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Vote Green, go Blue? – politicalbetting.com

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    LeonLeon Posts: 47,215

    Foxy said:

    O/t but. Just after asking Mr Jessop about his wildlife observations yesterday morning yesterday stopped being a GOOD DAY. Because I fell ….. tripped an uneven pavement…., en route to the paper shop, was carted off, by a very cheerful and positive ambulance crew, to hospital, was checked over quite thoroughly, including by the frailty team …..84 year old has nasty fall…… and was finally picked up, still unsteady on my feet by my wife, at about 3pm. Broke my glasses, have two black eyes and various other grazes on my face and arms. Looks dreadful!
    So life has changed again.

    However, most of the blue-tit chicks seem fit and healthy!

    Oh dear; in case correlation == causation I shall refrain from mentioning the chicks. Hope you feel better soon - sounds like it could have been worse.
    No, don't do that; comparison of wildlife observations are always interesting!
    And, indeed, could have been worse. Only my glasses are broken, no bones!
    Lots of hares around my way, more than I have seen for some years, but alas the mole has returned to my garden.
    A hare ran along the road as we were heading out to dinner last Tuesday at a pleasant country pub about five miles away. Hadn't seen one for ages.

    We had a mole in our garden for a while at our former house. Tried all sorts to get rid of it, in vain. Eventually the cat caught it.
    Played with it for a bit, as cats do, with my wife urging 'kill, kill'!
    Weasels are weirdly exciting to see in the wild. Likewise stoats. They are so devilish and quick
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,983
    edited May 2022
    Mr. Abode, ha, I was somewhat tempted by that bet (edited extra bit: a Russell podium) but preferred the group one, which is not entirely unrelated.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,298

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Good morning

    On the face of it the direction of travel is to the conservatives experiencing a heavy defeat in 24

    I watch in dismay as they put their fingers in their ears and just cannot decide on how to address this cost of living crisis, as people are experiencing rising costs that are frightening them, and they need their government to be on their side, which at present they are not

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    By 2024 (and remember: the election could be as late as January 2025) the Conservatives will have been in power over 14 years - that's longer than New Labour were, which felt like a very long time, and who governed during a period of far more benign conditions and looked invincible for much of it.

    Eventually, in any sensibly functioning democracy, you run out of road. But Boris has certainly pressed the pedal to the floor and careered the car to the end of the track heedless of collateral damage along the way.
    I agree but it does require a sensible labour platform
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,215
    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    I've already said sorry for having a dig and do so again.

    However, Leon, to describe yourself as a saint on this forum really is to stretch things a little far. Some of your (mostly late night) rants can be really vicious and full of invective in my opinion.

    You are no nicer than I but we cause a spark of electricity because of our very different perspectives on life.

    And your travel blogs irritate me a) because they're boastful and b) because I'm jealous.

    Actually, the real problem for me is that I've spent much of my life travelling and right now I can't so it's more deep envy. And vicarious annoyance.

    etc.
    Fair enough. Apology accepted

    You should still take a look at yourself. Tsk
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335
    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,311
    That's why I'm easy
    Albanese like Sunday morning
  • Options
    kjhkjh Posts: 10,631
    Heathener said:

    kjh said:

    Heathener said:

    kjh said:

    O/t but. Just after asking Mr Jessop about his wildlife observations yesterday morning yesterday stopped being a GOOD DAY. Because I fell ….. tripped an uneven pavement…., en route to the paper shop, was carted off, by a very cheerful and positive ambulance crew, to hospital, was checked over quite thoroughly, including by the frailty team …..84 year old has nasty fall…… and was finally picked up, still unsteady on my feet by my wife, at about 3pm. Broke my glasses, have two black eyes and various other grazes on my face and arms. Looks dreadful!
    So life has changed again.

    However, most of the blue-tit chicks seem fit and healthy!

    Sorry to hear that. Hope you shake it off quickly. By the sounds of it you will be shaking a fall off quicker than me and I have nearly 20 years advantage over you so try thinking of that to keep positive.
    I'm in my 50's and some of you may recall I slipped and fell, breaking a rib. It has taken six weeks for me even to be able to begin sleeping on that side.

    It shakes one up a bit too.

    :(

    x
    I broke a rib skiing. A pathetic fall but onto my pole. I carried on skiing (I'm that mean I wasn't going to waste the snow), but I was heavily dosed up with painkillers and coughing, sneezing, laughing or hiccups were so painful.
    That's really impressive that you carried on skiing. It's supposed to be one of the most painful things going: according to my GP which I'm not sure helped reassure me.

    Mine was also pathetic. A loss of concentration and lack of grip underfoot but the really pathetic part was falling onto my chest ... in the pocket of which was my mobile phone. It was that which broke the rib.

    I suppose if I had been walking whilst looking at political betting I wouldn't have broken a bone :smiley:

    Yes very very painful, particularly sneezing and I struggled to sleep, particularly turning over and sitting up in the morning was awful. But it was a family holiday on blue slopes teaching the kids to ski so it was easier and smoother than walking. I couldn't have done a black run or mogul field. And I am mean and stubborn which helps.

    I was actually not moving when I fell. Just standing there and not concentrating and fell downhill rather than uphill and fell on the handle of my pole. A real freak accident. A bit akin to my recent accident.

    It appears I can pitch pole catamarans and wipeout on black and yellow runs without injury but walking and standing still appears to be a challenge for me.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,641

    Foxy said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    And yet, the Culture Wars are working for the Right in the USA (abortion excepted, as always)

    I suggest this is because the Horror that is Woke is much further advanced in the USA than anywhere else, but it is spreading quickly in the UK, Canada, Oz, and is now creeping into the EU
    The right are the masters of Woke, they invented it after all.
    One curious issue, on my night out we talked of many things in a party of about 40 staff, and no one mentioned any "Woke" issue at all, either way. Its almost as if no one is bothered.
    Did you talk about Brexit?
    It did come up, in the context of holidays. Pet passports at the chunnel, but otherwise not mentioned. Lots of covid and lockdown related chat, but in a bunch of healthworkers processing what has been a gruelling couple of years that was to be expected. Mostly people were clearly relishing being out on the town again.
  • Options
    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,205
    edited May 2022
    Heathener said:

    Re. the pair of kestrels, where I have been walking there's a pair of buzzards. Always a wonderful sight, unless you're a mouse.

    It amazes me too how they get mobbed by the crows.

    We have those too. Buzzards I mean.

    Very close by is Hodbarrow Bird Reserve so this is a fantastic place to be for bird watchers. And while I am not a twitcher, I do love seeing them. One of the loveliest things about living here is the day long bird song. I am woken at 4:30 / 5:00 by the dawn chorus and it goes on pretty much all day until it's dark. It's like having Nature's Mozart as the accompaniment to daily life.

    On the evening I first moved in to the barn I lived in during Covid, driving up the path leading to it past another working barn, a snowy white barn owl flew out from it and in front of my car almost at eye level. I got such a good view of it. It was magical.

    I used to see that owl regularly during my time living there. But that first view was special. Almost as if she was welcoming me to her territory.

  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,850

    Foxy said:

    Isn't the big question what votes are moving where?

    If (say) Labour are losing votes in Hackney but gaining in Southampton, that's useful for them.

    Yes, one of the issues.

    The other thing that I notice is that there isn't much of the current Lab/LD/Green vote that would consider voting Tory. Not much room for swingback if you take people at their word.
    I haven't looked at the recent polls in detail, but earlier in the year the dominant feature was that a disproportionate fraction of the Tory 2019 vote was telling pollsters that they didn't know who they would vote for. You can get quite a bit of swingback just from these voters reluctantly being prodded into Tory-voting action to stop the onward march of woke. You wouldn't need anyone currently saying they would vote for an opposition party to change their mind.
    I'd expect the Conservatives to win about 40% in 2024, which may or may not be enough to eke out a majority.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,750

    I see the BBC news website can barely contain its glee over the Australian Labor victory this morning.

    Two leading articles, the second of which says politics will be greener, more feminine and more emphatically Australian before calling Morrison a small-T Trump.

    And people say this organisation has no bias.

    The BBC has biases. The key is whether it makes a genuine effort toward maintaining impartiality, not that it achieves it perfectly all the time. I think it does.

    Can't speak for this example, but I think they seem to make less effort on foreign affairs. Those I was very surprised to see its report on 'gaffe prone Biden' once.
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,850
    Cyclefree said:

    Heathener said:

    Re. the pair of kestrels, where I have been walking there's a pair of buzzards. Always a wonderful sight, unless you're a mouse.

    It amazes me too how they get mobbed by the crows.

    We have those too. Buzzards I mean.

    Very close by is Hodbarrow Bird Reserve so this is a fantastic place to be for bird watchers. And while I am not a twitcher, I do love seeing them. One of the loveliest things about living here is the day long bird song. I am woken at 4:30 / 5:00 by the dawn chorus and it goes on pretty much all day until it's dark. It's like having Nature's Mozart as the accompaniment to daily life.

    On the evening I first moved in to the barn I lived in during Covid, driving up the path leading to it past another working barn, a snowy white barn owl flew out from it and in front of my car almost at eye level. I got such a good view of it. It was magical.

    I used to see that owl regularly during my time living there. But that first view was special. Almost as if she was welcoming me to her territory.

    We have kites, and a vast array of songbirds, and the occasional pheasant, or deer.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,641

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    A rather nasty and unpleasant view. Are you by any chance suffering from Wokepox?
  • Options
    TresTres Posts: 2,226
    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    And yet, the Culture Wars are working for the Right in the USA (abortion excepted, as always)

    I suggest this is because the Horror that is Woke is much further advanced in the USA than anywhere else, but it is spreading quickly in the UK, Canada, Oz, and is now creeping into the EU
    This is because Americans are infected with religion and will do whatever the chap they see each Sunday morning tells them.
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,200
    kle4 said:

    I see the BBC news website can barely contain its glee over the Australian Labor victory this morning.

    Two leading articles, the second of which says politics will be greener, more feminine and more emphatically Australian before calling Morrison a small-T Trump.

    And people say this organisation has no bias.

    The BBC has biases. The key is whether it makes a genuine effort toward maintaining impartiality, not that it achieves it perfectly all the time. I think it does.

    Can't speak for this example, but I think they seem to make less effort on foreign affairs. Those I was very surprised to see its report on 'gaffe prone Biden' once.
    I think it tries on most things, but on green topics it is now verboten to deviate from the accepted line. One of the reasons they are so cock a hoop about labour winning in Australia.
  • Options
    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 5,262
    Cyclefree said:

    Heathener said:

    Re. the pair of kestrels, where I have been walking there's a pair of buzzards. Always a wonderful sight, unless you're a mouse.

    It amazes me too how they get mobbed by the crows.

    We have those too. Buzzards I mean.

    Very close by is Hodbarrow Bird Reserve so this is a fantastic place to be for bird watchers. And while I am not a twitcher, I do love seeing them. One of the loveliest things about living here is the day long bird song. I am woken at 4:30 / 5:00 by the dawn chorus and it goes on pretty much all day until it's dark. It's like having Nature's Mozart as the accompaniment to daily life.

    On the evening I first moved in to the barn I lived in during Covid, driving up the path leading to it past another working barn, a snowy white barn owl flew out from it and in front of my car almost at eye level. I got such a good view of it. It was magical.

    I used to see that owl regularly during my time living there. But that first view was special. Almost as if she was welcoming me to her territory.

    How glorious. It sounds (literally) absolutely wonderful.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,215

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,636
    There could still be a leadership challenge against Johnson if the Tories lose both by-elections by big margins.
  • Options
    TazTaz Posts: 11,179
    Foxy said:

    Taz said:

    O/t but. Just after asking Mr Jessop about his wildlife observations yesterday morning yesterday stopped being a GOOD DAY. Because I fell ….. tripped an uneven pavement…., en route to the paper shop, was carted off, by a very cheerful and positive ambulance crew, to hospital, was checked over quite thoroughly, including by the frailty team …..84 year old has nasty fall…… and was finally picked up, still unsteady on my feet by my wife, at about 3pm. Broke my glasses, have two black eyes and various other grazes on my face and arms. Looks dreadful!
    So life has changed again.

    However, most of the blue-tit chicks seem fit and healthy!

    All the best OkC, get well soon.
    Foxy said:

    Interesting night out in town for a works leaving do (ward housekeeper retiring). Town very lively with hen parties, shortie playsuits seem to be the fashion here. Matron surprisingly good at the kareoke and a good time had by all.

    LEICESTER IS BACK!


    For the time being. Same with Newcastle yesterday. When the cost of living crisis truly bites hospitality will be devastated. Discretionary spend will fall off a cliff.
    Yes, probably. Though quite a few have saved a fair bit over lockdown, what with no holidays and the like, so have a bit of a cushion. Not everyone of course.

    Economically, things are never as good as they seem, nor as bad as they seem. I think the external inflationary pressures will pass fairly quickly.
    I hope you are right, if China sorts itself out quickly then possibly.

    However I expect little good in the next 12 months economically.
  • Options
    TresTres Posts: 2,226

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    The problem is that the three RMT leaders are Putin apologists and easily identified as such therefore providing a gift to Boris and a nightmare for labour
    Is this true or are you merely repeating some tripe you read in the Daily Mail?
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,298
    Jeremy Hunt coming over well on Sophie Ridge this morning
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,641

    Foxy said:

    Isn't the big question what votes are moving where?

    If (say) Labour are losing votes in Hackney but gaining in Southampton, that's useful for them.

    Yes, one of the issues.

    The other thing that I notice is that there isn't much of the current Lab/LD/Green vote that would consider voting Tory. Not much room for swingback if you take people at their word.
    I haven't looked at the recent polls in detail, but earlier in the year the dominant feature was that a disproportionate fraction of the Tory 2019 vote was telling pollsters that they didn't know who they would vote for. You can get quite a bit of swingback just from these voters reluctantly being prodded into Tory-voting action to stop the onward march of woke. You wouldn't need anyone currently saying they would vote for an opposition party to change their mind.
    Yes, motivation to vote will be critical, and that undecided population too. I think too that even these "certain" voterrs will move about a bit inthe next couple of years.

    Labour cannot continue the policy vacuum much longer, though I do understand why they appear to be keeping their powder dry. If they have any powder at all.
  • Options
    DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 24,391

    I see the BBC news website can barely contain its glee over the Australian Labor victory this morning.

    Two leading articles, the second of which says politics will be greener, more feminine and more emphatically Australian before calling Morrison a small-T Trump.

    And people say this organisation has no bias.

    It is a bit OTT but...

    First, news judgements are always a bit off overnight at weekends because the senior staff are at home in bed. Second, Australia is an English-speaking Commonwealth country with which most of us are familiar. Third, this may well be a landmark election. Fourth, news is always relative and not much else has happened. Fifth, I would not completely rule out an Australian editor on the overnight news team.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335
    kle4 said:

    I see the BBC news website can barely contain its glee over the Australian Labor victory this morning.

    Two leading articles, the second of which says politics will be greener, more feminine and more emphatically Australian before calling Morrison a small-T Trump.

    And people say this organisation has no bias.

    The BBC has biases. The key is whether it makes a genuine effort toward maintaining impartiality, not that it achieves it perfectly all the time. I think it does.

    Can't speak for this example, but I think they seem to make less effort on foreign affairs. Those I was very surprised to see its report on 'gaffe prone Biden' once.
    I think there's a difference between "on-air" and the BBC news website.

    The latter is no better than the Guardian.
  • Options
    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 5,262
    edited May 2022
    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    I've already said sorry for having a dig and do so again.

    However, Leon, to describe yourself as a saint on this forum really is to stretch things a little far. Some of your (mostly late night) rants can be really vicious and full of invective in my opinion.

    You are no nicer than I but we cause a spark of electricity because of our very different perspectives on life.

    And your travel blogs irritate me a) because they're boastful and b) because I'm jealous.

    Actually, the real problem for me is that I've spent much of my life travelling and right now I can't so it's more deep envy. And vicarious annoyance.

    etc.
    Fair enough. Apology accepted

    You should still take a look at yourself. Tsk
    Fine. And will you? I just looked back and, I kid you not, you have done @Heathener numerous times in the past days when I haven't been on this forum. I won't bother to repeat the quotes on here but I have them open in tabs so take it as a read. When you go off on one, usually after a glass or two, you can get pretty vicious especially against the Left and Remainers - even though I understand that up until the very last minute you were genuinely conflicted?

    As for Casino Royale's comment just now about woke people ... what a snide, nasty, comment that was. A really vile piece of invective.

    So there's a lot of pot, kettle, black about this. The Right sometimes seem to claim the moral high ground and when, as in the US, they drag poor old God into it, it because truly bilious.
  • Options
    TazTaz Posts: 11,179
    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    A true left leaner would support the RMT standing up for the 2,500 safety critical employees threatened with dismissal and dedicated rail staff who have been offered a wage increase that is effectively a massive pay cut. If there is a strike it is due to management failing to engage. The RMT want a fair solution.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335
    Andy_JS said:

    There could still be a leadership challenge against Johnson if the Tories lose both by-elections by big margins.

    Hunt's "I wouldn't have locked down in 2020" line is interesting because it shows he's on a wooing mission to the Steve Baker's of this world and thus keen to build up a following amongst the parliamentary right as well as his one nation core.

    There's no doubt in my mind that he's entirely serious.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,641
    Tres said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    The problem is that the three RMT leaders are Putin apologists and easily identified as such therefore providing a gift to Boris and a nightmare for labour
    Is this true or are you merely repeating some tripe you read in the Daily Mail?
    It maybe true, but that won't get the workers to vote to strike. A 2% payrise and 9% inflation will. In some ways a return to the Seventies, where some union leaders were marxists, but the workers just wanted to improve their living standards and incomes.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,311

    Jeremy Hunt coming over well on Sophie Ridge this morning

    Oo-er, Missus!!
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,641
    Taz said:

    Foxy said:

    Taz said:

    O/t but. Just after asking Mr Jessop about his wildlife observations yesterday morning yesterday stopped being a GOOD DAY. Because I fell ….. tripped an uneven pavement…., en route to the paper shop, was carted off, by a very cheerful and positive ambulance crew, to hospital, was checked over quite thoroughly, including by the frailty team …..84 year old has nasty fall…… and was finally picked up, still unsteady on my feet by my wife, at about 3pm. Broke my glasses, have two black eyes and various other grazes on my face and arms. Looks dreadful!
    So life has changed again.

    However, most of the blue-tit chicks seem fit and healthy!

    All the best OkC, get well soon.
    Foxy said:

    Interesting night out in town for a works leaving do (ward housekeeper retiring). Town very lively with hen parties, shortie playsuits seem to be the fashion here. Matron surprisingly good at the kareoke and a good time had by all.

    LEICESTER IS BACK!


    For the time being. Same with Newcastle yesterday. When the cost of living crisis truly bites hospitality will be devastated. Discretionary spend will fall off a cliff.
    Yes, probably. Though quite a few have saved a fair bit over lockdown, what with no holidays and the like, so have a bit of a cushion. Not everyone of course.

    Economically, things are never as good as they seem, nor as bad as they seem. I think the external inflationary pressures will pass fairly quickly.
    I hope you are right, if China sorts itself out quickly then possibly.

    However I expect little good in the next 12 months economically.
    We know Omicron blows through quickly, even in unimmunised countries like most of Africa, so I think it will be gone in China soon.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,298
    Tres said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    The problem is that the three RMT leaders are Putin apologists and easily identified as such therefore providing a gift to Boris and a nightmare for labour
    Is this true or are you merely repeating some tripe you read in the Daily Mail?
    It is widely reported that the leaders are Putin apologists and a strike led by them will be a gift to Boris

    https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/news/telegraph-links-rmt-union-to-putins-russia-following-tube-strike-314472/
  • Options
    TazTaz Posts: 11,179
    Carnyx said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    On the topic of nature and wildlife, I was delighted the other day to find an Early Purple orchid (orchis mascula). It was growing all by itself, so far as I could tell, in a shady and damp bank underneath hanging branches and in a place few would walk. Really beautiful.

    https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/trees-woods-and-wildlife/plants/wild-flowers/early-purple-orchid/

    Does anyone know how rare they are?

    Not terribly rare, although they like specific places - round here usually limestone or lime rich.

    The BSBI have public (although low resolution) maps available :
    https://bsbi.org/maps?taxonid=2cd4p9h.caq
    Thanks so much for this. A very useful map.

    I spotted a Long-eared owl this time last year which I think is one of my rarest UK sightings. I suppose the Golden Eagle in the Highlands was rarer still.

    What is the rarest flora or fauna to have been sighted by others in the UK?
    For me, perhaps what must have been a Minke Whale sounding near our yacht in the Sound of Eigg.

    Egyptian Goose also comer to think of that (though the last was nesting about 2m from the visitor centre shop at Rutland Water reserve).
    We walked past a group of birdwatchers who were watching a bird, small thing, which had drifted off course into the U.K. that was pretty rare here.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335
    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
  • Options
    kjhkjh Posts: 10,631
    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    This is interesting because it is something that would really irritate me if I come across it (as mentioned before I come from the Jeremy Clarkson wing of the LDs), yet it never crops up. Now you may say I'm in my own bubble yet it appears most here don't come across it in their lives either.
  • Options
    Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,060
    Cyclefree said:

    Heathener said:

    O/t but. Just after asking Mr Jessop about his wildlife observations yesterday morning yesterday stopped being a GOOD DAY. Because I fell ….. tripped an uneven pavement…., en route to the paper shop, was carted off, by a very cheerful and positive ambulance crew, to hospital, was checked over quite thoroughly, including by the frailty team …..84 year old has nasty fall…… and was finally picked up, still unsteady on my feet by my wife, at about 3pm. Broke my glasses, have two black eyes and various other grazes on my face and arms. Looks dreadful!
    So life has changed again.

    However, most of the blue-tit chicks seem fit and healthy!

    Oh dear; in case correlation == causation I shall refrain from mentioning the chicks. Hope you feel better soon - sounds like it could have been worse.
    Personally I would far rather read your calming and beautiful wildlife postings than yet another tipsy travel boast from Leon.
    You are the only person who felt the need to make a dig at another poster in an otherwise friendly and concerned series of posts. What does that say about you?
    Lots of birds feeding in my garden and quite a variety too. But the real beauty is seeing kestrels soar high above. It's not the first time I've seen them round here but it never fails to impress.
    I’m lucky enough to live in a part of the world where red kites have become a very common sight, both high up and low enough to see the feathers. I’m been distracted a time it two while teaching when one has glided (glid?) past the windows of the lab.
  • Options
    TazTaz Posts: 11,179
    Foxy said:

    Taz said:

    Foxy said:

    Taz said:

    O/t but. Just after asking Mr Jessop about his wildlife observations yesterday morning yesterday stopped being a GOOD DAY. Because I fell ….. tripped an uneven pavement…., en route to the paper shop, was carted off, by a very cheerful and positive ambulance crew, to hospital, was checked over quite thoroughly, including by the frailty team …..84 year old has nasty fall…… and was finally picked up, still unsteady on my feet by my wife, at about 3pm. Broke my glasses, have two black eyes and various other grazes on my face and arms. Looks dreadful!
    So life has changed again.

    However, most of the blue-tit chicks seem fit and healthy!

    All the best OkC, get well soon.
    Foxy said:

    Interesting night out in town for a works leaving do (ward housekeeper retiring). Town very lively with hen parties, shortie playsuits seem to be the fashion here. Matron surprisingly good at the kareoke and a good time had by all.

    LEICESTER IS BACK!


    For the time being. Same with Newcastle yesterday. When the cost of living crisis truly bites hospitality will be devastated. Discretionary spend will fall off a cliff.
    Yes, probably. Though quite a few have saved a fair bit over lockdown, what with no holidays and the like, so have a bit of a cushion. Not everyone of course.

    Economically, things are never as good as they seem, nor as bad as they seem. I think the external inflationary pressures will pass fairly quickly.
    I hope you are right, if China sorts itself out quickly then possibly.

    However I expect little good in the next 12 months economically.
    We know Omicron blows through quickly, even in unimmunised countries like most of Africa, so I think it will be gone in China soon.
    Yup, it should run out of people to infect.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335
    Sean_F said:

    Foxy said:

    Isn't the big question what votes are moving where?

    If (say) Labour are losing votes in Hackney but gaining in Southampton, that's useful for them.

    Yes, one of the issues.

    The other thing that I notice is that there isn't much of the current Lab/LD/Green vote that would consider voting Tory. Not much room for swingback if you take people at their word.
    I haven't looked at the recent polls in detail, but earlier in the year the dominant feature was that a disproportionate fraction of the Tory 2019 vote was telling pollsters that they didn't know who they would vote for. You can get quite a bit of swingback just from these voters reluctantly being prodded into Tory-voting action to stop the onward march of woke. You wouldn't need anyone currently saying they would vote for an opposition party to change their mind.
    I'd expect the Conservatives to win about 40% in 2024, which may or may not be enough to eke out a majority.
    I'd be surprised if they polled that high to be honest.

    At the moment I'm thinking 36-38%.
  • Options
    TresTres Posts: 2,226

    Tres said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    The problem is that the three RMT leaders are Putin apologists and easily identified as such therefore providing a gift to Boris and a nightmare for labour
    Is this true or are you merely repeating some tripe you read in the Daily Mail?
    It is widely reported that the leaders are Putin apologists and a strike led by them will be a gift to Boris

    https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/news/telegraph-links-rmt-union-to-putins-russia-following-tube-strike-314472/
    Being widely reported doesn't equal true!
    Though they may be some MPs who regret opening the doors to going back to see whatever everyone was saying about Russia and Ukraine in 2014.....
  • Options
    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 5,262
    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    A rather nasty and unpleasant view. Are you by any chance suffering from Wokepox?
    Yep a really nasty and unpleasant view, and supported by Leon.

    I don't see a particular difference between nastiness on Left or Right but I happen to think the latter are more hypocritical and have more Chutzpah about it. They seem to lack self-awareness that they are being vile.

  • Options
    Penddu2Penddu2 Posts: 595
    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    O/t but. Just after asking Mr Jessop about his wildlife observations yesterday morning yesterday stopped being a GOOD DAY. Because I fell ….. tripped an uneven pavement…., en route to the paper shop, was carted off, by a very cheerful and positive ambulance crew, to hospital, was checked over quite thoroughly, including by the frailty team …..84 year old has nasty fall…… and was finally picked up, still unsteady on my feet by my wife, at about 3pm. Broke my glasses, have two black eyes and various other grazes on my face and arms. Looks dreadful!
    So life has changed again.

    However, most of the blue-tit chicks seem fit and healthy!

    Oh dear; in case correlation == causation I shall refrain from mentioning the chicks. Hope you feel better soon - sounds like it could have been worse.
    Personally I would far rather read your calming and beautiful wildlife postings than yet another tipsy travel boast from Leon.
    And a very good morning to you too, @Heathener from my semi-permanent office in sunny Sivota, Epirus

    No booze, just an excellent cappuccino


    Sivota is pleasant (if you like Yachties). I strongly reccomend nearby Parga.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,007
    edited May 2022
    Under a FPTP system like the UK if the Greens are polling high then that will likely doom Labour for as the Yougov poll shows the Greens will take votes from those who would most likely vote Labour otherwise.

    However under an AV or PR or runoff system it would not matter. Hence in Australia yesterday Labor got just 32% on first preferences with the Greens on 12% and the Coalition on 35%. Yet once Green preferences were taken into account Labor were able to get to 52% to 48% for the Coalition and win the election

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022_Australian_federal_election

    What saved Cameron in 2015 of course under FPTP was winning over centrist voters and squeezing the LD vote which had declined by 15% since 2010, thus he was able to survive leakage to his right to UKIP
  • Options
    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 5,262

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    You're the one being really deeply unpleasant and toxic this morning.

    Have a nice day everyone.

    xx
  • Options
    No_Offence_AlanNo_Offence_Alan Posts: 3,814
    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    O/t but. Just after asking Mr Jessop about his wildlife observations yesterday morning yesterday stopped being a GOOD DAY. Because I fell ….. tripped an uneven pavement…., en route to the paper shop, was carted off, by a very cheerful and positive ambulance crew, to hospital, was checked over quite thoroughly, including by the frailty team …..84 year old has nasty fall…… and was finally picked up, still unsteady on my feet by my wife, at about 3pm. Broke my glasses, have two black eyes and various other grazes on my face and arms. Looks dreadful!
    So life has changed again.

    However, most of the blue-tit chicks seem fit and healthy!

    Oh dear; in case correlation == causation I shall refrain from mentioning the chicks. Hope you feel better soon - sounds like it could have been worse.
    Personally I would far rather read your calming and beautiful wildlife postings than yet another tipsy travel boast from Leon.
    And a very good morning to you too, @Heathener from my semi-permanent office in sunny Sivota, Epirus

    No booze, just an excellent cappuccino


    I just can't work those touchpads. I need a mouse.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,311

    I see the BBC news website can barely contain its glee over the Australian Labor victory this morning.

    Two leading articles, the second of which says politics will be greener, more feminine and more emphatically Australian before calling Morrison a small-T Trump.

    And people say this organisation has no bias.

    That's why I'm easy
    Albanese like Sunday morning
  • Options
    TazTaz Posts: 11,179

    kle4 said:

    I see the BBC news website can barely contain its glee over the Australian Labor victory this morning.

    Two leading articles, the second of which says politics will be greener, more feminine and more emphatically Australian before calling Morrison a small-T Trump.

    And people say this organisation has no bias.

    The BBC has biases. The key is whether it makes a genuine effort toward maintaining impartiality, not that it achieves it perfectly all the time. I think it does.

    Can't speak for this example, but I think they seem to make less effort on foreign affairs. Those I was very surprised to see its report on 'gaffe prone Biden' once.
    I think there's a difference between "on-air" and the BBC news website.

    The latter is no better than the Guardian.
    It’s more of an online magazine these days. It is pretty obvious what it’s editorial biases are but then it is desperately trying to appeal to da yoof as is the whole of the BBC. Hence bringing back, with disastrous results, BBC3.
  • Options
    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,205
    Penddu2 said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    O/t but. Just after asking Mr Jessop about his wildlife observations yesterday morning yesterday stopped being a GOOD DAY. Because I fell ….. tripped an uneven pavement…., en route to the paper shop, was carted off, by a very cheerful and positive ambulance crew, to hospital, was checked over quite thoroughly, including by the frailty team …..84 year old has nasty fall…… and was finally picked up, still unsteady on my feet by my wife, at about 3pm. Broke my glasses, have two black eyes and various other grazes on my face and arms. Looks dreadful!
    So life has changed again.

    However, most of the blue-tit chicks seem fit and healthy!

    Oh dear; in case correlation == causation I shall refrain from mentioning the chicks. Hope you feel better soon - sounds like it could have been worse.
    Personally I would far rather read your calming and beautiful wildlife postings than yet another tipsy travel boast from Leon.
    And a very good morning to you too, @Heathener from my semi-permanent office in sunny Sivota, Epirus

    No booze, just an excellent cappuccino


    Sivota is pleasant (if you like Yachties). I strongly reccomend nearby Parga.
    I must find out where Daughter is today ......
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,007
    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    To face a landslide defeat the Conservatives would need to fall to 30% or less like 1997, currently they are on around 33 to 35%, in part because of the culture wars, which while not enough to win re election, would be enough to avoid a landslide defeat
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335
    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    I've already said sorry for having a dig and do so again.

    However, Leon, to describe yourself as a saint on this forum really is to stretch things a little far. Some of your (mostly late night) rants can be really vicious and full of invective in my opinion.

    You are no nicer than I but we cause a spark of electricity because of our very different perspectives on life.

    And your travel blogs irritate me a) because they're boastful and b) because I'm jealous.

    Actually, the real problem for me is that I've spent much of my life travelling and right now I can't so it's more deep envy. And vicarious annoyance.

    etc.
    Fair enough. Apology accepted

    You should still take a look at yourself. Tsk
    Fine. And will you? I just looked back and, I kid you not, you have done @Heathener numerous times in the past days when I haven't been on this forum. I won't bother to repeat the quotes on here but I have them open in tabs so take it as a read. When you go off on one, usually after a glass or two, you can get pretty vicious especially against the Left and Remainers - even though I understand that up until the very last minute you were genuinely conflicted?

    As for Casino Royale's comment just now about woke people ... what a snide, nasty, comment that was. A really vile piece of invective.

    So there's a lot of pot, kettle, black about this. The Right sometimes seem to claim the moral high ground and when, as in the US, they drag poor old God into it, it because truly bilious.
    I'm not going to be dragged down into the gutter with you.

    Your hyperbolic response is because you recognised something of yourself in what I said and are thus upset about it.

    Reconsider your approach to life.

    Think about it.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,298
    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    The problem is that the three RMT leaders are Putin apologists and easily identified as such therefore providing a gift to Boris and a nightmare for labour
    Is this true or are you merely repeating some tripe you read in the Daily Mail?
    It is widely reported that the leaders are Putin apologists and a strike led by them will be a gift to Boris

    https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/news/telegraph-links-rmt-union-to-putins-russia-following-tube-strike-314472/
    Being widely reported doesn't equal true!
    Though they may be some MPs who regret opening the doors to going back to see whatever everyone was saying about Russia and Ukraine in 2014.....
    Maybe disprove the allegations then
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335

    I see the BBC news website can barely contain its glee over the Australian Labor victory this morning.

    Two leading articles, the second of which says politics will be greener, more feminine and more emphatically Australian before calling Morrison a small-T Trump.

    And people say this organisation has no bias.

    It is a bit OTT but...

    First, news judgements are always a bit off overnight at weekends because the senior staff are at home in bed. Second, Australia is an English-speaking Commonwealth country with which most of us are familiar. Third, this may well be a landmark election. Fourth, news is always relative and not much else has happened. Fifth, I would not completely rule out an Australian editor on the overnight news team.
    Yes, the BBC always has an excuse.

    I'd just like to see more balance from their editorial team.
  • Options
    Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 12,999
    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    You're the one being really deeply unpleasant and toxic this morning.

    Have a nice day everyone.

    xx
    Give him a break. The moment he stands down from his vigil the nation's rivers will be choked with toppled statues.
  • Options
    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 5,262
    Just one last thought.

    There are a lot of throwaway "jokes" made about trans people but as Professor van der Kolk states, 'often people use jokes to hide their own prejudices'.

    Perhaps a lot more self-awareness of the fact that you are doing it, little less invective, and some more graciousness and understanding from those on the Right towards those who are different from them might make society a much nicer and kinder place.

    It might also help stop the Indignant Left from feeling the need to defend their corner quite so stridently.

    Ciao xx
  • Options
    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 39,003
    Leon said:

    O/t but. Just after asking Mr Jessop about his wildlife observations yesterday morning yesterday stopped being a GOOD DAY. Because I fell ….. tripped an uneven pavement…., en route to the paper shop, was carted off, by a very cheerful and positive ambulance crew, to hospital, was checked over quite thoroughly, including by the frailty team …..84 year old has nasty fall…… and was finally picked up, still unsteady on my feet by my wife, at about 3pm. Broke my glasses, have two black eyes and various other grazes on my face and arms. Looks dreadful!
    So life has changed again.

    However, most of the blue-tit chicks seem fit and healthy!

    Lord luvaduck

    Nasty. Hope you get well sharpish

    On the subject of falls, I was walking around a monastery in Meteora a couple of days ago and I saw a fit, healthy thirty something Asian-American woman take a tremendous clattering fall, onto hard stone, scattering all her cameras and bags and everything - because she missed just one step

    Luckily she got away with a sprained ankle and a big scare (for everyone: it looked horrific) but she was inches away from a smashed face, lost teeth, broken bones - and maybe something worse. A fall onto stone can severely injure or kill you - a friend of mine got frontal lobe brain damage exactly this way (he was sober, BTW, but a bit frail from an illness, hence the fall)

    We are all moments from disaster. Eat drink and be merry, and scatter ye rosebuds
    I saw a horrible one years back. I was walking on (I think) Milk Hill, Wiltshire's highest point. A mountain biker passed me; no problems, he gave me a wide berth, then approached a stile. He got off his bike, hoisted it onto his shoulder, and went over the stile. Except he mis stepped and ended up badly twisting his ankle. A friend of his soon arrived on another bike to help us out.

    From my perspective as an onlooker, it almost looked like it happened in slow motion.
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,636
    I'm convinced the same people who lecture people on holding the correct Woke attitudes today would have been the most conservative and religious people in, say, Victorian times. Their beliefs change over the generations, but their hectoring and lecturing doesn't.
  • Options
    TresTres Posts: 2,226
    edited May 2022

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    The problem is that the three RMT leaders are Putin apologists and easily identified as such therefore providing a gift to Boris and a nightmare for labour
    Is this true or are you merely repeating some tripe you read in the Daily Mail?
    It is widely reported that the leaders are Putin apologists and a strike led by them will be a gift to Boris

    https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/news/telegraph-links-rmt-union-to-putins-russia-following-tube-strike-314472/
    Being widely reported doesn't equal true!
    Though they may be some MPs who regret opening the doors to going back to see whatever everyone was saying about Russia and Ukraine in 2014.....
    Maybe disprove the allegations then
    Ah the old classic, have you stopped having your photograph taken with Russian backed militias?
    Have the dozens of Tory MPs who accepted donations from mysterious Russians apologised for their poor judgement? I wonder if the Daily Mail will run a smear story about that.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,311
    Carnyx said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    On the topic of nature and wildlife, I was delighted the other day to find an Early Purple orchid (orchis mascula). It was growing all by itself, so far as I could tell, in a shady and damp bank underneath hanging branches and in a place few would walk. Really beautiful.

    https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/trees-woods-and-wildlife/plants/wild-flowers/early-purple-orchid/

    Does anyone know how rare they are?

    Not terribly rare, although they like specific places - round here usually limestone or lime rich.

    The BSBI have public (although low resolution) maps available :
    https://bsbi.org/maps?taxonid=2cd4p9h.caq
    Thanks so much for this. A very useful map.

    I spotted a Long-eared owl this time last year which I think is one of my rarest UK sightings. I suppose the Golden Eagle in the Highlands was rarer still.

    What is the rarest flora or fauna to have been sighted by others in the UK?
    For me, perhaps what must have been a Minke Whale sounding near our yacht in the Sound of Eigg.

    Egyptian Goose also comer to think of that (though the last was nesting about 2m from the visitor centre shop at Rutland Water reserve).
    Egyptian Geese? They're two a penny in London! Whether in Ilford's Valentine's Park or St James's Park in the city centre!

  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,983
    Mr. Royale, the Conservatives may do even worse than that, I think.
  • Options
    kjhkjh Posts: 10,631

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    Your wife is right and we all come across people like this. Nothing to do with wokeness and all to do with insecurity as your wife says.

    I do think you have gone over the top re @Heathener this morning. Done the same myself with others in the past so not a criticism, just saying.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335
    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    You're the one being really deeply unpleasant and toxic this morning.

    Have a nice day everyone.

    xx
    Your problem is that you make the political personal, because you think the facts only point one way and therefore if someone disagrees with you they must be a deeply unpleasant individual. This then means that you can get personal responses in kind which validate your prejudices but also upset and depress you in turn - because they're not nice.

    Only you are responsible for your own behaviour and it's up to you whether you want to break the circle or not.

    Log off and have a good think about it xx
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,298
    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    The problem is that the three RMT leaders are Putin apologists and easily identified as such therefore providing a gift to Boris and a nightmare for labour
    Is this true or are you merely repeating some tripe you read in the Daily Mail?
    It is widely reported that the leaders are Putin apologists and a strike led by them will be a gift to Boris

    https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/news/telegraph-links-rmt-union-to-putins-russia-following-tube-strike-314472/
    Being widely reported doesn't equal true!
    Though they may be some MPs who regret opening the doors to going back to see whatever everyone was saying about Russia and Ukraine in 2014.....
    Maybe disprove the allegations then
    Ah the old classic, have you stopped having your photograph taken with Russian backed militias?
    Have the dozens of Tory MPs who accepted donations from mysterious Russians apologised for their poor judgement? I wonder if the Daily Mail will run a smear story about that.
    It seems you cannot disprove the allegations against the 3 RMT leaders, and it is not just the daily mail reporting on the pro Putin loyalties of these leaders
  • Options
    kjhkjh Posts: 10,631

    It's that time of year in the garden when the young fluff-ball tawny owls have left the nest and spend all night squeaking. And all day snoozing....


    We have 5 young foxes playing in the garden. It seems a wheelbarrow full of cut daffodils and bluebells are great fun.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335
    kjh said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    Your wife is right and we all come across people like this. Nothing to do with wokeness and all to do with insecurity as your wife says.

    I do think you have gone over the top re @Heathener this morning. Done the same myself with others in the past so not a criticism, just saying.
    I haven't gone over the top at all.

    My comment wasn't directed at anyone but rather the Woke in general. It was in response to one that was but that's quite a different thing.

    It some have responded to take it personally then that says quite a lot about them, in my view.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,125
    kjh said:

    It's that time of year in the garden when the young fluff-ball tawny owls have left the nest and spend all night squeaking. And all day snoozing....


    We have 5 young foxes playing in the garden. It seems a wheelbarrow full of cut daffodils and bluebells are great fun.
    Put out a football if you want to see great fun!
  • Options
    TazTaz Posts: 11,179
    Heathener said:

    Just one last thought.

    There are a lot of throwaway "jokes" made about trans people but as Professor van der Kolk states, 'often people use jokes to hide their own prejudices'.

    Perhaps a lot more self-awareness of the fact that you are doing it, little less invective, and some more graciousness and understanding from those on the Right towards those who are different from them might make society a much nicer and kinder place.

    It might also help stop the Indignant Left from feeling the need to defend their corner quite so stridently.

    Ciao xx

    Advice for those on either extreme of the woke debate.

    Www.terfisaslur.com
  • Options
    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 5,262
    edited May 2022

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    You're the one being really deeply unpleasant and toxic this morning.

    Have a nice day everyone.

    xx
    Your problem is that you make the political personal, because you think the facts only point one way and therefore if someone disagrees with you they must be a deeply unpleasant individual. This then means that you can get personal responses in kind which validate your prejudices but also upset and depress you in turn - because they're not nice.

    Only you are responsible for your own behaviour and it's up to you whether you want to break the circle or not.

    Log off and have a good think about it xx
    Jesus the lack of self-awareness from you is staggering. You have posted a really vile post, even criticised by others more of your persuasion.

    I know you are annoyed about the Aussie result and the BBC and anyone left ... but go away and take a look at yourself.

    If I leave this forum it won't be because you tell me to.
  • Options
    TresTres Posts: 2,226

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    The problem is that the three RMT leaders are Putin apologists and easily identified as such therefore providing a gift to Boris and a nightmare for labour
    Is this true or are you merely repeating some tripe you read in the Daily Mail?
    It is widely reported that the leaders are Putin apologists and a strike led by them will be a gift to Boris

    https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/news/telegraph-links-rmt-union-to-putins-russia-following-tube-strike-314472/
    Being widely reported doesn't equal true!
    Though they may be some MPs who regret opening the doors to going back to see whatever everyone was saying about Russia and Ukraine in 2014.....
    Maybe disprove the allegations then
    Ah the old classic, have you stopped having your photograph taken with Russian backed militias?
    Have the dozens of Tory MPs who accepted donations from mysterious Russians apologised for their poor judgement? I wonder if the Daily Mail will run a smear story about that.
    It seems you cannot disprove the allegations against the 3 RMT leaders, and it is not just the daily mail reporting on the pro Putin loyalties of these leaders
    Are you happy for Johnson's cabinet to be stuffed full of MPs who have accepted donations from mysterious Russians?
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,974
    moonshine said:

    Off-topic:

    A relative of Mrs J has just got something that sounds suspiciously like Monkey Pox, during a trip to Switzerland. She's getting better now.

    It'll be interesting to find out if it was or not, especially as I don't think any cases have been reported in either Turkey or Switzerland...

    Interestingly, the lady in question does not seem to fit the rumoured demographic for this outbreak.

    Who knows what she gets up to her in spare time.
    seems contact is enough so you just need to use same towel I assume touch same things etc.
  • Options
    TazTaz Posts: 11,179
    Watching Sunday Morning on BBC1, I wish the bloody interviewer would just let Nadim Zahawi speak and make his point and reply to the question.
  • Options
    DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 24,391

    I see the BBC news website can barely contain its glee over the Australian Labor victory this morning.

    Two leading articles, the second of which says politics will be greener, more feminine and more emphatically Australian before calling Morrison a small-T Trump.

    And people say this organisation has no bias.

    It is a bit OTT but...

    First, news judgements are always a bit off overnight at weekends because the senior staff are at home in bed. Second, Australia is an English-speaking Commonwealth country with which most of us are familiar. Third, this may well be a landmark election. Fourth, news is always relative and not much else has happened. Fifth, I would not completely rule out an Australian editor on the overnight news team.
    Yes, the BBC always has an excuse.

    I'd just like to see more balance from their editorial team.
    What excuse and what balance? I've long been critical of the BBC news site for its disproportionate coverage of American domestic stories, especially overnight and at weekends. This is the same, except for Australia rather than America. If the story were ignored, there'd be complaints the BBC was Euro-centric for giving the re-election of President Macron more prominence than the Australian election.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,298
    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    The problem is that the three RMT leaders are Putin apologists and easily identified as such therefore providing a gift to Boris and a nightmare for labour
    Is this true or are you merely repeating some tripe you read in the Daily Mail?
    It is widely reported that the leaders are Putin apologists and a strike led by them will be a gift to Boris

    https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/news/telegraph-links-rmt-union-to-putins-russia-following-tube-strike-314472/
    Being widely reported doesn't equal true!
    Though they may be some MPs who regret opening the doors to going back to see whatever everyone was saying about Russia and Ukraine in 2014.....
    Maybe disprove the allegations then
    Ah the old classic, have you stopped having your photograph taken with Russian backed militias?
    Have the dozens of Tory MPs who accepted donations from mysterious Russians apologised for their poor judgement? I wonder if the Daily Mail will run a smear story about that.
    It seems you cannot disprove the allegations against the 3 RMT leaders, and it is not just the daily mail reporting on the pro Putin loyalties of these leaders
    Are you happy for Johnson's cabinet to be stuffed full of MPs who have accepted donations from mysterious Russians?
    Boris and the cabinet by their actions against the war criminal Putin speaks for itself
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,641
    edited May 2022

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    You're the one being really deeply unpleasant and toxic this morning.

    Have a nice day everyone.

    xx
    Your problem is that you make the political personal, because you think the facts only point one way and therefore if someone disagrees with you they must be a deeply unpleasant individual. This then means that you can get personal responses in kind which validate your prejudices but also upset and depress you in turn - because they're not nice.

    Only you are responsible for your own behaviour and it's up to you whether you want to break the circle or not.

    Log off and have a good think about it xx
    My irony meter just exploded. Does anyone know a good repair shop?
  • Options
    TresTres Posts: 2,226

    kjh said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    Your wife is right and we all come across people like this. Nothing to do with wokeness and all to do with insecurity as your wife says.

    I do think you have gone over the top re @Heathener this morning. Done the same myself with others in the past so not a criticism, just saying.
    I haven't gone over the top at all.

    My comment wasn't directed at anyone but rather the Woke in general. It was in response to one that was but that's quite a different thing.

    It some have responded to take it personally then that says quite a lot about them, in my view.
    You can't dehumanise someone and then get upset when you're called out on it.
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,974
    @OldKingCole
    Sorry to hear about your fall OKC, hopefuly you are fit and well soon.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,298
    Taz said:

    Watching Sunday Morning on BBC1, I wish the bloody interviewer would just let Nadim Zahawi speak and make his point and reply to the question.

    It is a fundamental issue with all the media and the object is to achieve a 'gotcha' rather than listen to the responses to their questions
  • Options
    TresTres Posts: 2,226

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    The problem is that the three RMT leaders are Putin apologists and easily identified as such therefore providing a gift to Boris and a nightmare for labour
    Is this true or are you merely repeating some tripe you read in the Daily Mail?
    It is widely reported that the leaders are Putin apologists and a strike led by them will be a gift to Boris

    https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/news/telegraph-links-rmt-union-to-putins-russia-following-tube-strike-314472/
    Being widely reported doesn't equal true!
    Though they may be some MPs who regret opening the doors to going back to see whatever everyone was saying about Russia and Ukraine in 2014.....
    Maybe disprove the allegations then
    Ah the old classic, have you stopped having your photograph taken with Russian backed militias?
    Have the dozens of Tory MPs who accepted donations from mysterious Russians apologised for their poor judgement? I wonder if the Daily Mail will run a smear story about that.
    It seems you cannot disprove the allegations against the 3 RMT leaders, and it is not just the daily mail reporting on the pro Putin loyalties of these leaders
    Are you happy for Johnson's cabinet to be stuffed full of MPs who have accepted donations from mysterious Russians?
    Boris and the cabinet by their actions against the war criminal Putin speaks for itself
    Ah witch-hunts for some, jelly and ice cream for others. Never change BigG.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335
    Dura_Ace said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    You're the one being really deeply unpleasant and toxic this morning.

    Have a nice day everyone.

    xx
    Give him a break. The moment he stands down from his vigil the nation's rivers will be choked with toppled statues.
    This from the man who said, only the other day, that his life philosophy was to never accept blame and never apologize.

    Mine is the precise opposite.

    I am comfortable with my integrity and honour, and thus myself.

    Are you?
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,974

    Jonathan said:

    Heathener said:

    And, second one, is Matthew Lynn's about the inevitability of a stock market crash and recession:

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2022/05/21/stock-market-crash-has-just-begun/

    If he knew what the stock market was going to do then he wouldn't be working for the Daily Telegraph (or at all).
    That is true, there are signs that things are seriously overheating. The market for IT contractors in London is overheating even by its own rather special standards. I was discussing a figure of £350k/pa last week. (Fortunately it was only a discussion). Graduates with a couple of years experience are demanding senior salaries.

    Looks like a bubble to me.
    I’m seeing kids a couple of years out of school demanding 6 figure salaries
    Is there anyone stupid enough to give them it though. 6 figure salaries are rarer than rocking horse shit.
  • Options
    dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,970
    What's the point of a Union if you get a pay offer 6.5% below the rate of inflation and the leadership just shrugs and says that sounds good?
    I wouldn't be renewing my subs in that case.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335
    Tres said:

    kjh said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    Your wife is right and we all come across people like this. Nothing to do with wokeness and all to do with insecurity as your wife says.

    I do think you have gone over the top re @Heathener this morning. Done the same myself with others in the past so not a criticism, just saying.
    I haven't gone over the top at all.

    My comment wasn't directed at anyone but rather the Woke in general. It was in response to one that was but that's quite a different thing.

    It some have responded to take it personally then that says quite a lot about them, in my view.
    You can't dehumanise someone and then get upset when you're called out on it.
    Woah. I haven't dehumanised anyone and there's nothing to be "called out" on. My comment is an entirely reasonable one and I stand by it.

    This is simply the left-wing herd rallying to defend one of their own because they think they've been targeted and have been triggered by the use of the word Woke.
  • Options
    MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 25,196
    HYUFD said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    To face a landslide defeat the Conservatives would need to fall to 30% or less like 1997, currently they are on around 33 to 35%, in part because of the culture wars, which while not enough to win re election, would be enough to avoid a landslide defeat
    There will be no landslide, unless Johnson can rejuvenate himself and his party and it is a Conservative landslide.

    Johnson has control of the electoral timetable now, and whereas Spring 2024 doesn't seem so far away January 2025 does.

    In 1997 the Media including the Sun, the Mail and the Express was four square behind Blair. Johnson owns the press today, and they own him.

    I am fairly sure that a manifesto promise of a return to capital punishment for traitors, Islamic terrorists and nonces will seal the deal for him. At that point the question is to where outside these shores do I retire?
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,007

    Andy_JS said:

    I'm convinced the same people who lecture people on holding the correct Woke attitudes today would have been the most conservative and religious people in, say, Victorian times. Their beliefs change over the generations, but their hectoring and lecturing doesn't.

    Hectoring is always tiresome. But anti-woke hectoring is common too, and in electoral terms can be just as off-putting. This quote from an Australian Liberal MP may give pause for thought to some Tories here:

    "Morrisonism is economic populism and culture wars – that was poison for us in the city. We’ve got to return to economic rationalism and social liberalism."

    Fundamentally, most people want (a) a decent standard of living and (b) enough social concern that they feel comfortable about their government. We all differ in the details, but if politicians veer off into obsessing about woke or anti-woke attitudes, most of us just switch off. Moreover, I don't think there is anything like a majority for aggressive reactionary attitudes. The overwhelming British attitude today is "live and let live" - applying to minorities, trans people, believers in different religions and anyone else. In the election debates, if Keir says "I want to improve your standard of living" and Boris says "Haha, he can't even definie a woman", Boris isn't going to come out of it well.
    However if the Liberals went too far back in favour of economic conservatives and social liberalism, a la Malcolm Turnbull or David Cameron, they would face a surge in the One Nation vote, the UKIP of Australia, in outer suburbs and rural areas and small towns even if they won back upper middle class voters from Independents in wealthy inner city areas. One Nation was already up 2% from 2019 to 5% yesterday on the primary vote
  • Options
    northern_monkeynorthern_monkey Posts: 1,517
    Hope you feel better soon OKC.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335

    I see the BBC news website can barely contain its glee over the Australian Labor victory this morning.

    Two leading articles, the second of which says politics will be greener, more feminine and more emphatically Australian before calling Morrison a small-T Trump.

    And people say this organisation has no bias.

    It is a bit OTT but...

    First, news judgements are always a bit off overnight at weekends because the senior staff are at home in bed. Second, Australia is an English-speaking Commonwealth country with which most of us are familiar. Third, this may well be a landmark election. Fourth, news is always relative and not much else has happened. Fifth, I would not completely rule out an Australian editor on the overnight news team.
    Yes, the BBC always has an excuse.

    I'd just like to see more balance from their editorial team.
    What excuse and what balance? I've long been critical of the BBC news site for its disproportionate coverage of American domestic stories, especially overnight and at weekends. This is the same, except for Australia rather than America. If the story were ignored, there'd be complaints the BBC was Euro-centric for giving the re-election of President Macron more prominence than the Australian election.
    Oh, the story shouldn't be ignored but I'd expect the editorial to put both sides of it. And not to give a heavily propagandised take of one side.
  • Options
    kjhkjh Posts: 10,631

    kjh said:

    It's that time of year in the garden when the young fluff-ball tawny owls have left the nest and spend all night squeaking. And all day snoozing....


    We have 5 young foxes playing in the garden. It seems a wheelbarrow full of cut daffodils and bluebells are great fun.
    Put out a football if you want to see great fun!
    We don't have to, they bring their own! Over years we have collected dozens of big balls, hundreds of golf balls, loads of gloves and shoes, several children's lunch bags and one set of diving goggles.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,007
    edited May 2022

    I see the BBC news website can barely contain its glee over the Australian Labor victory this morning.

    Two leading articles, the second of which says politics will be greener, more feminine and more emphatically Australian before calling Morrison a small-T Trump.

    And people say this organisation has no bias.

    It is a bit OTT but...

    First, news judgements are always a bit off overnight at weekends because the senior staff are at home in bed. Second, Australia is an English-speaking Commonwealth country with which most of us are familiar. Third, this may well be a landmark election. Fourth, news is always relative and not much else has happened. Fifth, I would not completely rule out an Australian editor on the overnight news team.
    Yes, the BBC always has an excuse.

    I'd just like to see more balance from their editorial team.
    What excuse and what balance? I've long been critical of the BBC news site for its disproportionate coverage of American domestic stories, especially overnight and at weekends. This is the same, except for Australia rather than America. If the story were ignored, there'd be complaints the BBC was Euro-centric for giving the re-election of President Macron more prominence than the Australian election.
    To be fair in terms of population size and economy size and membership of international bodies like the G7 and UN Security Council, the French election while not as important as the US election is more important than the Australian election in global terms, as is the German election and as is ours.

    It is more ties of culture and language that give the Australian election more prominence in the UK
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,335
    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    You're the one being really deeply unpleasant and toxic this morning.

    Have a nice day everyone.

    xx
    Your problem is that you make the political personal, because you think the facts only point one way and therefore if someone disagrees with you they must be a deeply unpleasant individual. This then means that you can get personal responses in kind which validate your prejudices but also upset and depress you in turn - because they're not nice.

    Only you are responsible for your own behaviour and it's up to you whether you want to break the circle or not.

    Log off and have a good think about it xx
    Jesus the lack of self-awareness from you is staggering. You have posted a really vile post, even criticised by others more of your persuasion.

    I know you are annoyed about the Aussie result and the BBC and anyone left ... but go away and take a look at yourself.

    If I leave this forum it won't be because you tell me to.
    I am very self aware; it's you who are not. Like @Leon said you started this morning with a spiteful and nasty post that was totally uncalled for and that's your style.

    The solution for me is simple: you add precisely no value to this forum so I will simply ignore everything you say from this point forth until you sort yourself out.

    Good day.
  • Options
    dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,970
    HYUFD said:

    Andy_JS said:

    I'm convinced the same people who lecture people on holding the correct Woke attitudes today would have been the most conservative and religious people in, say, Victorian times. Their beliefs change over the generations, but their hectoring and lecturing doesn't.

    Hectoring is always tiresome. But anti-woke hectoring is common too, and in electoral terms can be just as off-putting. This quote from an Australian Liberal MP may give pause for thought to some Tories here:

    "Morrisonism is economic populism and culture wars – that was poison for us in the city. We’ve got to return to economic rationalism and social liberalism."

    Fundamentally, most people want (a) a decent standard of living and (b) enough social concern that they feel comfortable about their government. We all differ in the details, but if politicians veer off into obsessing about woke or anti-woke attitudes, most of us just switch off. Moreover, I don't think there is anything like a majority for aggressive reactionary attitudes. The overwhelming British attitude today is "live and let live" - applying to minorities, trans people, believers in different religions and anyone else. In the election debates, if Keir says "I want to improve your standard of living" and Boris says "Haha, he can't even definie a woman", Boris isn't going to come out of it well.
    However if the Liberals went too far back in favour of economic conservatives and social liberalism, a la Malcolm Turnbull or David Cameron, they would face a surge in the One Nation vote, the UKIP of Australia, in outer suburbs and rural areas and small towns even if they won back upper middle class voters from Independents in wealthy inner city areas. One Nation was already up 2% from 2019 to 5% yesterday on the primary vote
    You've got to pick up transfers.
    You don't have to here.
  • Options
    TazTaz Posts: 11,179

    Taz said:

    Watching Sunday Morning on BBC1, I wish the bloody interviewer would just let Nadim Zahawi speak and make his point and reply to the question.

    It is a fundamental issue with all the media and the object is to achieve a 'gotcha' rather than listen to the responses to their questions
    Jo Coburn is usually quite good when I catch daily politics show.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,298
    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    Watching Sunday Morning on BBC1, I wish the bloody interviewer would just let Nadim Zahawi speak and make his point and reply to the question.

    It is a fundamental issue with all the media and the object is to achieve a 'gotcha' rather than listen to the responses to their questions
    Jo Coburn is usually quite good when I catch daily politics show.
    Yes she can be
  • Options
    NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,336
    kle4 said:

    I see the BBC news website can barely contain its glee over the Australian Labor victory this morning.

    Two leading articles, the second of which says politics will be greener, more feminine and more emphatically Australian before calling Morrison a small-T Trump.

    And people say this organisation has no bias.

    The BBC has biases. The key is whether it makes a genuine effort toward maintaining impartiality, not that it achieves it perfectly all the time. I think it does.

    Can't speak for this example, but I think they seem to make less effort on foreign affairs. Those I was very surprised to see its report on 'gaffe prone Biden' once.
    Yes, they make a serious effort where an issue is the subject of intense domestic controversy - Partygate and Beergate, for example. They don't bother if there is a broad national consensus (Ukraine - how much time do they give the Russian view? Trump - how often do you see a pro-Trump Republican interviewed?). I'd prefer them to give both sides all the time, just so we're properly informed, since I think that lack of information leads us into mistakes and anyway, who wants to be ignorant? But many journalists like to have a coherent story, which they see as just presenting one side, interviewing a few people who agree, and leaving it at that.
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,974
    Taz said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    A true left leaner would support the RMT standing up for the 2,500 safety critical employees threatened with dismissal and dedicated rail staff who have been offered a wage increase that is effectively a massive pay cut. If there is a strike it is due to management failing to engage. The RMT want a fair solution.
    Morning Taz. I was surprised to read yesterday that on Scotrail , once qualified and past probation period train drivers get 48K and Doctor's once qualified get 40K.
    Doctors may have advantages later but it seems from that to me at least that train drivers are not badly paid.
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,082

    Right.

    That's it.

    Burn down the Student Loans Company. They're too stupid to exist.

    --> Email to me to support Middle Child's continued student finance.
    That's fine, no problem.

    -> Please log in with email address and password.
    No problem.

    -> "What is your secret answer?"
    To WHAT?

    Like - so, you asked me years ago a question when Eldest Daughter started out and I gave an answer - but it's considered polite to give a clue as to WHAT THE BLOODY QUESTION WAS!!!

    Mother' maiden name didn't work
    Dream job as a child didn't work
    Town of birth didn't work.

    GIVE ME A SODDING CLUE YOU MORONS!

    Name of first pet ?
  • Options
    kjhkjh Posts: 10,631

    Tres said:

    kjh said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    Your wife is right and we all come across people like this. Nothing to do with wokeness and all to do with insecurity as your wife says.

    I do think you have gone over the top re @Heathener this morning. Done the same myself with others in the past so not a criticism, just saying.
    I haven't gone over the top at all.

    My comment wasn't directed at anyone but rather the Woke in general. It was in response to one that was but that's quite a different thing.

    It some have responded to take it personally then that says quite a lot about them, in my view.
    You can't dehumanise someone and then get upset when you're called out on it.
    Woah. I haven't dehumanised anyone and there's nothing to be "called out" on. My comment is an entirely reasonable one and I stand by it.

    This is simply the left-wing herd rallying to defend one of their own because they think they've been targeted and have been triggered by the use of the word Woke.
    I don't think that is right CR. You are coming over as very very angry this morning. Honestly.
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,974
    Tres said:

    kjh said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.
    Yes you're on the Woke left and I'm on the non-Woke right, but for all your loudly avowed good intentions and self-regarding progressive values, the weird thing is that I am obviously nicer than you

    eg there is no way I would join the board of a morning and make some random, tiny, aimless yet spiteful aside about a poster not even present. Simply wouldn't occur to me. Not in my nature.

    Yet it is in yours. Something to ponder, I suggest

    It's typical of the Woke.

    They are actually rather nasty and unpleasant (and secretly hate themselves for it) so wear the Wokery as a public cloak to make themselves feel better and communicate what they'd like others to think about them.

    Doesn't work, of course - because they know it's vacuous and insincere.
    This is absolutely true and completely accords with my experience

    For the purposes of clarity and kindness, this is not aimed at @Heathener - I simply don't know her well enough to say anything serious about her - but yes, the Woke-iest people I know in real life are often the nastiest. Bitchy, resentful, humourless, with a tendency to supercilious preaching and, if they can get away with it, bullying

    This is one reason why Wokeness is so corrosive and aggressive and gets such a strong reaction. It is often pressed by the most annoying types: they would have been the hectoring, ultra-conservative prudes in Victorian times

    This is also a reason why the Trans-Terf wars are so vicious, they are prosecuted by the Woke on both sides, so they try and bully each other. Ugly
    I have a primary client at the moment is precisely like this.

    A deeply unpleasant and self-obsessed woman who spends all her time briefing heavily against others behind their backs and creating a toxic environment - she is entirely untrustworthy and absolutely a bully - whilst brandishing her credentials for every national/international day for this and that under the sun all over LinkedIn.

    My wife, shrewd as she is, continually points out to me that this means she has deep-seated insecurities and issues - not those who she targets.
    Your wife is right and we all come across people like this. Nothing to do with wokeness and all to do with insecurity as your wife says.

    I do think you have gone over the top re @Heathener this morning. Done the same myself with others in the past so not a criticism, just saying.
    I haven't gone over the top at all.

    My comment wasn't directed at anyone but rather the Woke in general. It was in response to one that was but that's quite a different thing.

    It some have responded to take it personally then that says quite a lot about them, in my view.
    You can't dehumanise someone and then get upset when you're called out on it.
    He was right though the woke idiots are a nasty bunch.
  • Options
    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,190

    Right.

    That's it.

    Burn down the Student Loans Company. They're too stupid to exist.

    --> Email to me to support Middle Child's continued student finance.
    That's fine, no problem.

    -> Please log in with email address and password.
    No problem.

    -> "What is your secret answer?"
    To WHAT?

    Like - so, you asked me years ago a question when Eldest Daughter started out and I gave an answer - but it's considered polite to give a clue as to WHAT THE BLOODY QUESTION WAS!!!

    Mother' maiden name didn't work
    Dream job as a child didn't work
    Town of birth didn't work.

    GIVE ME A SODDING CLUE YOU MORONS!

    Name of first pet ?
    Name of first school?
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,974

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Tres said:

    Heathener said:

    Heathener said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    The best hope the Conservatives now have is to ride out the storm and hope it has blown through by 2024.

    It's probably too late now to save things by ditching the oaf at the top. The more he ramps up the culture wars and whips the Daily Mail into propaganda, the more hardened but smaller their voter base will become. We've seen this all before and it NEVER works.

    Prepare for a landslide defeat.

    the Horror that is Woke
    It's really little wonder that you and I dislike each other! :wink:

    I note that Australia has just booted out the right. I suspect, fairly strongly, that voters are turning left as usually happens during an economic downturn which the Right have failed to stem.

    The cost of living crisis is going to do for the Conservatives but the likelihood, or inevitability according to the Telegraph, of recession will really screw them. Hence why I think a landslide defeat is on the cards.

    Appealing to culture wars in a time of economic crisis is a well-worn tactic. It might have worked in Germany in the 1930s but recent history suggests it won't now.

    The only caution I would make is that a RMT rail strike led by 3 Putin apologists paralysing the country would play into Boris's hands (or whoever is conservative leader) and at the same time Rishi comes to his senses and delivers a fair and sensible package of measures to address some of the worst effects of our current col crisis could well change the narrative
    Yes I totally agree with you about this.

    As a Left-leaner the thought of a national rail strike fills me with political dread, for the very reason you suggest.

    It could play right into Boris' hands.
    The problem is that the three RMT leaders are Putin apologists and easily identified as such therefore providing a gift to Boris and a nightmare for labour
    Is this true or are you merely repeating some tripe you read in the Daily Mail?
    It is widely reported that the leaders are Putin apologists and a strike led by them will be a gift to Boris

    https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/news/telegraph-links-rmt-union-to-putins-russia-following-tube-strike-314472/
    Being widely reported doesn't equal true!
    Though they may be some MPs who regret opening the doors to going back to see whatever everyone was saying about Russia and Ukraine in 2014.....
    Maybe disprove the allegations then
    Ah the old classic, have you stopped having your photograph taken with Russian backed militias?
    Have the dozens of Tory MPs who accepted donations from mysterious Russians apologised for their poor judgement? I wonder if the Daily Mail will run a smear story about that.
    It seems you cannot disprove the allegations against the 3 RMT leaders, and it is not just the daily mail reporting on the pro Putin loyalties of these leaders
    Are you happy for Johnson's cabinet to be stuffed full of MPs who have accepted donations from mysterious Russians?
    Boris and the cabinet by their actions against the war criminal Putin speaks for itself
    yes a bunch of crooked shysters, take anyone's money, greedy grubby wasters.
  • Options
    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,205
    Dear me - a Sunday morning and here we are with a personal spat taking up space.

    Very dreary.

    Off to write an article about the Boeing 737 Max. There is some Scottish country dancing later on. It's all happening here, you know!
This discussion has been closed.