the very start of Carter's term I think it highly unlikely that the Dems every had a veto proof majority in favour of codifying Roe. Obama's incredibly brief window of a veto proof majority (due to death and delayed seating of some of the Dems making up the majority) was used to land Obamacare and there was almost certainly a number of anti-Roe senators amongst that 60 so no actual chance of passing it.
What difference would it have made? The current court are perfectly capable of declaring it not a federal competency and setting aside the Ninth Amendment if it had been a federal law.
Absent a constitutional amendment, this court would still have found a way round abortion rights.
The last sentence is simply unanswerable fact. There is certainly a point at which supporting any cause, however just, becomes too high a price to pay. The level of that price is different for different countries. For Turkey, the price is zilch. But they're getting no stick whatsoever. Germany seems prepared to do a lot more than Turkey, but less than the UK. The UK has a little more wiggle room, as we're less dependent on Russian energy, which is great, but over all, it doesn't make me feel terribly comfortable that the current Government is so quick to set aside the national interest to earn some meaningless backslapping in the counsels of the world.
Genuine question - what do you think is the UK's national interest with respect to Ukraine-Russia? Because I think it's Reagan's idea of lobbing one in the mens room in the Kremlin.
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
A lot of people ostensibly opposed to Russian victory but emphasising a quick peace (seemingly at any cost) probably make something like the below point. You know the sort, the ones who think arming Ukraine is a bad thing because it prolongs the fight, and fighting is bad as it gives them false hope.
The authors of this miserable diatribe finally come up with a statement so awful that it would take a new long compound German word to capture just how cynical and patronising it is. They manage to accept that Russia is the aggressor, but claim: “Even legitimate resistance to an aggressor is at some point an intolerable disproportion.
I cannot express how angry those words you bolded make me. It does not even have the courage of "If I am threatened, I will surrender." It is "I, from the luxury and comfort of my couch, which I never believe will be subjected to bombs and bullets, tell you you must surrender so that my ordered life can continue."
It's a sentiment that comes from a place of very great privilege. They have the luxury of feeling good as they tell others to surrender. "Scum" is not too strong a word to describe the people who express such sentiments.
The last sentence is simply unanswerable fact. There is certainly a point at which supporting any cause, however just, becomes too high a price to pay. The level of that price is different for different countries. For Turkey, the price is zilch. But they're getting no stick whatsoever. Germany seems prepared to do a lot more than Turkey, but less than the UK. The UK has a little more wiggle room, as we're less dependent on Russian energy, which is great, but over all, it doesn't make me feel terribly comfortable that the current Government is so quick to set aside the national interest to earn some meaningless backslapping in the counsels of the world.
Genuine question - what do you think is the UK's national interest with respect to Ukraine-Russia? Because I think it's Reagan's idea of lobbing one in the mens room in the Kremlin.
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
A lot of people ostensibly opposed to Russian victory but emphasising a quick peace (seemingly at any cost) probably make something like the below point. You know the sort, the ones who think arming Ukraine is a bad thing because it prolongs the fight, and fighting is bad as it gives them false hope.
The authors of this miserable diatribe finally come up with a statement so awful that it would take a new long compound German word to capture just how cynical and patronising it is. They manage to accept that Russia is the aggressor, but claim: “Even legitimate resistance to an aggressor is at some point an intolerable disproportion.
The last sentence is simply unanswerable fact. There is certainly a point at which supporting any cause, however just, becomes too high a price to pay. The level of that price is different for different countries. For Turkey, the price is zilch. But they're getting no stick whatsoever. Germany seems prepared to do a lot more than Turkey, but less than the UK. The UK has a little more wiggle room, as we're less dependent on Russian energy, which is great, but over all, it doesn't make me feel terribly comfortable that the current Government is so quick to set aside the national interest to earn some meaningless backslapping in the counsels of the world.
Germany doesn’t give a monkeys about Ukraine. Everything they’ve done has required external pressure, and they would still rather the whole ‘war’ thing just went away and they could return to cheap Russian gas.
But the war is there, right on the border of the EU and affecting millions of people. It’s not going away, so they need to pull their weight.
Johnson and Biden are very clear, that the war doesn’t end until there’s no Russian forces in Ukraine, and are sending arms and training to effect that goal.
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
A lot of people ostensibly opposed to Russian victory but emphasising a quick peace (seemingly at any cost) probably make something like the below point. You know the sort, the ones who think arming Ukraine is a bad thing because it prolongs the fight, and fighting is bad as it gives them false hope.
The authors of this miserable diatribe finally come up with a statement so awful that it would take a new long compound German word to capture just how cynical and patronising it is. They manage to accept that Russia is the aggressor, but claim: “Even legitimate resistance to an aggressor is at some point an intolerable disproportion.
The last sentence is simply unanswerable fact. There is certainly a point at which supporting any cause, however just, becomes too high a price to pay. The level of that price is different for different countries. For Turkey, the price is zilch. But they're getting no stick whatsoever. Germany seems prepared to do a lot more than Turkey, but less than the UK. The UK has a little more wiggle room, as we're less dependent on Russian energy, which is great, but over all, it doesn't make me feel terribly comfortable that the current Government is so quick to set aside the national interest to earn some meaningless backslapping in the counsels of the world.
Which is why the Russians should surrender at discretion, immediately.
One common explanation in the Seattle area for Boeing's problems is that the merger with McDonnell Douglas brought in bad values. (I have no idea whether that theory has any truth to it, but it is certain that some top managers paid no attention to explicit warnings from their engineers and programmers.)
Kind of.
It's misses out quite a bit of blame for long term Boeing employees - it's a handy externalisation of the problem.
It's more about the corporate culture that can't accept that they are fucking up.
They took the out sourcing paradigm to the limit and beyond. They tried to turn Boeing into a hedge fund that owned some IP and paid other people too make planes. They lost control and understanding of their business. And they never learn to do modern software.
There was a hilarious leaked email (have to find it) about SpaceX, NASA and Boeings failures in the Commercial Crew program. The author of the email took the success of SpaceX to prove that the problem was with the horribly unfair Commercial Crew program. Because otherwise Boeing would have won. By Divine Right, as the greatest aerospace company ever.
When you reach the stage where your failures are evidence of your genius.....
Jim Miller still has a point re; Northrup. Kindly respect our Pacific Northwest folk wisdom!
And clearly you WOULD be an adornment to the Boeing board, no joke.
At least you know it's possible to lie (esp. to one's self) with statistics!
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
A lot of people ostensibly opposed to Russian victory but emphasising a quick peace (seemingly at any cost) probably make something like the below point. You know the sort, the ones who think arming Ukraine is a bad thing because it prolongs the fight, and fighting is bad as it gives them false hope.
The authors of this miserable diatribe finally come up with a statement so awful that it would take a new long compound German word to capture just how cynical and patronising it is. They manage to accept that Russia is the aggressor, but claim: “Even legitimate resistance to an aggressor is at some point an intolerable disproportion.
The last sentence is simply unanswerable fact.
If you're going to be tortured and killed whether you fight or whether you give in without a fight, it is not 'unanswerable fact' that it is 'intolerable disproportion' to at least take some of the mofos with you. And that is clearly what is happening in Ukraine.
I don't blame anyone in Ukraine for fighting the invasion. I merely state that there is absolutely a point at which supporting their continued brave resistance becomes untenable. Everyone, and every polity, must decide where their personal and collective point is.
If we thought UK politics was bad, across the pond it’s really bad. Democrat commentators now starting to ask why Dem administrations have done nothing to codify Roe v Wade in law for decades.
Here’s the brilliantly named Krystal Ball, with an eight-minute evisceration of cynical Washington politics.
Without getting out my matchsticks, don't think that Dem admins since Roe v Wade have had the votes in Congress to codify it into FEDERAL law.
On state level, numbers of states - including WA State - have done just that.
With the possible exception of the very start of Carter's term I think it highly unlikely that the Dems every had a veto proof majority in favour of codifying Roe. Obama's incredibly brief window of a veto proof majority (due to death and delayed seating of some of the Dems making up the majority) was used to land Obamacare and there was almost certainly a number of anti-Roe senators amongst that 60 so no actual chance of passing it.
What difference would it have made? The current court are perfectly capable of declaring it not a federal competency and setting aside the Ninth Amendment if it had been a federal law.
Absent a constitutional amendment, this court would still have found a way round abortion rights.
You mean they started with a solution and worked their way backwards from there? What an astonishing accusation about jurists who never operate to advance their personal poltical agendas.
Strongly suspect the chance of Johnson leaving in 2022 will be barely affected by the locals but significantly affected by the upcoming by-elections. But time will tell.
Agree. And also I think such value as there is, betting wise, is with Boris exit in 2023.
I wonder what the author really thinks about the German intellectuals who wrote that open letter to Scholz?
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
A lot of people ostensibly opposed to Russian victory but emphasising a quick peace (seemingly at any cost) probably make something like the below point. You know the sort, the ones who think arming Ukraine is a bad thing because it prolongs the fight, and fighting is bad as it gives them false hope.
The authors of this miserable diatribe finally come up with a statement so awful that it would take a new long compound German word to capture just how cynical and patronising it is. They manage to accept that Russia is the aggressor, but claim: “Even legitimate resistance to an aggressor is at some point an intolerable disproportion.
The last sentence is simply unanswerable fact.
If you're going to be tortured and killed whether you fight or whether you give in without a fight, it is not 'unanswerable fact' that it is 'intolerable disproportion' to at least take some of the mofos with you. And that is clearly what is happening in Ukraine.
I don't blame anyone in Ukraine for fighting the invasion. I merely state that there is absolutely a point at which supporting their continued brave resistance becomes untenable. Everyone, and every polity, must decide where their personal and collective point is.
Comments
Sturgeon, largely for political reasons, decided to unlink it from the rUK census. More here, if you find this sort of thing interesting:
https://www.holyrood.com/news/view,comment-scotlands-census-delay-is-just-another-scottish-government-failure
But really it's just the tradition I like, that normal people can mostly wake up and know the results straight away, that the political volunteers face the drama of a day's volunteering and then a wait through the night. I think one night of being a bit bleary eyed is not onerous (and the candidates themselves are usually not there from the start, and get some shut eye). For Locals a large number won't be around for all night anyway, as there's relatively quick turnaround most of the time (parishes can be more awkward and time costing)
So whilst there is a convenience aspect to waiting to the next day, I don't think it is as huge as supposed (certainly if people are talking about errors), in which case it's a matter of preference rather than actual superiority.
https://mobile.twitter.com/KevinRothrock/status/1522277544791322624
Here’s the brilliantly named Krystal Ball, with an eight-minute evisceration of cynical Washington politics.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=VJWLUxR7UyE
One thing that I learned today is that Russian soldiers can legally refuse to enter Ukraine unless war is declared, and apparently some have done.
And while my comments had a bit of a barb, am sincere in saying the above.
Note that Boeing recently threw bean-counting CEO (successor to Stonecipher the REAL culprit IMHO) and put in an engineer, definitely a change for better.
As for moving HQ to DC area from Chicago, cozier lobby opportunities no doubt a factor. But wonder IF other factors also, such as property investments and tax considerations, are also in play?
And am wondering, just how sound in pure business terms, was moving from Seattle to Chicago in the first place. As real impetus appeared to be - from Seattle's perspective - corporate desire to NOT be too tied to Washington State? Part and parcel with moving significant share of Boeing's aircraft production to South Carolina - with mixed results re: quality control if not (apparent) cost reduction.
So it is a bit harsh to blame the Dems. Could they have done more? Probably. Would it have made the slightest difference? Not likely.
And it's not money people end up losing.
On state level, numbers of states - including WA State - have done just that.
- military defeat in Ukraine,
- Coup / revolution
- Nuclear wipeout in WW3
Edit - I'm posting fake news.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declaration_of_war_by_the_United_States#Formal
Do they really want tens of thousands of barely-trained reservists with insufficient equipment, on the battlefield as cannon fodder? Tens of thousands more grieving wives and mothers?
Do they have sufficient industrial capacity to make military vehicles? We think they can only turn out a handful of tanks a week in total, when they’re losing a dozen a day to NLAWs.
Interesting point about the legality of war. There were some stories of deserters early in the war, soldiers who thought they were doing exercises in Belarus, who didn’t expect to be heading for Kiev to shoot at their cousins.
Klopp asks to reschedule the Newcastle and the PL tell him to eff off, but for a match West Ham won't be playing, the PL reschedule it.
In contrast, because the population of sub-Saharan Africa was so much larger (about a 1000 times) when the out-of-Africa group left, "present-day sub-Saharan Africans have retained this rich genetic inheritance and different groups are as different from each other as they are from extra-African humankind."
Wisely, McEvedy does not call any of these groups "races", since that is a sure way to attract trouble, if you are within 100 miles (or more) of a modern university.
For instance, the American Anthropological Association has been arguing about whether they are doing science for decades. So far as this outsider can tell, the anti-scientists are winning.
For the record, I am pleased by the increased number of Americans who are of mixed race, and say so, openly and often proudly: https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2015/06/11/multiracial-in-america/
And it's not like outsourcing all our knowledge and integration skills will make the planes any less safe anyway.
And we can always make it up on our military contracts. Our friend in congress will make sure of that.
P.S. Anyone want a slightly un-used spacecraft?
P.S.S. Can't deal with these unprofessional idiots - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvim4rsNHkQ
https://medium.com/britainelects
In a world of death pits and rape gangs there is nothing here but virtue signalling moral mush. Compare this with the clarity and toughness of other European leaders, especially the “warrior women” in charge of Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.
https://thecritic.co.uk/its-time-to-burst-the-red-balloons/
This is the direction Putin is going with his repression, stronger but brittler. At some point, brittle snaps.
We're counting TONIGHT: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victoria_(Sefton_ward)
The authors of this miserable diatribe finally come up with a statement so awful that it would take a new long compound German word to capture just how cynical and patronising it is. They manage to accept that Russia is the aggressor, but claim: “Even legitimate resistance to an aggressor is at some point an intolerable disproportion.
It's misses out quite a bit of blame for long term Boeing employees - it's a handy externalisation of the problem.
It's more about the corporate culture that can't accept that they are fucking up.
They took the out sourcing paradigm to the limit and beyond. They tried to turn Boeing into a hedge fund that owned some IP and paid other people too make planes. They lost control and understanding of their business. And they never learn to do modern software.
There was a hilarious leaked email (have to find it) about SpaceX, NASA and Boeings failures in the Commercial Crew program. The author of the email took the success of SpaceX to prove that the problem was with the horribly unfair Commercial Crew program. Because otherwise Boeing would have won. By Divine Right, as the greatest aerospace company ever.
When you reach the stage where your failures are evidence of your genius.....
She is making slow but steady progress. Honestly, I don't think she'll win, but maybe she can close the gap.
She suspects turnout will be down slightly (no PCC voting this time), and is hoping to squeeze the CON vote a bit more. Let's wait and see......
There was a great big red flag recently.
The PM has a majority of nearly 80 and he could't whip his side to stop Labour's amendment on investigating the PM.
Shoot me a DM if you'd be keen and are planning to stay up! If you've helped in previous years lmk too!
https://twitter.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1522301145087156226
We saw the same with Mrs May in 2018, who was challenged but won comfortably.
Because I think it's Reagan's idea of lobbing one in the mens room in the Kremlin.
Absent a constitutional amendment, this court would still have found a way round abortion rights.
But the war is there, right on the border of the EU and affecting millions of people. It’s not going away, so they need to pull their weight.
Johnson and Biden are very clear, that the war doesn’t end until there’s no Russian forces in Ukraine, and are sending arms and training to effect that goal.
And clearly you WOULD be an adornment to the Boeing board, no joke.
At least you know it's possible to lie (esp. to one's self) with statistics!