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Savanta poll: By 58% to 35% the rail strikes are “justified” – politicalbetting.com

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  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    Carnyx said:

    If you do plan to do that - look at not having the money at all yourself but letting it go even more directly. Deeds of variation, and get the lawyer to do them for safety. Just in case you follow them within 7 years. (Not cheerful, I know, but ...).
    Ah, deeds of variation, another Ed Miliband error. :)
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    tlg86 said:

    Ah, deeds of variation, another Ed Miliband error. :)
    Don't know about that?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,782
    edited June 2022

    Then tough to anyone who "needs" an inheritance if they don't get it then either.

    If people who aren't able to work can't get a deposit, I fail to see why an inheritance should be protected either.
    So on your definition then most of the population of London and the Home counties will have to move north then to buy if you refuse to protect inheritances. Thus concreting all over your Northern countryside with the extra properties that need to be built while in the meantime your Northern property prices surge at the same time.

    London meanwhile becomes a city just for a few very rich high earning home owners with the vast majority renting and even more based on immigration from abroad than now!
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    HYUFD said:

    I assume then you will be voting Tory next time in gratitude for Boris capping residential and social care costs paid out of estates for those who do need care at £86,000
    So more money going out of the public pocket to those who have money already.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,462
    HYUFD said:

    The average property in the South East is now over £400k and in London over £600k, there is plenty to inherit
    Head. Wall. Bang. Read the bloody posts. Firstly some will be in the subset you define (read the posts). Some will inherit a lot, but not need it at 60+ (read the posts). Some will inherit little or nothing (read the posts).

    You have put everyone in the country in one set/basket that most of us aren't in.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,353
    Roger said:

    A £50 win win bet.

    2/1 on the Tories to win Tiverton.

    If the Tories win you walk away with £100. Enough to drown your sorrows

    If the Tories lose its a nail in Johnson's coffin. With such good news you wouldn't even notice the £50

    Likewise, although I am on higher odds, but only beer money.

    Gonna be fascinating on Friday morning (assume it is overnight count??).
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,782
    edited June 2022
    kjh said:

    Head. Wall. Bang. Read the bloody posts. Firstly some will be in the subset you define (read the posts). Some will inherit a lot, but not need it at 60+ (read the posts). Some will inherit little or nothing (read the posts).

    You have put everyone in the country in one set/basket that most of us aren't in.
    Most of London and the Home counties ARE in that subset that is the whole point. Unless on a high income they cannot get a deposit without an inheritance.

    You are a Liberal, why should we Tories care what you think about inheritances anyway? Support for inheritance is one of the core principles of our party and voters not yours!
  • HYUFD said:

    So on your definition then most of the population of London and the Home counties will have to move north then to buy if you refuse to protect inheritances. Thus concreting all over your Northern countryside with the extra properties that need to be built while in the meantime your Northern property prices surge at the same time.

    London meanwhile becomes a city just for a few very rich high earning home owners with the vast majority renting and even more based on immigration from abroad than now!
    No. If inheritances aren't protected, then income becomes the way people can get a home of their own instead, which is what it should be.

    People should be able to buy their own homes, from their own work. If they can't, that's fucked up and needs fixing. There is absolutely no justification for ever needing an inheritance and if you do and don't get one, then "tough".
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    Carnyx said:

    Don't know about that?
    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/feb/12/did-ed-miliband-avoid-inheritance-tax-parents-home-deed-of-variation

    Long story short, I think, they acted to avoid tax but in the end it didn't make any difference as the rules were changed.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,782

    Absolutely no personal bitterness/envy, completely the opposite, I consider myself most fortunate.

    I am in the incredibly fortunate position that I have reached the age of 40 myself while still having not only my parents but almost all of my grandparents still alive. I only went to my first funeral for my nan a few months ago after she passed away. My wife has lost all of her grandparents, most of them when she was a teenager before I met her - and she commented mournfully the other day that she knew my nan while we were together for longer than she knew her own nan. I am grateful that my nan and my other grandparents lived long enough to see my own children and get to know them themselves, I feel sorry for my wife that none of her grandparents lives long enough to see her get married or have children.

    I am incredibly grateful that I have had a lifetime of knowing my parents and grandparents. I feel sorry for those that don't. I have never received, nor wanted, a penny of inheritance. All I have wanted is love and happiness for my family, that is what family is for.

    I do not desire to leave any inheritance for my children. I hope to ideally live to see my children grow up, be happy, get their own jobs, get married and walk them down the aisle, for them to have children and maybe even live long enough to see them have grandchildren of their own. I wish that they will be happy and provided for, with a home of their own, while I am still alive.

    I don't intend to see my children want, to only be supported after I am gone and they can have my leftovers.
    Yes but you are a libertarian, pro Brexit liberal NOT a Tory
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,071
    HYUFD said:

    I assume then you will be voting Tory next time in gratitude for Boris capping residential and social care costs for those who do need care at £86,000
    You didn't understand a word I wrote.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    HYUFD said:

    Yes but you are a libertarian, pro Brexit liberal NOT a Tory
    It’s a big tent, there’s room for lots of us.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,353
    Is that the next leader of the Opposition sat on Starmer's left? :smile:
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    tlg86 said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/feb/12/did-ed-miliband-avoid-inheritance-tax-parents-home-deed-of-variation

    Long story short, I think, they acted to avoid tax but in the end it didn't make any difference as the rules were changed.
    Ah, thanks. I'd got stuck on trying to remember what Mr M had done at the Treasury in the way of legislation on ds of v!
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,764
    I do enjoy watching Lindsay Hoyle in action. A refreshing change vs the self-inflating buffoonery of his predecessor and the "is he asleep" actions of the one before.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,343
    edited June 2022
    PJH said:

    Yes, I saw him in March and he was still responding to treatment quite well. in the last month or so he went downhill quickly.
    I'm sorry to hear you sad news.
    Much sympathy.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,456
    Professor Tim Spector, of Zoe fame, sounds like a barrel of laughs, must be good at parties



    “Face masks and ventilation continue to provide important additional layers of protection – especially in crowded settings. “I still wear a mask, but not a cheap mask – I wear a proper FFP2 or 3 mask,” said Spector. “These new variants are still very much airborne and you need an even smaller amount to get infected, so I think a mask is definitely a good idea when as many as one in 30 people have it again.””

    He’s still living in a diving helmet

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jun/22/uk-worried-rising-covid-infections?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Absolutely no personal bitterness/envy, completely the opposite, I consider myself most fortunate.

    I am in the incredibly fortunate position that I have reached the age of 40 myself while still having not only my parents but almost all of my grandparents still alive. I only went to my first funeral for my nan a few months ago after she passed away. My wife has lost all of her grandparents, most of them when she was a teenager before I met her - and she commented mournfully the other day that she knew my nan while we were together for longer than she knew her own nan. I am grateful that my nan and my other grandparents lived long enough to see my own children and get to know them themselves, I feel sorry for my wife that none of her grandparents lives long enough to see her get married or have children.

    I am incredibly grateful that I have had a lifetime of knowing my parents and grandparents. I feel sorry for those that don't. I have never received, nor wanted, a penny of inheritance. All I have wanted is love and happiness for my family, that is what family is for.

    I do not desire to leave any inheritance for my children. I hope to ideally live to see my children grow up, be happy, get their own jobs, get married and walk them down the aisle, for them to have children and maybe even live long enough to see them have grandchildren of their own. I wish that they will be happy and provided for, with a home of their own, while I am still alive.

    I don't intend to see my children want, to only be supported after I am gone and they can have my leftovers.
    You are indeed fortunate to have both parents alive at your age. I was not so fortunate. Nonetheless I do detect a little hint of envy each time inheritance or property ownership is discussed. My view is that life offers us a bit of a lottery on many things. Most people who post on here have intelligence. That is one of the best inheritances and privileges you can get. There are some that don't like the idea that some also get the privilege of inherited money. My view is that if I earned it, or even got it by good fortune (won lottery or bought a house in a "lucky" area) then it should be my right to pass that to my kids for their benefit.

    Where I might agree with you is that I do not feel it is right to expect tax payers to foot the bill for my old age care so that I can pass on a £1M+ house to my kids. that is a bit more troubling.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,764
    Starmer didn't mention that Boris took a lot of money from a Russian donor at that fundraiser...
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,782

    You are indeed fortunate to have both parents alive at your age. I was not so fortunate. Nonetheless I do detect a little hint of envy each time inheritance or property ownership is discussed. My view is that life offers us a bit of a lottery on many things. Most people who post on here have intelligence. That is one of the best inheritances and privileges you can get. There are some that don't like the idea that some also get the privilege of inherited money. My view is that if I earned it, or even got it by good fortune (won lottery or bought a house in a "lucky" area) then it should be my right to pass that to my kids for their benefit.

    Where I might agree with you is that I do not feel it is right to expect tax payers to foot the bill for my old age care so that I can pass on a £1M+ house to my kids. that is a bit more troubling.
    You can't over £1 million as inheritance tax is still owed on it
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,071
    edited June 2022

    Starmer didn't mention that Boris took a lot of money from a Russian donor at that fundraiser...

    Johnson is smashing Starmer out of the park.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,782
    Sandpit said:

    It’s a big tent, there’s room for lots of us.
    Not those who want to tax inheritance out of existence, they are not Tories and should go off to Labour or the LDs where they belong
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    HYUFD said:

    You can't over £1 million as inheritance tax is still owed on it
    You win a pedantry award, but you know the point I was making. There are many that think they have the right to expect the state to pay for their care so they can cling on to a house to give to their kids. I don't agree that that is right
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,227
    Boris is bad. But Starmer is really poor as well.

    If he's the top lawyer he's supposed to be, the law must be in a really poor state.

    (runs for cover...)
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,074
    edited June 2022
    Carnyx said:

    Tell us about the lunch afterwards ...
    Going to Maison Bleue in Victoria Street. Should be excellent.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,782

    No. If inheritances aren't protected, then income becomes the way people can get a home of their own instead, which is what it should be.

    People should be able to buy their own homes, from their own work. If they can't, that's fucked up and needs fixing. There is absolutely no justification for ever needing an inheritance and if you do and don't get one, then "tough".
    No it does not.

    London is a global city now and will always thus have expensive properties and owning a home will always be out of reach of the average Londoner without Inheritances unless you slash immigration to near zero
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Leon said:

    Professor Tim Spector, of Zoe fame, sounds like a barrel of laughs, must be good at parties



    “Face masks and ventilation continue to provide important additional layers of protection – especially in crowded settings. “I still wear a mask, but not a cheap mask – I wear a proper FFP2 or 3 mask,” said Spector. “These new variants are still very much airborne and you need an even smaller amount to get infected, so I think a mask is definitely a good idea when as many as one in 30 people have it again.””

    He’s still living in a diving helmet

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jun/22/uk-worried-rising-covid-infections?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

    Was it a relative or disciple of his on that bus with you perhaps?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    HYUFD said:

    You can't over £1 million as inheritance tax is still owed on it
    Missing the point. IHT is payable only on the bit above £1m and only 40% at that - and that assumes there are no donations to your political party or the local doggies' home. So NF only has to leave sufficient to cover the rest, or have his bairns pay it themselves.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,432
    edited June 2022
    Pulpstar said:

    Inheritances in your 60s are utterly pointless. I'd challenge that. They're less useful than at say 30 but you'd be able to help your own kids or grandkids out.
    The degree of utility is going to depend on the size of inheritance and your, your kids and grandkids circs.
    Triple lock extra benefit is a grand total over a decade of about £12-14 per week, which given where pensions started, and where they still are, seems necessary and not at all overdone.

    I'd disagree about inheritances in your 60s.

    You either need it to give a comfortable retirement, or you have that so you can usefully give it away.

    The expressed hatred for "pensioners who voted for Thatcher" or "boomers" is weird.

    Thatcher's highest share of the vote was 43.9%.

    Presumably people who say such things are happy being demonised as "the generation that voted for Boris Johnson".
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,644
    Sandpit said:

    It’s a big tent, there’s room for lots of us.
    Must be a circus tent, as there is a clown trying to entertain the crowd.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,764

    Johnson is smashing Starmer out of the park.
    Its strangely subdued from both. I think there is a trail of mines being laid for next week. Once again the Boris response to the genuine woes people are facing is to say how marvellous everything is.

    As that just isn't the real world I don't see how boosterism helps the Tories now.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    DavidL said:

    Going to Maison Bleu in Victoria Street. Should be excellent.
    Ooh, yes! Long time since I have been.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,292
    edited June 2022

    You are indeed fortunate to have both parents alive at your age. I was not so fortunate. Nonetheless I do detect a little hint of envy each time inheritance or property ownership is discussed. My view is that life offers us a bit of a lottery on many things. Most people who post on here have intelligence. That is one of the best inheritances and privileges you can get. There are some that don't like the idea that some also get the privilege of inherited money. My view is that if I earned it, or even got it by good fortune (won lottery or bought a house in a "lucky" area) then it should be my right to pass that to my kids for their benefit.

    Where I might agree with you is that I do not feel it is right to expect tax payers to foot the bill for my old age care so that I can pass on a £1M+ house to my kids. that is a bit more troubling.
    I have absolutely no qualms with you passing on money to your kids, whatever you want to do with your money, is your choice, good for you. And we are agreed on the care element.

    However you joined the conversation halfway through, I suggest you go back and read the chain of comments that led to that response - HYUFD was suggest an inheritance should be necessary to get a home of your own, an inheritance should only ever be something nice to have, rather than necessary to have.

    It should be preferable that people are able to get a home and a deposit from their own savings, from their own job, ideally if they are fortunate enough while their loved ones are still alive and can see them get it too, rather than saying "wait for an inheritance and then you might get a deposit". Can we agree on that point?
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,764
    Boris has just said that he is cutting the cost of transport for working people.

    Dafuq?
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,980

    Is that the next leader of the Opposition sat on Starmer's left? :smile:

    Has Labour switched its seating arrangements round this week, and if so, why?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,071

    Its strangely subdued from both. I think there is a trail of mines being laid for next week. Once again the Boris response to the genuine woes people are facing is to say how marvellous everything is.

    As that just isn't the real world I don't see how boosterism helps the Tories now.
    Labour should be lobbying Durham Constabulary to hurry up an issue that FPN.
  • HYUFD said:

    No it does not.

    London is a global city now and will always thus have expensive properties and owning a home will always be out of reach of the average Londoner without Inheritances unless you slash immigration to near zero
    No it absolutely won't be.

    People buy their own homes in global cities from their own incomes all over the world. Global cities come with global pay rates.

    Don't tax people too much, and people can keep enough of their income that they can pay for their own deposit rather than waiting for the lottery of somebody dying.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,462
    HYUFD said:

    Most of London and the Home counties ARE in that subset that is the whole point. Unless on a high income they cannot get a deposit without an inheritance.

    You are a Liberal, why should we Tories care what you think about inheritances anyway? Support for inheritance is one of the core principles of our party and voters not yours!
    Ok you have just made that up but lets look at the sets you were looking at.

    Firstly you were looking at everyone in the UK. Now you are just down to London and the South East.

    There go those jet powered goal posts of yours again.

    Then you end with 'I am a liberal so why should you consider what I think'. I haven't actually said what I think at all I am just pointing out what you are saying is factual nonsense so actually it doesn't matter whether what my views are at all. What I am is of no relevance to this discussion

    Now you have again (because you either don't read or don't understand the posts) assumed the subset I was talking about was the one you just invented for £400K - £600K homes. Something I didn't ever mention.

    Of course there will be people in that subset (again something I have numerous times), but (and I am tired of doing this) there will be people who won't inherit much, there will be people who inherit lots who don't need to inherit (a lot in their 60s when they don't need it), there will be those whose potential inheritance is taken up with care costs, etc, etc.

    Try responding to the points made and not what you think I am saying (challenging I know).
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,343

    Boris has just said that he is cutting the cost of transport for working people.

    Dafuq?

    You can't pay for what's not there ?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,071
    It wasn't me, was it?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,432

    Sad news :(
    Sorry to hear that @PJH .
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,432

    Has Labour switched its seating arrangements round this week, and if so, why?
    UVDL coming to visit?
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Len McCluskey
    @LenMcCluskey
    In the Mirror
    @REWearmouth
    gets it wrong again, quoting a "Labour source" saying I "nearly bankrupted Unite."

    Unite had £50m when I became General Secretary in 2011; it now has £500m—the wealthiest UK union, giving our members real clout.

    Good journalists check the facts.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,456
    edited June 2022

    Was it a relative or disciple of his on that bus with you perhaps?
    The woman in the plastic bag from Preveza? Lol. Mebbes

    I always somehow remember Prof Spector as being a voice of sanity. Yet he is STILL wearing a mask, and not just any mask - a proper FFP2 or FFP3!! - all the time, it seems.

    I get that he really wants to avoid Covid A LOT but has he not got the brain space to work out that many other people have balanced the risks, realised that Covid is here to stay, and opted for a modest dash of extra danger, in return for a real human life of smiles and laughter and unmasked faces?

    We cannot wear masks for the rest of time. Down with the Mask Taliban
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,671
    Nigelb said:

    You can't pay for what's not there ?
    Saves lots of money to provoke a strike.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,782
    edited June 2022
    Carnyx said:

    Missing the point. IHT is payable only on the bit above £1m and only 40% at that - and that assumes there are no donations to your political party or the local doggies' home. So NF only has to leave sufficient to cover the rest, or have his bairns pay it themselves.
    Well so what, they still have to pay something and if it benefits those with estates over £1 million too those estates under £1 million getting taken out of IHT again so what? Those with estates over £1 million are part of the Tory core vote and part of who the Tories were elected to deliver for when Osborne raised the IHT threshold. Which was also one of the most popular Tory policies this century
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,343
    Nigelb said:

    A Kamikaze drone struck the Novoshakhtinsk oil refinery, in #Rostov Oblast, Russia; causing a large fire.

    Although the precise type is unclear, it appears to be based on the UA PD-1 or PD-2 series of reconnaissance UAVs. The area is around 150km from the front line.

    https://twitter.com/UAWeapons/status/1539520241906159616

    Translation of the commentary, anyone ?

    Russian 1: “A drone. LOL.”
    Russian 2: “Is it Ukrainian?”
    Russian 1: “Of course not!”
    …💥

    https://twitter.com/ChristopherJM/status/1539547331187572736
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,462

    I have absolutely no qualms with you passing on money to your kids, whatever you want to do with your money, is your choice, good for you. And we are agreed on the care element.

    However you joined the conversation halfway through, I suggest you go back and read the chain of comments that led to that response - HYUFD was suggest an inheritance should be necessary to get a home of your own, an inheritance should only ever be something nice to have, rather than necessary to have.

    It should be preferable that people are able to get a home and a deposit from their own savings, from their own job, ideally if they are fortunate enough while their loved ones are still alive and can see them get it too, rather than saying "wait for an inheritance and then you might get a deposit". Can we agree on that point?
    Yes, yes, yes. There is nothing wrong with inheritance, but nobody should be dependent upon it.
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 5,559
    edited June 2022
    Just catching up on the latest on M5S travails in Italy. A blazing row between Conte (ex-PM, current party leader, against arming Ukraine) and Di Maio (ex party leader, current foreign minister, and by now firmly pro-EU, NATO and government armament line) has raged since poor local election results and last night Di Maio quit the party. It's likely to be a more substantial split than the average and frequent calvings of Italian politics, not least because a lot of senior figures, Di Maio.included, were facing the Logan's run of M5S's limit of serving 2 political terms.

    As I've said before, perhaps the central, yet under discussed, question underpinning the next Italian election is M5S's willingness and organisational ability to commit fully to the centre left in a national election and that discussion is again notable by its low profile in this split. They helped the left mayoral tickets greatly in locals in the many places they participated, whilst themselves suffering badly in the proportional party vote.

    It's perfectly likely both factions will end up on the left ticket, but whenever the election looms the finalisation, or not, of that is liable to be a bit chaotic.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,456

    No it absolutely won't be.

    People buy their own homes in global cities from their own incomes all over the world. Global cities come with global pay rates.

    Don't tax people too much, and people can keep enough of their income that they can pay for their own deposit rather than waiting for the lottery of somebody dying.
    That really is not true. Property prices in NYC, Paris, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Sydney are often as bad as London if not worse

    Massively attractive global cities are hugely expensive. Is all
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,071
    The quality of sycophantic back bench Tory MP questions really is dire.

    Then, as if by magic, a backbench Labour MP tees Johnson up perfectly.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,169
    Leon said:

    The woman in the plastic bag from Preveza? Lol. Mebbes

    I always somehow remember Prof Spector as being a voice of sanity. Yet he is STILL wearing a mask, and not just any mask - a proper FFP2 or FFP3!! - all the time, it seems.

    I get that he really wants to avoid Covid A LOT but has he not got the brain space to work out that many other people have balanced the risks, realised that Covid is here to stay, and opted for a modest dash of extra danger, in return for a real human life of smiles and laughter and unmasked faces?

    We cannot wear masks for the rest of time. Down with the Mask Taliban
    If you are going to wear a mask, and you can afford it, of course you should choose a proper one. Wearing a less effective one is the worst option of all.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,782
    edited June 2022

    No it absolutely won't be.

    People buy their own homes in global cities from their own incomes all over the world. Global cities come with global pay rates.

    Don't tax people too much, and people can keep enough of their income that they can pay for their own deposit rather than waiting for the lottery of somebody dying.
    The majority of New York city and Paris rent now too just like in London actually and even more would have to without an inheritance.

    You could tax the average earning Londoner zero and they still would not have enough to get a deposit to buy the average London property which is about 20 times the average London income now
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Must be a circus tent, as there is a clown trying to entertain the crowd.
    And a clown car driven by the transport specialist clown.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,494

    Absolutely no personal bitterness/envy, completely the opposite, I consider myself most fortunate.

    I am in the incredibly fortunate position that I have reached the age of 40 myself while still having not only my parents but almost all of my grandparents still alive. I only went to my first funeral for my nan a few months ago after she passed away. My wife has lost all of her grandparents, most of them when she was a teenager before I met her - and she commented mournfully the other day that she knew my nan while we were together for longer than she knew her own nan. I am grateful that my nan and my other grandparents lived long enough to see my own children and get to know them themselves, I feel sorry for my wife that none of her grandparents lives long enough to see her get married or have children.

    I am incredibly grateful that I have had a lifetime of knowing my parents and grandparents. I feel sorry for those that don't. I have never received, nor wanted, a penny of inheritance. All I have wanted is love and happiness for my family, that is what family is for.

    I do not desire to leave any inheritance for my children. I hope to ideally live to see my children grow up, be happy, get their own jobs, get married and walk them down the aisle, for them to have children and maybe even live long enough to see them have grandchildren of their own. I wish that they will be happy and provided for, with a home of their own, while I am still alive.

    I don't intend to see my children want, to only be supported after I am gone and they can have my leftovers.
    I only knew one set of my grandparents; the others died before I was born. However my eldest granddaughter, now in her early 30's, met all her great grandparents, although she barely remembers some of them, and all her grandparents are still alive, as indeed are the 'other' grandparents of all our other grandchildren!
    The only one of her immediate ancestors who is not still alive is her mother who died of MND some 8 years ago!

    Most of us are living a lot longer than our grandparents did, and that affects inheritance patterns.
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,961
    HYUFD said:

    In the 19th century and early 20th century the Tories were often protectionist, it was the Whigs and Liberals who were most pro free trade.

    It was just keeping Labour out after universal suffrage that in the 20th century shifted many pro free trade middle class Liberal businessmen to become Tories.

    Remember too it was the Liberals who introduced the workhouse, many old school Tories opposed it
    Back in the days of Elizabeth I, young HY, long before the Liberal Party was created. But mind you, they were needed, after Henry VIII and is gang of greedy chancers tore down the monasteries and grabbed the land and the loot. The poor and the homeless were dying in the ditches. So the original workhouses were a vast improvement on that state of affairs.

    It was later on that you Tories saw the workhouses as a way of exploiting the poor inmates as a form a slave labour, and they became discredited.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,456

    If you are going to wear a mask, and you can afford it, of course you should choose a proper one. Wearing a less effective one is the worst option of all.
    OR do not wear one, because Covid is with us forever and masks are horrible
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,527
    Have we done this?

    The Johnson family are bigger grifters than the Trump family.

    Boris Johnson’s father is seeking the removal of a ban that blocks the Chinese ambassador to Britain from the Palace of Westminster as the 81-year-old plans to visit the sanctioned country.

    Stanley Johnson intends to retrace the steps of Marco Polo and will visit Xinjiang, home to the Uighur people, who are persecuted by Beijing for their Muslim faith.

    In an interview with the South China Morning Post, Johnson described Zheng Zeguang, the Chinese ambassador to Britain, as “a very agreeable, capable and intelligent man” after the two met and talked about his travel plans.

    However, his comments mark an embarrassing blow to his son, whose government has joined the European Union, Canada and the United States in sanctioning Chinese officials for human rights abuses in Xinjiang.

    The former MEP said that Zheng was enthusiastic about the project, which Johnson said might help improve UK-China relations. He is planning to take his son, Max, the prime minister’s half-brother, with him on the trip.


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/stanley-johnson-seeks-to-lift-westminster-ban-on-chinese-envoy-before-xinjiang-visit-m6h37rpb9
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,061
    tlg86 said:

    Really? Surely the most important thing is that government doesn't give in on pay because they'll have the rest of the public sector queuing up for similar pay increases.
    Absolutely spot on. High pay rises from public and private sector prolonging the inflation cost of living crisis is an existential threat to the re election of this government. This is a battle to the death for this government, they cannot give an inch on the pay rises being demanded.
  • MISTYMISTY Posts: 1,594

    Have we done this?

    The Johnson family are bigger grifters than the Trump family.

    Boris Johnson’s father is seeking the removal of a ban that blocks the Chinese ambassador to Britain from the Palace of Westminster as the 81-year-old plans to visit the sanctioned country.

    Stanley Johnson intends to retrace the steps of Marco Polo and will visit Xinjiang, home to the Uighur people, who are persecuted by Beijing for their Muslim faith.

    In an interview with the South China Morning Post, Johnson described Zheng Zeguang, the Chinese ambassador to Britain, as “a very agreeable, capable and intelligent man” after the two met and talked about his travel plans.

    However, his comments mark an embarrassing blow to his son, whose government has joined the European Union, Canada and the United States in sanctioning Chinese officials for human rights abuses in Xinjiang.

    The former MEP said that Zheng was enthusiastic about the project, which Johnson said might help improve UK-China relations. He is planning to take his son, Max, the prime minister’s half-brother, with him on the trip.


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/stanley-johnson-seeks-to-lift-westminster-ban-on-chinese-envoy-before-xinjiang-visit-m6h37rpb9

    How about the Biden Family? the Clintons? the Bushes?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    .
    Carnyx said:

    And a clown car driven by the transport specialist clown.
    A clown train would be terribly inconvenient when they’re on strike.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,071
    Bill Wiggin asks a question about how the strike will impact the posh kids from Hereford Sixth Form College. What about the poor kids from the tech next door?
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,614
    In principle, I am very much against industrial action. And I tend to think rail workers are remunerated very well for what they do. However, on the face of it, the fault lies with the Government for refusing to meet with the Union. That cannot be right, however little headway they anticipate. It's dereliction of duty, flagrantly so.

    We deserve a Government that performs its basic duties.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Sandpit said:

    .

    A clown train would be terribly inconvenient when they’re on strike.
    Yes, but the clown transport specialist "chooses to drive" anyway. If there was a level crossing in the tent he'd get stuck on it ...
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,227
    I wore a mask the other day, for the first time in a couple of months.

    I had an issue with an eye, and so I had an emergency optician's appointment. Given the closeness of optician and customer for a sustained period, it made sense. Everyone in the shop was masked.

    Fortunately the issue was nothing serious. :)
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    MISTY said:

    How about the Biden Family? the Clintons? the Bushes?
    We are the 52nd State? News to us.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,071
    MISTY said:

    How about the Biden Family? the Clintons? the Bushes?
    I love how quoting a trio of rum character families makes Boris Johnson triply innocent for the fanbase.
  • In principle, I am very much against industrial action. And I tend to think rail workers are remunerated very well for what they do. However, on the face of it, the fault lies with the Government for refusing to meet with the Union. That cannot be right, however little headway they anticipate. It's dereliction of duty, flagrantly so.

    We deserve a Government that performs its basic duties.

    Since when has it been the Government's duty to mediate between unions and their employers?

    Shouldn't the employers be the ones meeting with unions?
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,764

    In principle, I am very much against industrial action. And I tend to think rail workers are remunerated very well for what they do. However, on the face of it, the fault lies with the Government for refusing to meet with the Union. That cannot be right, however little headway they anticipate. It's dereliction of duty, flagrantly so.

    We deserve a Government that performs its basic duties.

    They don't give a rat fuck. That's the reality. Strikes? Marvellous, lets say its a return to the 70s. Stop the strikes? Why would we want to do that?
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,528

    Off the top of my head, how about saying that when staff are balloted to take industrial action, that ballot must name a single, continuous bloc of dates the action will be over? After that strike, then any further strike would require a new ballot.

    That would prevent industrial action from being in alternate dates, since you couldn't have a new ballot done in the day inbetween. It would still allow industrial action to be taken, and allow a fresh mandate as to whether to continue it or not after the first bloc of dates has happened.
    This just seems to me like an arbitrary restriction on the right to strike. Union members voted for a specific proposal. There have been numerous restrictions in recent years, so any strike now is certainly what members want to do.

    The current Government objects to any constraints on their own power, but they rush to limit what anyone else can do.

  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    Leon said:

    OR do not wear one, because Covid is with us forever and masks are horrible
    No they aren't. It's a state of mind.

    Wore one in Asia where it's de rigueur. It becomes second nature, like wearing knickers or underpants.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,764
    PM ends PMQs speaking up in defence of people calling out bullies and bullying. Whilst sat next to a smirking Priti Patel.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,761
    PMQs - Starmer really does need to get quicker on his feet, too many opportunities for good ripostes are missed.

    So today - Boris: "25 of your MPs were on picket lines", Starmer should have been straight back with: "I'd rather have 25 of my MPs on the picket line than 148 of my MPs voting no confidence in me".

    He does need to sharpen up, quickly.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,764
    Hoyle tearing a hole out of the government briefing the media and not the House
  • MISTYMISTY Posts: 1,594

    The quality of sycophantic back bench Tory MP questions really is dire.

    Then, as if by magic, a backbench Labour MP tees Johnson up perfectly.

    Any questions about the Bill of Rights?

    Raab's weaknesses are well documented on here, but recently he has performed quite strongly, sounded like a conservative, and the successful implementation of the Bill could increase his standing with the faithful.

    Not out of the picture for next leader.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,764

    I wore a mask the other day, for the first time in a couple of months.

    I had an issue with an eye, and so I had an emergency optician's appointment. Given the closeness of optician and customer for a sustained period, it made sense. Everyone in the shop was masked.

    Fortunately the issue was nothing serious. :)

    Glad to hear it
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,528

    So fix that. That isn't good enough.

    Inheritances should never be required for anyone who works for a living to get a deposit.
    I agree with your sentiment: “fix that”. We’ve had 12 years of Conservative PMs who haven’t fixed it. I wonder if maybe the solution therefore is to vote in a PM from another party…?
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,614

    Since when has it been the Government's duty to mediate between unions and their employers?

    Shouldn't the employers be the ones meeting with unions?
    Yes, they should, and the Government for its part should have done its best to facilitate and support such meetings, and if asked to, attend them. Even if the expected (or even hoped for) outcome was the failure to reach a positive outcome.
  • MISTYMISTY Posts: 1,594

    I love how quoting a trio of rum character families makes Boris Johnson triply innocent for the fanbase.
    I can't stand Johnson. But I am an equal opportunity grifter comparison supporter.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,782

    Bill Wiggin asks a question about how the strike will impact the posh kids from Hereford Sixth Form College. What about the poor kids from the tech next door?

    They aren't that posh, certainly not as posh as those from Hereford Cathedral school
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,074

    PMQs - Starmer really does need to get quicker on his feet, too many opportunities for good ripostes are missed.

    So today - Boris: "25 of your MPs were on picket lines", Starmer should have been straight back with: "I'd rather have 25 of my MPs on the picket line than 148 of my MPs voting no confidence in me".

    He does need to sharpen up, quickly.

    He just doesn't have the wit or response time needed by either a court lawyer or a front line politician. I can't see this changing now.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,071
    MISTY said:

    Any questions about the Bill of Rights?

    Raab's weaknesses are well documented on here, but recently he has performed quite strongly, sounded like a conservative, and the successful implementation of the Bill could increase his standing with the faithful.

    Not out of the picture for next leader.
    If you are right, I better re-evaluate the idea of a Labour landslide.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Definitely Tim formerly of this Parish and a few more on here
  • I agree with your sentiment: “fix that”. We’ve had 12 years of Conservative PMs who haven’t fixed it. I wonder if maybe the solution therefore is to vote in a PM from another party…?
    Maybe.

    There were some good reforms done when George Osborne was Chancellor that reversed some of the damage inflicted in the Blair and Brown years. Not seen much good in recent years from any party though, the originally proposed planning reforms this government were proposing were very sound, but were defeated by NIMBY backbenchers like Theresa May moaning about "mutant algorithms" and the Lib Dems winning a by-election by campaigning on NIMBYism.

    If another party comes up with better proposals, I would be interested in hearing them, sadly none seem to right now.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,545
    Heathener said:

    No they aren't. It's a state of mind.

    Wore one in Asia where it's de rigueur. It becomes second nature, like wearing knickers or underpants.
    Its different for everyone though. The face is crucial to human-human interaction - you don't get the same communication with just words and eyes. It also tends to emphasize that things aren't normal.
    You can argue that that's a good thing - we still have lots of covid around, and sadly people are still dying, and the NHS is still under pressure. However go to Glastonbury this weekend, or Wimbledon next week, or the pub, or the cinema and you will see that for the vast majority of the country, they no longer regard this as an emergency that warrants mask wearing.

    If individuals want to carry on thats fine. But just as I won't criticize them, I'd hope they would not criticize those who no longer where the things.

    We should realistically be looking at better approaches to air quality. Using air filters and better building design is easier on people than mask wearing. You may find it easy to wear one, many of us hate it.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    MISTY said:

    Any questions about the Bill of Rights?

    Raab's weaknesses are well documented on here, but recently he has performed quite strongly, sounded like a conservative, and the successful implementation of the Bill could increase his standing with the faithful.

    Not out of the picture for next leader.
    He ruled out running in an interview today i believe 'i have said i wouldnt run again'
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,456
    Heathener said:

    No they aren't. It's a state of mind.

    Wore one in Asia where it's de rigueur. It becomes second nature, like wearing knickers or underpants.
    It’s not de rigueur in Asia

    It’s de rigueur when you have a respiratory illness (cold, flu, etc) and you do it as a courtesy to others, in crowded places, transport, etc

    THAT is a habit we should borrow. For sure. But healthy people in Bangkok, or Tokyo, or Hong Kong, or Shanghai, pre Covid, did not go around wearing masks in bars or streets or restaurants or schools or offices or trains, because masks are horrible

    I note that Thailand is now dropping nearly all mask restrictions from July 1

  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,061

    Absolutely spot on. High pay rises from public and private sector prolonging the inflation cost of living crisis is an existential threat to the re election of this government. This is a battle to the death for this government, they cannot give an inch on the pay rises being demanded.
    Hence it was Starmer who had a subdued Boris over a barrel at PMQs today, with the “the nation wants you to sit down and sort the strike out” attack line, which Boris can’t do - I actually think would if he could - he can’t give in to the unions on pay. Starmer will just keep repeating that line now: you are in government, talk and sort it. But Boris can’t, the government can only hold out till the Union caves - if the government signed a deal to green light higher pay they will be stoking the fire that burns their election hopes.

    And that is how a rather subdued and boring PMQs went today if you missed it - I actually thought it looked like a TV play, anyone on PB could have written all the questions and answers they were that boringly predictable, and the actors were just going through the motions.

    I’m beginning to think if the General election is held in 28 months time it will produce the same result as if held today, Labour beating Boris by 5%, the die is cast already.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,343

    The quality of sycophantic back bench Tory MP questions really is dire.

    Then, as if by magic, a backbench Labour MP tees Johnson up perfectly.

    Do the Whips force them to ask those awful questions? It is excruciating to listen to. I'd tell the Whips to do one.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,071
    edited June 2022

    Definitely Tim formerly of this Parish and a few more on here
    Can we crowdfund for the Mirror? Any enemy of McCluskey is a friend of mine.
  • MISTYMISTY Posts: 1,594

    He ruled out running in an interview today i believe 'i have said i wouldnt run again'
    Definitely worth backing then!! LOL.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,971

    Maybe.

    There were some good reforms done when George Osborne was Chancellor that reversed some of the damage inflicted in the Blair and Brown years. Not seen much good in recent years from any party though, the originally proposed planning reforms this government were proposing were very sound, but were defeated by NIMBY backbenchers like Theresa May moaning about "mutant algorithms" and the Lib Dems winning a by-election by campaigning on NIMBYism.

    If another party comes up with better proposals, I would be interested in hearing them, sadly none seem to right now.
    How did Theresa and the Lib Dems overturn Boris's landside majority?
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045

    Its certainly interesting. I'm in the same boat. There are a lot of theories. You may have a pre-existing immunity from another coronavirus. You may have had it completely asymptomatic. The vaccine may have induced a sufficient level of protection that you don't get sick. You may have not inhaled enough virus.

    There are studies looking at people who have not had covid, particularly NHS staff in the pre-vaccine period. One colleague was enrolled, but then just before the testing started she caught covid.

    You will probably fall like a domino eventually, not least because the variants keep coming, so if it is a pre-existing immunity, chances are it will get bypassed eventually.

    For now - enjoy it. Of those i know who have had it, there has been a wide range of responses.
    Interestingly, one paper was recently published (https://insight.jci.org/articles/view/156372/pdf) indicating that cross-reactive immunity to two of the existing cold coronaviruses ( HCoV-OC43 and HCoV- HKU1, the first especially) was associated with worse outcomes.

    Essentially, the immune system had imprinted on those before, saw similarities in the spike, and respopnded by rolling out its usual response to those two HCoVs. Which was massively insufficient, and by the time it had responded further, the virus had got far further.

    (And, as older people will have had more exposure to those and greater chance of "original antigenic sin" being triggered, it would be one of the many contributors to worse outcomes as you aged)
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,456
    PB BRAINS TRUST

    I am working out where to go next, after I’ve finished Armenia and Georgia. I’ve kind of had enough of post USSR states, charmingly ramshackle as they are. That said, I am drawn to the Stans, particularly Kyrgyzstan, which looks small enough to see in a week

    But where else could I go within striking distance of the Caucasus? I don’t want to double back to europe. Is there anywhere in India that has decent weather in July? Ladakh sounds like it does, but what the hell is Ladakh?!
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,148
    Leon said:

    OR do not wear one, because Covid is with us forever and masks are horrible
    I hate masks with a passion, but I was surprised that wearing a good quality one on public transport in London over Easter was sufficient to prevent me from catching Covid then, while a family wedding (obviously without masks) has meant that I've caught it now.

    My wife is still wearing a mask around the house though. She has Covid. I have Covid. Her mother has Covid. Her Dad will have Covid after sharing a car with her mom for four hours as they drive back from Roscommon. Some people are a bit strange about masks.

    Hopefully the vaccines will do their thing for us and, after we recover, her fear will have abated. And then the masking can stop.
This discussion has been closed.