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These are the numbers that should really panic Number 10 – politicalbetting.com

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  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Alistair said:

    I applaud your pedantically useless obsession with a completely randomly chosen time period. It adds to the tenor and tone of the debate.
    fail
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    edited May 2022
    IshmaelZ said:

    Wallace should shave off his remaining hair. Much edgier and he needs to differentiate himself from IDS
    Wallace needs a bit of a perm, then he is the manager from Dilbert.



    Wallace vs Hunt seems a sensible choice.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569
    ydoethur said:

    At the moment petrol round here is £7.70 per gallon. Diesel would be over £8 a gallon.
    When I started driving petrol was 3/9p a gallon
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    I've been struck at the response in a Yorkshire village I know. Bunting everywhere and the high street to be closed for a street party. Obvs everyone is up for a celebration etc, and HMQ is v popular personally but, all the same, any serious attempt to do away the monarchy would be highly divisive. No sensible politician will go anywhere near it. And the succession is secured by William and Kate, even if Charles isn't so popular. This is really a non-issue.
    I think Charles will be a much better monarch starting in his seventies (or eighties..) then he would have been if he'd become King in his forties or fifties.

    Republicans hoping that the popularity of the institution will inevitably take a serious dive under his leadership are likely to be disappointed.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    Bloody hell do I have to explain all my jokes I thought you lot were a sophisticated crowd.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,537
    Stocky said:

    What stupid-arse thing Johnson might do next.
    Have they done "must wear a shirt and tie to the theatre" yet?
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,849

    It is still about 1/3 of cost of petrol per mile even on a supercharger. Even less if charged on low rate economy 7 over night.
    Have got a Tesla Model Y on order which I have deferred back into Q3 whilst awaiting work stuff to become more clear. Moving car costs to pre tax from post tax makes a lot of sense. Only problem is that I am becoming more attached to my Outlander PHEV now that I've reserved its replacement.

    Fuel costs are only one part of the total cost - and however great pence per mile may look at the moment on leccy vs dino juice, that equation will keep changing.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    edited May 2022

    Gallons? What are they, forsooth?
    4.546 l to you. Good for mental arithmetic.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,537

    That would work. Nonetheless, the icing on the populist cake has to be hanging traitors and nonces.

    Now, what constitutes a traitor might be of debate. Fifty four letter writers might get a little nervous.
    Hulk ships for prisoners.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172

    Of course it is illogical. Oxbridge colleges are privately financed institutions that are absolute bastions of snobbery, class distinction, absurd anachronisms and extreme wealth. No socialist should cross their thresholds. But, yay, socialism always has its way of bending the rules. I would just call it hypocrisy though.
    It is true that e.g., Trinity College Cambridge has an endowment of 1.3 billion.

    But -- as you seem not to understand -- let me explain.

    If a bright sixth-former is admitted as an undergraduate, they don't get to spend the 1.3 billion.
  • PJHPJH Posts: 815

    Electric cars have never been more appealing.

    Last night the girlfriend asked me to take her somewhere really expensive for dinner.


    LOL. My plan is (was) to upgrade to fully electric when my current car (diesel Mondeo) is life expired.

    Unfortunately Sadiq Khan wants to bring this about 4 years early but I will need the full 5 years to save up for one. Not sure what I'm going to do in the interim as I buy cars new and run them until they fall apart and I don't have much spare money right now so couldn't even buy anything decent second hand. Uber and hiring as required, I guess.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    TOPPING said:

    Bloody hell do I have to explain all my jokes I thought you lot were a sophisticated crowd.

    Seems so.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,458
    OT Anyone still doubt Brexit is a disaster?

    (I ask before the words 'lunatic asylum' join the banned list)
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792

    Have got a Tesla Model Y on order which I have deferred back into Q3 whilst awaiting work stuff to become more clear. Moving car costs to pre tax from post tax makes a lot of sense. Only problem is that I am becoming more attached to my Outlander PHEV now that I've reserved its replacement.

    Fuel costs are only one part of the total cost - and however great pence per mile may look at the moment on leccy vs dino juice, that equation will keep changing.
    It was the BIK that sold it to me. That and the absurd acceleration! It is also very good to drive, and in spite of what the plonkerish CEO of BMW said, easily as good as any of the German cars I have had.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    IshmaelZ said:

    fail
    If I'd said 5 months would that have worked better for you?
  • PJHPJH Posts: 815
    ydoethur said:

    15 gallons? Doesn't sound unreasonable for a biggish road vehicle if the gauge was very low.
    Mondeo diesel. Tank was a bit emptier than usual but I've never paid above £80ish before.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,320
    MattW said:

    Turkey would probably not let them in under Montreux.
    ?
    Archer class Patrol Boats - S/Lt (Acting) Mordaunt has some experience with these from her time in the M*** Fleet so there's our CinC.

    Up the Rhine at Rotterdam, through the Rhine-Main-Danube Canal then down the Danube to Odessa for the liberation of Snake Island and the greater glory of Global Britain.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    edited May 2022
    On topic:

    This seems to be the basis of the ConHome poll:

    Edited :smile:



    https://twitter.com/987_charles/status/1531402146859581440

    Not clear whether it is statistically matched.

  • OllyTOllyT Posts: 5,035
    Stocky said:

    What's your gut feel on this? I'm about 75% lose, 25% win.
    Regardless of current polling in 2024 there will be people who will only come out and vote Tory if Johnson is the leader and there are people who will not vote Tory if Johnson is leader.

    Tory MPs will have to make a call on which is the larger group. If the letters go in I think your odds on a VONC are about right.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792

    It is true that e.g., Trinity College Cambridge has an endowment of 1.3 billion.

    But -- as you seem not to understand -- let me explain.

    If a bright sixth-former is admitted as an undergraduate, they don't get to spend the 1.3 billion.
    I think if I don't understand then you are completely fucked. The point I was making was about snobbery dim wit. The hypocrisy of those that oppose private education who then bang on about how they went to the most snobbish institution in the world. That obvious enough for you?
  • mr-claypolemr-claypole Posts: 218
    On Royalty my in laws worked for the British council (a fine but now neglected institution) and as a result had a few brushes with Royalty over the years. Some fairly awful experiences with Princess Margaret although such tales are legion.

    One that stands out was the Queen deploying extreme sarcasm when after walking into a room she found one member of the assembly leaning on a mantlepiece rather than standing up straight for her 'Oh dear have you hurt your back?'

    I don't think that sort of thing is going to be a runner in the 21st century (once QE2 has left us) so if they want to survive they will need to be thinking clearly about what Monarchy will look like. I think support for them is wide but shallow.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,673
    PJH said:

    LOL. My plan is (was) to upgrade to fully electric when my current car (diesel Mondeo) is life expired.

    Unfortunately Sadiq Khan wants to bring this about 4 years early but I will need the full 5 years to save up for one. Not sure what I'm going to do in the interim as I buy cars new and run them until they fall apart and I don't have much spare money right now so couldn't even buy anything decent second hand. Uber and hiring as required, I guess.

    We went from being a three car house to a two car house because in April 2020 my lease ran out and there was no point getting a new car then.

    Have you considered something like Cazoo?

    https://www.cazoo.co.uk/car-subscription/
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,537
    Oh!! This is massive n'est pas?



    Steven Swinford
    @Steven_Swinford
    ·
    1h
    There’s a myth doing rounds that once Brady has got letters to trigger a vote he goes back to each Tory MP to check with them

    This is untrue - when threshold is crossed vote it triggered

    It makes Chief Whip’s plan to submit 10 letters and withdraw them to save PM precarious
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255

    Apols if already posted, but this is a fascinating interview.

    https://unherd.com/2022/05/dominic-cummings-i-dont-like-parties/

    Dominic Cummings with Suzanne Moore.

    She asks all the questions you would want answering.

    (Precis: Basically, it's all Carrie's fault.)

    That's a cracking interview.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    On Royalty my in laws worked for the British council (a fine but now neglected institution) and as a result had a few brushes with Royalty over the years. Some fairly awful experiences with Princess Margaret although such tales are legion.

    One that stands out was the Queen deploying extreme sarcasm when after walking into a room she found one member of the assembly leaning on a mantlepiece rather than standing up straight for her 'Oh dear have you hurt your back?'

    I don't think that sort of thing is going to be a runner in the 21st century (once QE2 has left us) so if they want to survive they will need to be thinking clearly about what Monarchy will look like. I think support for them is wide but shallow.

    I'd be amazed if it was said sarcastically. Better story if it was, that said.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,155
    TOPPING said:

    Bloody hell do I have to explain all my jokes I thought you lot were a sophisticated crowd.

    Trigger’s broom.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,673
    MattW said:

    On topic:

    This seems to be the basis of the ConHome poll:

    Edited :smile:



    https://twitter.com/987_charles/status/1531402146859581440

    Not clear whether it is statistically matched.

    The margin of error on that poll/sample size is 3.35.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,849

    It was the BIK that sold it to me. That and the absurd acceleration! It is also very good to drive, and in spite of what the plonkerish CEO of BMW said, easily as good as any of the German cars I have had.
    I don't think people understand until they drive an electric car.

    There is no gearbox. You are always in the right gear with 100% of power available at all times instantly. You are driving a vehicle with a low centre of gravity which means it holds the roll better than a car without a battery pack in the floor.

    When wanging it down your favourite driving road you have this new trick of mid-corner regen. A fossil car might suffer from lift-off oversteer, whereas an EV mid-corner liftoff rebalances the car through regen and helps you corner harder.

    Much as I loved my Volvo S90, the return to both diseasal and a torque-converter gearbox was something I never really got used to. So when it went and got replaced by another PHEV the relief was instant.
  • PJHPJH Posts: 815

    We went from being a three car house to a two car house because in April 2020 my lease ran out and there was no point getting a new car then.

    Have you considered something like Cazoo?

    https://www.cazoo.co.uk/car-subscription/
    Thanks - yes it's worth thinking about something like that.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,673
    I am shocked. Shocked that DB have been accused of badness.

    Deutsche Bank AG and its asset management unit had their Frankfurt offices raided by police, adding to the legal headaches facing Germany’s largest lender.

    Law enforcement officials on Tuesday morning entered the twin towers where Germany’s largest lender is headquartered, as well as the nearby premises of DWS Group, according to a statement from the prosecutor that confirmed an earlier Bloomberg report. The search is related to accusations of greenwashing against the asset manager.


    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-05-31/deutsche-bank-s-dws-unit-raided-amid-allegations-of-greenwashing
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,802

    Bit harsh on Brixton and Streatham!
    St Denis is far worse than Brixton or streatham. There isn’t really an equivalent in London, not even Tottenham - it’s not just the deprivation, there is a seething hatred of the authorities and police, all of it mixed in a toxic, lawless brew of Islamism and radicalism
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792
    Alistair said:

    If I'd said 5 months would that have worked better for you?
    With reference to your earlier comment: My definition of "genuine rural people" is a simple one. It is defined for me as someone who either makes their living from the land (farming etc.) or is related in some way to those that do. A vegetarian social worker who moved to a pretty village near Tunbridge Wells would not fit my category.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    We went from being a three car house to a two car house because in April 2020 my lease ran out and there was no point getting a new car then.
    This of course is the interesting point. To old timers like me who are used to buying their cars outright it is a bonkers world of everyone "buying cars" on the never never. Explains a lot in terms of people driving around in Range Rover Evoques but it is unnerving.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,537
    Julian Jessop 🇬🇧 🇺🇦
    @julianHjessop
    ·
    1h
    Another reason why the UK economy should avoid a #recession...

    This morning's Bank of England money and credit data confirm that the household sector as a whole (not everyone, of course) still has plenty of excess savings accumulated during the pandemic 👇

    https://twitter.com/julianHjessop/status/1531571901251854336
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536

    I am shocked. Shocked that DB have been accused of badness.

    Deutsche Bank AG and its asset management unit had their Frankfurt offices raided by police, adding to the legal headaches facing Germany’s largest lender.

    Law enforcement officials on Tuesday morning entered the twin towers where Germany’s largest lender is headquartered, as well as the nearby premises of DWS Group, according to a statement from the prosecutor that confirmed an earlier Bloomberg report. The search is related to accusations of greenwashing against the asset manager.


    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-05-31/deutsche-bank-s-dws-unit-raided-amid-allegations-of-greenwashing

    When anyone on here mentions DB, I assume they are talking about the railways!
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Alistair said:

    If I'd said 5 months would that have worked better for you?
    look, just leave it. There is nothing particularly meritorious about being a countryman (I have always had some sympathy for Marx's remark about "the imbecility of rural life") but you aren't one. You are like someone claiming to be bilingual in French who can't immediately find the word for cheese in that language.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172

    I think if I don't understand then you are completely fucked. The point I was making was about snobbery dim wit. The hypocrisy of those that oppose private education who then bang on about how they went to the most snobbish institution in the world. That obvious enough for you?
    But, private education implies that you can only access it if you have money (scholarships excepted).

    There is no such requirement at Cambridge.

    Cambridge University -- like Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Princeton University, Yale University, Brown University-- operate needs-blind admission.

    If you pass the academic admission criteria, then there is no financial obstacle to attending.

    Most Universities with large endowments can afford to operate need-blind admission.

    That is exactly the opposite of private schools.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    I am shocked. Shocked that DB have been accused of badness.

    Deutsche Bank AG and its asset management unit had their Frankfurt offices raided by police, adding to the legal headaches facing Germany’s largest lender.

    Law enforcement officials on Tuesday morning entered the twin towers where Germany’s largest lender is headquartered, as well as the nearby premises of DWS Group, according to a statement from the prosecutor that confirmed an earlier Bloomberg report. The search is related to accusations of greenwashing against the asset manager.


    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-05-31/deutsche-bank-s-dws-unit-raided-amid-allegations-of-greenwashing

    Don't worry the German regulator will close ranks and miraculously those investigations will come to nothing while the investigators will find their careers cut short.
  • OllyTOllyT Posts: 5,035
    edited May 2022
    Sandpit said:

    AV has one round of voting, multiple rounds of counting, and the same electorate for each round. None of which are present in the Tory leadership election.
    The principle is the same, the process is different. The principle is that it is not acceptable to simply elect the person with the most votes in an election with 3 or more candidates. The process is different because it would be impractical to apply the Tory methodology to the whole electorate.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    On Royalty my in laws worked for the British council (a fine but now neglected institution) and as a result had a few brushes with Royalty over the years. Some fairly awful experiences with Princess Margaret although such tales are legion.

    One that stands out was the Queen deploying extreme sarcasm when after walking into a room she found one member of the assembly leaning on a mantlepiece rather than standing up straight for her 'Oh dear have you hurt your back?'

    I don't think that sort of thing is going to be a runner in the 21st century (once QE2 has left us) so if they want to survive they will need to be thinking clearly about what Monarchy will look like. I think support for them is wide but shallow.

    On the one hand theres no need to be lounging about when the Head of State comes in, on the other the extreme deference of the classes stuff has to go. Minor royals and 'aristocracy' can do one if they expect forelock tugging boot licking. Its getting closer to eradication but its still there in the 'tradesmen to use the rear entrance' stuff. Similarly the shade thrown at the better off just for being better off is unnecessary.
    Mutual respect and politeness are sufficient. Much easier in person than on a political discussion forum.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    edited May 2022
    Dura_Ace said:

    Archer class Patrol Boats - S/Lt (Acting) Mordaunt has some experience with these from her time in the M*** Fleet so there's our CinC.

    Up the Rhine at Rotterdam, through the Rhine-Main-Danube Canal then down the Danube to Odessa for the liberation of Snake Island and the greater glory of Global Britain.
    I'm not wholly sure that a 20m Archer Class patrol boat with one 20mm popgun counts as "the Navy".

    Never mind whether it will get under the 5.1m minimum bridge clearance on the Rhine-Main-Danube canal.


    Unless those sailors are Munchkins. Or Diddy Men.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,537
    This is a tad worrying, from Cummings, in the UnHerd interview....

    "And they actually could get somebody worse: Liz Truss would be even worse than Boris. She’s about as close to properly crackers as anybody I’ve met in Parliament."
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    I am shocked. Shocked that DB have been accused of badness.

    Deutsche Bank AG and its asset management unit had their Frankfurt offices raided by police, adding to the legal headaches facing Germany’s largest lender.

    Law enforcement officials on Tuesday morning entered the twin towers where Germany’s largest lender is headquartered, as well as the nearby premises of DWS Group, according to a statement from the prosecutor that confirmed an earlier Bloomberg report. The search is related to accusations of greenwashing against the asset manager.


    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-05-31/deutsche-bank-s-dws-unit-raided-amid-allegations-of-greenwashing

    Second raid on DB this year i believe?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    boulay said:

    Trigger’s broom.
    At least one of us was sophisticated enough to know it as Theseus' trireme paradox.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited May 2022
    TOPPING said:

    This of course is the interesting point. To old timers like me who are used to buying their cars outright it is a bonkers world of everyone "buying cars" on the never never. Explains a lot in terms of people driving around in Range Rover Evoques but it is unnerving.
    Rising interest rates will be yet another factor in the car industry recession. So many sales are personal leases and PCP plans, which all just got a lot more expensive. Much of the car industry profits were from financial services and inflated cash prices for new cars.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    tlg86 said:

    When anyone on here mentions DB, I assume they are talking about the railways!
    I did have a moment of confusion yesterday when I read the FSB was asking for a bailout.
    I know Sunak likes to spray the cash but.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792

    But, private education implies that you can only access it if you have money (scholarships excepted).

    There is no such requirement at Cambridge.

    Cambridge University -- like Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Princeton University, Yale University, Brown University-- operate needs-blind admission.

    If you pass the academic admission criteria, then there is no financial obstacle to attending.

    Most Universities with large endowments can afford to operate need-blind admission.

    That is exactly the opposite of private schools.
    In your desperation to defend Oxbridge (which I am not attacking) you seem to be completely missing the point. Oxbridge is VERY elitist. It is far more elitist and discriminatory than grammar schools. The hypocrisy that amuses me about well educated lefties is that they seethe about people boasting about money (which I have some sympathy with) but they are often the worst academic snobs. Snobbery about their academic capability (won in a lottery of genetics) is OK to them. Any other type of snobbery is to be looked down on, in a very snobby supercilious way. Oh, the irony!

  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    https://order-order.com/2022/05/31/john-mcdonnell-defends-comrade-sunaks-inflationary-cash-splashing-from-labour-criticism/

    If Tory MPs weren’t comfortable with Comrade Sunak’s £21 billion cost of living package announced last week, they should check out the bizarre through-the-looking-glass situation on Twitter this morning, as John McDonnell defends the Tory chancellor’s spending plans against attacks from Labour that it might cause greater inflation.

    Pretty much sums up where we're at, to be honest.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,673
    tlg86 said:

    https://order-order.com/2022/05/31/john-mcdonnell-defends-comrade-sunaks-inflationary-cash-splashing-from-labour-criticism/

    If Tory MPs weren’t comfortable with Comrade Sunak’s £21 billion cost of living package announced last week, they should check out the bizarre through-the-looking-glass situation on Twitter this morning, as John McDonnell defends the Tory chancellor’s spending plans against attacks from Labour that it might cause greater inflation.

    Pretty much sums up where we're at, to be honest.

    Yup, I said this is socialism.

    Mrs Thatcher is spinning in her grave.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,511

    Apols if already posted, but this is a fascinating interview.

    https://unherd.com/2022/05/dominic-cummings-i-dont-like-parties/

    Dominic Cummings with Suzanne Moore.

    She asks all the questions you would want answering.

    (Precis: Basically, it's all Carrie's fault.)

    Big Dom, never fails to come across as such a humble and likable guy.
  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375

    Julian Jessop 🇬🇧 🇺🇦
    @julianHjessop
    ·
    1h
    Another reason why the UK economy should avoid a #recession...

    This morning's Bank of England money and credit data confirm that the household sector as a whole (not everyone, of course) still has plenty of excess savings accumulated during the pandemic 👇

    https://twitter.com/julianHjessop/status/1531571901251854336

    It is reflected in the fact that discretionary spending is still happening to a very large extent.

    I keep hearing about a cost of living crisis, compare now with the early 80's, early 90s, 2008, those must have been a cost of living armageddon.

    Millions of ordinary people have plenty of money at the moment.
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 5,564
    Le Monde reports:

    Stade de France: new call for a strike on the RER B on the day of the France-Denmark football match
    "The success of the strike during the Champions League final gives a concrete balance of power to the trade unions", say the trade union organizations of the RATP.

    After a previous strike during the very chaotic Champions League final on Saturday May 28, RATP trade union organizations launched a new strike call on Tuesday May 31 on line B of the RER for Friday June 3. , France-Denmark football match day at the Stade de France. “The success of the strike during the Champions League final gives a concrete balance of power to the trade unions. The fiasco of May 28 generated worldwide media coverage and the management bears full responsibility for the problems of routing supporters to the Stade de France , ”say in their appeal CGT Métro-RER, UNSA and La Base.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,264

    The margin of error on that poll/sample size is 3.35.
    Voodoo poll, though (unless there is selection or correction for demographics). The ConHome panel might be nuttier/less nutty than the typical Con member.

    Then, of course, you have to also allow for the destabilising effect of former PB posters sent there in disgrace :wink:
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    Yup, I said this is socialism.

    Mrs Thatcher is spinning in her grave.
    My dad's reaction when he visited us yesterday on the windfall tax "supposedly the party of low taxes", he has voted Tory for 40+ years and was a member for 30+, Boris and Rishi are losing core voters.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,642
    MattW said:

    4.546 l to you. Good for mental arithmetic.
    Thanks Matt. Presumaly you pay for them in groats?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    Yup, I said this is socialism.

    Mrs Thatcher is spinning in her grave.
    We should wire her bones to the National Grid.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792
    dixiedean said:

    We should wire her bones to the National Grid.
    Oh that is good!
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,802
    I have moved into a fantastically dilapidated apartment in the Old Town of Tbilisi. There’s a tree growing through the roof of the neighbouring house

    And outside is this graffiti


  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,320



    There is no gearbox. You are always in the right gear with 100% of power available at all times instantly. .

    Power = Torque x RPM so, no, because the motor RPM is relatively low at low speeds.

    Teslas are torque limited from a standing start to avoid blowing out the diffs and half shafts. The torque starts to drop off at about 30% engine RPM (also peak power) so a Tesla does have a torque curve of sorts.

    You are getting a lot more bottom end torque and 'throttle' repsonse than an IC car - particularly a shitbox.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,673
    MaxPB said:

    My dad's reaction when he visited us yesterday on the windfall tax "supposedly the party of low taxes", he has voted Tory for 40+ years and was a member for 30+, Boris and Rishi are losing core voters.
    I said last week that I'm expecting rent controls next from this government.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    This is a tad worrying, from Cummings, in the UnHerd interview....

    "And they actually could get somebody worse: Liz Truss would be even worse than Boris. She’s about as close to properly crackers as anybody I’ve met in Parliament."

    My father and I had a discussion on the phone this morning, i brought up Boris and that i think its game over. He's a non voter/occasional Tory (voted Tory 2019 and 2010 but not bothered in 15 or 17 and hadn't voted prior since 92 he tells me, but he always votes for a councillor (of all stripes))
    Anyway, he is virulently anti Truss (as much as he now despises Johnson)
    FWIW, the Woolie's Dad tip is Ben Wallace 'he seems a good bloke'
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650

    Thanks Matt. Presumaly you pay for them in groats?
    I'd be inclined to go for goats. More interesting than groats.

    4.546 is a nice number to work with - x5 minus 10% as near as. Plus 1% on that if you are obsessing.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    I said last week that I'm expecting rent controls next from this government.
    I've honestly never known a Tory government to simply give up on supply side economics. It's as if Rishi has just thrown away all of the first year economics text books and decided that pumping up demand is going to solve the inflation problem. Completely mad.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792
    Dura_Ace said:

    Power = Torque x RPM so, no, because the motor RPM is relatively low at low speeds.

    Teslas are torque limited from a standing start to avoid blowing out the diffs and half shafts. The torque starts to drop off at about 30% engine RPM (also peak power) so a Tesla does have a torque curve of sorts.

    You are getting a lot more bottom end torque and 'throttle' repsonse than an IC car - particularly a shitbox.
    The bit that can be quite exciting is the amount of power and acceleration you still have when already at 70mph. I of course never take advantage of this optional power, and if I did, I would be on my way somewhere else, to my flat for example, but at all times I thought I was working.
  • MightyAlexMightyAlex Posts: 1,759
    edited May 2022

    But, private education implies that you can only access it if you have money (scholarships excepted).

    There is no such requirement at Cambridge.

    Cambridge University -- like Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Princeton University, Yale University, Brown University-- operate needs-blind admission.

    If you pass the academic admission criteria, then there is no financial obstacle to attending.

    Most Universities with large endowments can afford to operate need-blind admission.

    That is exactly the opposite of private schools.
    Having tangentially known a worker bee in one College's admissions office the criteria are not all academic and snobbery still lingers.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,511
    MaxPB said:

    My dad's reaction when he visited us yesterday on the windfall tax "supposedly the party of low taxes", he has voted Tory for 40+ years and was a member for 30+, Boris and Rishi are losing core voters.
    Ratnering their brand. Its the whole USP of the Tory Party.

    The thing is I am not sure there is a replacement that will be (able) to propose a lower tax approach anytime soon. Economic outlook is bad and so much money has been spent. We are all going to get hammered for the next 10 years whoever is in power.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,982

    This is a tad worrying, from Cummings, in the UnHerd interview....

    "And they actually could get somebody worse: Liz Truss would be even worse than Boris. She’s about as close to properly crackers as anybody I’ve met in Parliament."

    Apt. Cheese n Crackers.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    edited May 2022

    Big Dom, never fails to come across as such a humble and likable guy.
    I was particularly amused by his criticism that 'civil servants and politicians all did similar degrees at similar universities,' apparently without a trace of irony.

    But it is an interesting interview, if only for the insight into his own wounded vanity.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Thanks Matt. Presumaly you pay for them in groats?
    And then have the arguments over whether debased Henry VIII ones are acceptable or not.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,155
    dixiedean said:

    At least one of us was sophisticated enough to know it as Theseus' trireme paradox.
    Mange tout, mange tout, Dixie.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,511
    edited May 2022
    ydoethur said:

    I was particularly amused by his criticism that 'civil servants and politicians all did similar degrees at similar universities,' apparently without a trace of irony.

    But it is an interesting interview, if only for the insight into his own wounded vanity.
    As often with Cummings he makes many interesting and often spot on observations, but he can never resist from the well if only everybody listened to me routine and that his solution to most problems involves vague revolution and chaos...which might be fine for a tech start-up, where the only downside is blowing some VC money, but rather bigger costs to failure when you are talking about government policy.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792

    Apt. Cheese n Crackers.
    I'd love to carry out some psychometrics on Cummings. He would be such an interesting study. I suspect he suffers very badly from Psychological projection and a paranoia and narcissism that rivals his old boss. Sociopathy would definitely be in there.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,511
    edited May 2022
    Trans activist who heckled Nadhim Zahawi off Warwick University campus is the son of Ed Balls and Labour Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper

    In video posted by the Warwick Labour society, Joel Cooper interrupts the Education Secretary's Q&A to heckle him over his stance on trans rights. He then sits down after his monologue to cheers from fellow Labour activists

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10870697/Trans-activist-heckled-Nadhim-Zahawi-Warwick-University-campus-son-Yvette-Cooper.html

    I believe there was a bit of a dust up yesterday on here with at the time unsupported claims there was a Labour angle involved in this story.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    MaxPB said:

    I've honestly never known a Tory government to simply give up on supply side economics. It's as if Rishi has just thrown away all of the first year economics text books and decided that pumping up demand is going to solve the inflation problem. Completely mad.
    Hes given labour a double digit lead as party of low tax. Quite insane.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    My father and I had a discussion on the phone this morning, i brought up Boris and that i think its game over. He's a non voter/occasional Tory (voted Tory 2019 and 2010 but not bothered in 15 or 17 and hadn't voted prior since 92 he tells me, but he always votes for a councillor (of all stripes))
    Anyway, he is virulently anti Truss (as much as he now despises Johnson)
    FWIW, the Woolie's Dad tip is Ben Wallace 'he seems a good bloke'
    Thing about Wallace is. He may be good. He may not. The only job he's had is Defence. It's ridiculously low profile. Then there's a War. He can't really lose there. He hasn't had a difficult gig in public.
    Hie expenses in 2008 may be an issue too.
    Fourth highest trougher in an ultra-competitive field.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546

    Trans activist who heckled Nadhim Zahawi off Warwick University campus is the son of Ed Balls and Labour Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper

    In video posted by the Warwick Labour society, Joel Cooper interrupts the Education Secretary's Q&A to heckle him over his stance on trans rights. He then sits down after his monologue to cheers from fellow Labour activists

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10870697/Trans-activist-heckled-Nadhim-Zahawi-Warwick-University-campus-son-Yvette-Cooper.html

    I believe there was a bit of a dust up yesterday on here with at the time unsupported claims there was a Labour angle involved in this story.

    Joel Cooper? A trans activist who dropped Balls? That is brilliant.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792
    dixiedean said:

    Thing about Wallace is. He may be good. He may not. The only job he's had is Defence. It's ridiculously low profile. Then there's a War. He can't really lose there. He hasn't had a difficult gig in public.
    Hie expenses in 2008 may be an issue too.
    Fourth highest trougher in an ultra-competitive field.
    The thing about Wallace is he is not Big Dog, and I am not referring to Gromit.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    MaxPB said:

    I've honestly never known a Tory government to simply give up on supply side economics. It's as if Rishi has just thrown away all of the first year economics text books and decided that pumping up demand is going to solve the inflation problem. Completely mad.
    Make a start on un-printing that £600bn. Conduct a full spending review. Look at government-held assets for disposal. Start a debate on what exactly government should be providing in the future. Invest in automation technology for government services.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,511
    The BBC changed the testimony of a rape victim after a debate over the pronouns of her transgender attacker, The Times has learnt.

    The woman referred to her alleged rapist as “him” but insiders said that her words were changed to avoid “misgendering” the abuser in an article on the corporation’s website.

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/bbc-altered-gender-in-trans-rape-claim-3cqj73tq5
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546

    The thing about Wallace is he is not Big Dog, and I am not referring to Gromit.
    So you're saying he's not an Aardman?
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,123
    Now even the ERG aren't brexity enough! https://twitter.com/bea_johanssen/status/1531600558251028481
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    ydoethur said:

    So you're saying he's not an Aardman?
    I think we should Park this conversation.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792
    ydoethur said:

    So you're saying he's not an Aardman?
    Very good. Had to look that one up.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,233
    Who runs the airports ?
    Seem to be thick as mince.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    I suppose though @Nigel_Foremain I would have been better served with the punch line from the Now Show spoof ad in 2020:

    'But what he is, what he has always been, and what he will be as your next President, is Not Donald Trump. And that is what makes Joe Biden Acceptable, Under the Circumstances.'
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Trans activist who heckled Nadhim Zahawi off Warwick University campus is the son of Ed Balls and Labour Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper

    In video posted by the Warwick Labour society, Joel Cooper interrupts the Education Secretary's Q&A to heckle him over his stance on trans rights. He then sits down after his monologue to cheers from fellow Labour activists

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10870697/Trans-activist-heckled-Nadhim-Zahawi-Warwick-University-campus-son-Yvette-Cooper.html

    I believe there was a bit of a dust up yesterday on here with at the time unsupported claims there was a Labour angle involved in this story.

    Ah yes, more Tory bigots stoking a culture war.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    dixiedean said:

    I think we should Park this conversation.
    Hey, don't try to Nick my puns.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792
    dixiedean said:

    I think we should Park this conversation.
    Yea, as we are on PB we might hear from SeanTheSheep.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,683

    I don't think people understand until they drive an electric car.

    There is no gearbox. You are always in the right gear with 100% of power available at all times instantly. You are driving a vehicle with a low centre of gravity which means it holds the roll better than a car without a battery pack in the floor.

    When wanging it down your favourite driving road you have this new trick of mid-corner regen. A fossil car might suffer from lift-off oversteer, whereas an EV mid-corner liftoff rebalances the car through regen and helps you corner harder.

    Much as I loved my Volvo S90, the return to both diseasal and a torque-converter gearbox was something I never really got used to. So when it went and got replaced by another PHEV the relief was instant.
    Diesel or electric?

    Deltic or Class 86?

    Only one winner there!
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,802
    As the Labour lead has increased since Rishi Sunak gave everyone £9,000, a bag of second hand salt, and a tiny inflatable plastic wildebeest, one has to wonder what would have happened if he had NOT been so generous. Would the Labour lead be 20 points plus? Or have the voters just banked the money and decided, Well, the Tories are mad spaffing socialists, I might as well support Labour - ie, would the Tories be doing better if they were meaner and more Tory?

    It is certainly possible
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,123
    Former Downing Street aide willing to share messages from PM's wife about alleged lockdown gathering in flat with Privileges Committee

    Carrie Johnson said to texted that 'the gay boys' were with her in the flat

    At that point indoor gatherings were banned https://twitter.com/Steven_Swinford/status/1531603624840798208/photo/1
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,709
    MattW said:

    Why is providing high quality housing services not a proper job?

    Houses don't maintain or invest in themselves. Traditionally 15-20% or so of the income goes on maintenance and investment, often done in advance during a full refurbishment with a 10 year+ return period.
    So they’re doing 15-20% of a proper job?

  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited May 2022
    dixiedean said:

    Thing about Wallace is. He may be good. He may not. The only job he's had is Defence. It's ridiculously low profile. Then there's a War. He can't really lose there. He hasn't had a difficult gig in public.
    Hie expenses in 2008 may be an issue too.
    Fourth highest trougher in an ultra-competitive field.
    He was a campaigner for expenses transparency though and he wasn't accused of duck house silliness, just a large bill.
    Yeah, hed be a risk but, on quick reflection after Dads comments, i think he might be an option as relatively unknown and thus clearer of taint. His military service wont hurt him.
    If the Tories want to play safe, stop the LD advance as much as possible, give up some red wall ground (but maybe retain the likes of Bishop Auckland etc) and restrict 2024 to 'at worst' opposition against a minority labour govt they'll go for Hunt
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    Scott_xP said:

    Former Downing Street aide willing to share messages from PM's wife about alleged lockdown gathering in flat with Privileges Committee

    Carrie Johnson said to texted that 'the gay boys' were with her in the flat

    At that point indoor gatherings were banned https://twitter.com/Steven_Swinford/status/1531603624840798208/photo/1

    So is she going to be done for lockdown breaking or homophobia?*

    *Bizarrely, that became 'no posho is.'
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,155
    Some SNP types are blaming Unionists for the failure of the census. Could get quite interesting if Sturgeon takes that line too.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792
    Leon said:

    As the Labour lead has increased since Rishi Sunak gave everyone £9,000, a bag of second hand salt, and a tiny inflatable plastic wildebeest, one has to wonder what would have happened if he had NOT been so generous. Would the Labour lead be 20 points plus? Or have the voters just banked the money and decided, Well, the Tories are mad spaffing socialists, I might as well support Labour - ie, would the Tories be doing better if they were meaner and more Tory?

    It is certainly possible

    IMO it isn't a policy thing; it is a leadership thing. Sorry to do a big "toldyaso" (well actually not that sorry), but anyone with the tiniest understanding of leadership understood that Boris Johnson's "style" would catch up with him , and that gradually the electorate, like a slow moving disinterested supertanker, would eventually realise they either have to drop the partying Captain over the side or crash on the rocks.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    edited May 2022

    I said last week that I'm expecting rent controls next from this government.
    An entirely empty proposal. I hope they are not *that* stupid. Though it is quite possible.

    Every time I look at the data PRS rents are increasing far more slowly than inflation.

    AIUI Scotland is currently p*ssing about with ideas for rent control at max CPI + 1%, which will mean setting a norm that will be followed and rents will rise faster under the authority of Government guidance.

    Of course such a proposal will not be applied to the Social Rented sector, where rents *do* increase far faster than inflation.

    One problem is that the people constantly maundering on about it in the media usually have sh*t where their brains used to be.

    Here, for example, is a normal quality wazzock-brained piece in the Guardian making claims about rental levels based on *advertised* rates for *new* tenancies on Rightmove. Never mind that these may not be achieved, or that normal practice is to keep rental increases minimal or zero during a tenancy because a change of tenant is damned expensive - costs 3-12 months rent, and good tenants are like gold.
    https://www.theguardian.com/money/2022/jan/27/private-rents-in-britain-rise-at-fastest-rate-on-record

    The rental regulation bureaucracy does need culling though - it costs hundreds of millions a year in overheads, which ultimately are paid for by tenants.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,357
    Meanwhile, this is interesting, even if one doesn't believe a single word of it.

    https://unherd.com/2022/05/dominic-cummings-i-dont-like-parties/
  • MISTYMISTY Posts: 1,594
    Leon said:

    As the Labour lead has increased since Rishi Sunak gave everyone £9,000, a bag of second hand salt, and a tiny inflatable plastic wildebeest, one has to wonder what would have happened if he had NOT been so generous. Would the Labour lead be 20 points plus? Or have the voters just banked the money and decided, Well, the Tories are mad spaffing socialists, I might as well support Labour - ie, would the Tories be doing better if they were meaner and more Tory?

    It is certainly possible

    When in power, labour can be relied on to be labour.

    The tories, by their actions over the last two and half years, cannot be relied to on be anything. From the moment they adopted the Chinese Communist Party policy of lockdown, on top of the Maoist arbitrary hard target of Net Zero by 2050 At All Costs, they were finished.

    And I think they are finished. Not just now, and not just for a generation. For ever.

    How could they ever sell themselves to the electorate as anything again? It would be like Hal the computer in A Space Odyssey telling Dave he was alright now.

    I'm feeling much better now voters. I favour low taxation. I favour personal responsibility. I want a small state and fiscal discipline. I want law and order. Mr sThatcher is my heroine. All as the voters shut the whole thing down.

    A new party/brand on the right will have to replace them.

This discussion has been closed.