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As voting starts Truss still the strong next PM favourite – politicalbetting.com

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  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683
    Leon said:

    This climatologist from UCL thinks it is too late already. Catastrophic climate change is in the post

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/jul/30/total-climate-meltdown-inevitable-heatwaves-global-catastrophe

    Perhaps this is the year we will see the first signs of truly irreversible warming
    Maybe - and it'd be a terrible shame if so.

    It would mean us as a species are the collective 27 year old who has overdone it and choked on our own vomit.

    In fact strike "terrible shame", let me for once unplug and emote. It would be a tragedy of the very first order.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,418

    Rishi needs to stop talking about his family because everyone knows his background. Get down to specifics like what Liz did.

    Standard stump stuff though isn't it? Repeat the same speech in dozens of different campaign stops.
  • MISTYMISTY Posts: 1,594

    This is all about who has been in the news and Starmer isn't getting a look in.
    Labour's good points aren't getting a look in, but neither are labour's problems.

    Their position over strikes. Their position over Tavistock.
  • IshmaelZ said:

    Creepy as fuck from Rishi, that my own size gag bombed worse than the suntan one

    Rishi needs a better team around him. That gag was ill-advised. In discussing the cost of living crisis, he skipped over the measures he has already taken and went straight on to what he will do, throwing away his advantage over Truss.

    Rishi also has the disadvantage of going second, so a lot of his lines echo Truss. He should have had his team anticipate this problem, listen to her speech and rewrite his on the fly.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,418
    Rishi nearly forgot to wave to crowd there.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,143

    This is all about who has been in the news and Starmer isn't getting a look in.
    Lol
  • After Liz Truss's speech and before Rishi:-

    Betfair next prime minister
    1.11 Liz Truss 90%
    10.5 Rishi Sunak 10%

    Next Conservative leader
    1.11 Liz Truss 90%
    10.5 Rishi Sunak 10%
    After Rishi:-

    Betfair next prime minister
    1.11 Liz Truss 90%
    10 Rishi Sunak 10%

    Next Conservative leader
    1.1 Liz Truss 91%
    10.5 Rishi Sunak 10%
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,540

    Without smart water meters I don't see how they could enforce it other than by nosy neighbour syndrome.

    If everyone takes the piss, however, standpipes await...


    We are nowhere near that yet.
    I don't see how a smart meter would detect it, unless drips are leaving their hoses on for hours rather than using it like running a bath.

    Normal water meters are up from 40% in 2015 to 60%+ now, so coming your way soon.

    There was a wonderful tweet claiming that not needing to build any reservoirs for a generation despite a 10% population increase was an indication of the failure of privatisation. :smile:

  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,418
    kinabalu said:

    Maybe - and it'd be a terrible shame if so.

    It would mean us as a species are the collective 27 year old who has overdone it and choked on our own vomit.

    In fact strike "terrible shame", let me for once unplug and emote. It would be a tragedy of the very first order.
    Definitely sub-optimal.

  • Standard stump stuff though isn't it? Repeat the same speech in dozens of different campaign stops.
    Yes but this is the age of the interweb and so it is unnecessary and even counterproductive. The irony is that Rishi even joked that everyone already knew his mum ran a pharmacy.
  • Leon said:


    "It didn’t used to be like this. This part of southern Mesopotamia, where the Tigris and Euphrates rivers flow into the Persian Gulf, was once so fertile that scholars have suggested it could have been the location of the biblical Garden of Eden."

    Nah, it was the Sunda Shelf.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Leon said:

    One of the most disturbing articles about climate change in recent years was in the Times only the other day. Describing daily life in Iraq and Kuwait

    Unfortunately, it is paywall, but it is powerful

    "Outside, in Basra and Kuwait, the heat is everywhere, like soup in your mouth or stinging fire in your throat — depending on the humidity. At its worst, you hold your tongue to the back of your front teeth because it hurts to breathe in the air directly. Your eyes prickle, their surfaces drying.

    "It didn’t used to be like this. This part of southern Mesopotamia, where the Tigris and Euphrates rivers flow into the Persian Gulf, was once so fertile that scholars have suggested it could have been the location of the biblical Garden of Eden."

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/under-a-burning-sun-kuwait-keeps-cool-as-iraq-reaches-boiling-point-bnjmqlgrh


    I don't see how the Middle East can remain habitable

    What you are rightly saying, is that the human race has been irretrievably fucked by the industrial revolution.

    The doubters said that the transatlantic slave trade was the pinnacle of our national achievement. but I said, Be patient!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353

    Sheep not solar panels says Truss.

    Really? Some pretty woolly thinking there if she did say that.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,143
    What if Mary E Truss tears SKS a new one in GE2024/25?
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    This is both impressive and hilarious: https://twitter.com/winter_bosak/status/1554173445520359434
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Who is this bad hair teenage dweeb compering the whole thing?
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,724

    What if Mary E Truss tears SKS a new one in GE2024/25?

    Is that a rhetorical question?
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    ydoethur said:

    Really? Some pretty woolly thinking there if she did say that.
    Texel sorts, is what I say
  • IshmaelZ said:

    Who is this bad hair teenage dweeb compering the whole thing?

    Seb Payne of the FT.
  • Liz Truss pledges better broadband and mobile phones for the south-west. Shades of Jeremy Corbyn?
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Seb Payne of the FT.
    Does his mother know he's out?
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468

    Not me. I love England and its seasons.

    I guess @Sandpit can tell us more about the reality in the deserts.
    I grew up living in the heat without air-conditioning, and spent a lot of time driving/camping around Yemen without it either. It is amazing what the human body can habituate to, but there is a limit. 50C in the dry desert was like walking in an oven but ok if you remembered to drink enough, even when you didn't think you needed to. 45C on the coast with high humidity without AC was just bearable, and the locals both sides of the Red Sea eke out a living in those conditions. But the human body cannot cope with much more than that - witness the hotter, uninhabited areas of Djibouti.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,186

    What if Mary E Truss tears SKS a new one in GE2024/25?

    I think she has been underestimated at every turn.

    She's capable. People warm to her. She's for a small state.

    What isn't to like!
  • agingjb2agingjb2 Posts: 122
    Clearly Liz Truss will be PM, and Keir Starmer LOTO. I would not have either as first preference, but would prefer Starmer.

    FPTP and safe seat (Labour nowhere) means that all I can do is register a vote for neither, which I will.

    I do wonder about Labour supporters attacking Starmer, the Tories will do that well enough, as they would and will for anyone not a Tory.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    dixiedean said:

    The hot broth de nos jours?
    For most people who got Covid, even pre vaccination, hot broth was fine
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353
    IshmaelZ said:

    Texel sorts, is what I say
    Ewe made a good effort, but that was rather Clun-ky.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Not me. I love England and its seasons.

    I guess @Sandpit can tell us more about the reality in the deserts.
    It really isn’t that bad, perfectly liveable in a city if you’re a white-collar desk jockey. Building sites work split shifts or night shifts in the summer, to avoid the worst of the heat. Winter is lovely though.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353
    Mortimer said:

    I think she has been underestimated at every turn.

    She's capable. People warm to her. She's for a small state.

    What isn't to like!
    Small state? No more Scotland, Northern Ireland, Wales, much of England...
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,654
    Good evening all.

    Yesterday, Shipley CLP selected the candidate to face Philip Davies at the next GE. Unfortunately, I remembered the meeting about 3 hours too late, so failed to participate. Mind, I didn't have strong views about any of the shortlisted candidates anyway.
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,953
    kinabalu said:

    Maybe - and it'd be a terrible shame if so.

    It would mean us as a species are the collective 27 year old who has overdone it and choked on our own vomit.

    In fact strike "terrible shame", let me for once unplug and emote. It would be a tragedy of the very first order.
    And this is why there are no aliens. Why, despite billions of years and billions of planets, nobody makes it off their home world.

    The great filter. We've found it. It's us, it's here, it's now.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,540
    edited August 2022

    Seb Payne of the FT.
    I thought Beaker had escaped.





  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,418
    And we are off - first question is about fox hunting.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,396

    Are you on board with Truss now Roger? Lots of hostility towards Starmer on show.
    I can't stand Truss. I just want Starmer to start showing some backbone. If he's going to become PM for the Leaver Red Wallers then he'll be very lucky to win. Most Labour voters AREN'T Leavers. Not being as bad as Truss might do it but I wouldn't put my house on it.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683
    edited August 2022

    I'm not sure he would have won the election that wasn't.

    All the Tories in Parliament and on here are falling in behind Truss. It strikes me as only those who want to see her appeal can see her appeal. She strikes me as an Emperor's New Clothes sort of a Prime Minister.
    To be expected that Cons get their minds right. But I don't think she'll connect and convince with floating voters here in England in 2022 - or more pertinently 2024. She looks really second rate to me. And now the quirky gaffes have gone, "dull". Which is just political death these days apparently.
  • MPartridgeMPartridge Posts: 174
    Evening all,

    Any first impressions of Liz Truss tonight so far?
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    And we are off - first question is about fox hunting.

    Good answer in the circs
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,186
    That was a remarkably good answer to the hunting question.

    Managed to get a rural audience to clap her when saying she wouldn't repeal the Hunting Act 2005
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    edited August 2022
    Mortimer said:

    I think she has been underestimated at every turn.

    She's capable. People warm to her. She's for a small state.

    What isn't to like!
    True, albeit Johnson and May and Brown and Major all led by 10% in at least one poll within about 10 days of becoming PM, so 1% ahead for Truss would not be a huge bounce even if still a welcome one
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,540
    edited August 2022
    ydoethur said:

    Small state? No more Scotland, Northern Ireland, Wales, much of England...
    I'm slightly discouraged by the semi-shouting of the second half of each sentence, as Maggie used to do in PMQ.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,654
    ydoethur said:

    Really? Some pretty woolly thinking there if she did say that.
    Wait for the ewe-turn.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,251
    Cookie said:

    As a parent currently going through this, my motivations are:
    1) Grammar schools weed out most of the kids who make your kids' lives a misery.
    2) Comprehensives have a lot of more challenging kidd, and a lot of kids who will need a bit more effort to get them over 5 grade Cs territory. This will leave fewer resources and focus for my kids.
    3) Locally, but I don't thi k this is uncommon: the grammar school is just nicer. Better maintained, less graffiti, fewer leaks.
    All entirely selfish motivations, but show me someone who makes decision their kids' education based on what will be best for other kids?
    Those are excellent points: but they equally mean that the 80% of kids left behind at Secondary Moderns suffer more from the problems you identify.

    Because, let us be clear, the problem is not grammar schools (which are great), but how you avoid a situation where the people left behind get a worse education.

    In a large comprehensive, there will be lots of movement between the second and third deciles: a significant number of kids will drop from first set maths to second... And vice versa. That's really tough to do when the sets are at different schools. Essentially you end up ossifying kids into two groups at a very early age.

    And, of course, it's ok for me. If my 10 year old fails the 11+, well I can put him in private education. But what if yours has a bad day? Or is a late developer? It's much much harder for them to climb out of the Secondary Modern into a Grammar.

    Finally, there's the issue of kids who are great at one thing, but not another. I was dreadful at languages (bottom in German Tanbridge School 1987!), but excellent at maths. How do you allocate people who are great at one set of subjects, but average (or worse) at another?

  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,060
    edited August 2022

    Evening all,

    Any first impressions of Liz Truss tonight so far?

    Truss is on now so judge for yourself
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5OPe6qzlzLg
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,243
    MattW said:


    I'm slightly discouraged by the semi-shouting of the second half of each sentence, as Maggie used to do in PMQ.
    That. Is. A...
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,186

    That. Is. A...
    Prime Minister in waiting?
  • Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 44% (+3)
    CON: 30% (=)
    LDM: 10% (-5)
    GRN: 8% (+2)

    Via
    @IpsosUK
    , 21-27 Jul.
    Changes w/ 22-29 Jun.

    BJO please explain?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    rcs1000 said:

    Those are excellent points: but they equally mean that the 80% of kids left behind at Secondary Moderns suffer more from the problems you identify.

    Because, let us be clear, the problem is not grammar schools (which are great), but how you avoid a situation where the people left behind get a worse education.

    In a large comprehensive, there will be lots of movement between the second and third deciles: a significant number of kids will drop from first set maths to second... And vice versa. That's really tough to do when the sets are at different schools. Essentially you end up ossifying kids into two groups at a very early age.

    And, of course, it's ok for me. If my 10 year old fails the 11+, well I can put him in private education. But what if yours has a bad day? Or is a late developer? It's much much harder for them to climb out of the Secondary Modern into a Grammar.

    Finally, there's the issue of kids who are great at one thing, but not another. I was dreadful at languages (bottom in German Tanbridge School 1987!), but excellent at maths. How do you allocate people who are great at one set of subjects, but average (or worse) at another?

    Most comprehensives and academies are effectively secondary moderns in all but name, apart from the minority rated Outstanding
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,654
    kinabalu said:

    Maybe - and it'd be a terrible shame if so.

    It would mean us as a species are the collective 27 year old who has overdone it and choked on our own vomit.

    In fact strike "terrible shame", let me for once unplug and emote. It would be a tragedy of the very first order.
    A tragedy for every other species that is getting shafted by the stupidity of humankind.
  • Mortimer said:

    That was a remarkably good answer to the hunting question.

    Managed to get a rural audience to clap her when saying she wouldn't repeal the Hunting Act 2005

    Perhaps because a lot of rural voters do not support foxhunting.
  • I see we're talking about a MoE tie not the fact Labour is once again 13 points ahead
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879

    I see we're talking about a MoE tie not the fact Labour is once again 13 points ahead

    Until the next Tory leader is elected Horse polls mean little, I would prepare yourself for a Truss bounce, even if a temporary one
  • HYUFD said:

    Until the next Tory leader is elected Horse polls mean little, I would prepare yourself for a Truss bounce, even if a temporary one
    Oh there will be a Truss bounce, I am quite certain of it.

    I do not think she has any answers on CoL.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,418
    IshmaelZ said:

    Good answer in the circs
    Although the line "I never make promises I don't keep" will have been noted by the Labour strategists.
  • Meanwhile...

    A poll from Techne has Sunak only five points behind Truss. It says it's a private poll but I think BPC rules say once a poll is written up like this the tables need to be published.
    https://t.co/bmKclHGOzZ
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,251
    Leon said:

    This climatologist from UCL thinks it is too late already. Catastrophic climate change is in the post

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/jul/30/total-climate-meltdown-inevitable-heatwaves-global-catastrophe

    Perhaps this is the year we will see the first signs of truly irreversible warming
    If it's sent by USPS, we'll be fine. The chances of it ever getting delivered are remote.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,143

    Perhaps because a lot of rural voters do not support foxhunting.
    Nothing wrong with foxhunting and never was.

    A load of waffley sentimentality. Wolves hunt animals in packs in the Yukon. Perfectly natural and normal.

    Deal with it.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,910
    HYUFD said:

    Most comprehensives and academies are effectively secondary moderns in all but name, apart from the minority rated Outstanding
    No they are not.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Mortimer said:

    That was a remarkably good answer to the hunting question.

    Managed to get a rural audience to clap her when saying she wouldn't repeal the Hunting Act 2005

    Mind you:

    I was talking to a mate who runs a small commercial pheasant shoot the other day who said she was putting down 5,000 birds this year. To be shot. And after they are thwacked, they are landfill or cat food. And every single person thwacking them is a rich fuck, vs about 20% of the average mounted hunting field.

    And what really pisses me off, is the likes of Nick Palmer are well informed and intelligent and realise all this is true. And are prepared to leverage sheer dishonesty to advance their case. I do utterly loathe an intelligent liar.
  • I'd bet on an Opinium lead almost certainly, I think that's a good one to come off by the end of the year.

    I do not think the boost will be long lasting because it seems to me that Truss nor Rishi are actually offering anything that's going to fundamentally impact CoL.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,251
    HYUFD said:

    Most comprehensives and academies are effectively secondary moderns in all but name, apart from the minority rated Outstanding
    That's simply not true.

    In my comprehensive, my top set maths was full of exactly the kids who would have been at the local grammar school (had there been grammar schools).
  • https://twitter.com/JohnRentoul/status/1554181461066096641

    Long answer: economic growth, which will be higher if taxes are lower

    Imagine if Labour was offering this rubbish
  • EXC: Penny Mordaunt is about to endorse Liz Truss from the podium at the Exeter hustings. Stop Rishi bandwagon growing.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    edited August 2022
    rcs1000 said:

    That's simply not true.

    In my comprehensive, my top set maths was full of exactly the kids who would have been at the local grammar school (had there been grammar schools).
    Might have been but the vast majority of the pupils wouldn't have been and the ethos of the school will be mainly directed towards them
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,418
    edited August 2022
    rcs1000 said:

    That's simply not true.

    In my comprehensive, my top set maths was full of exactly the kids who would have been at the local grammar school (had there been grammar schools).
    Likewise at my late 1970s bog standard comp.

    My memory is the problem was that kind of streaming didn't happen until after the first three years of the secondary education.

    For the brighter kids those three years were wasted. Down at the private school nearby they were teaching them a year or two ahead of where they should be.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,183
    Roger said:

    I can't stand Truss. I just want Starmer to start showing some backbone. If he's going to become PM for the Leaver Red Wallers then he'll be very lucky to win. Most Labour voters AREN'T Leavers. Not being as bad as Truss might do it but I wouldn't put my house on it.
    He is underwhelming, but too much red on red action when the Conservatives are embarking on a love-in with Liz will end in tears.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353
    HYUFD said:

    Might have been but the vast majority of the pupils wouldn't have been
    The vast majority of pupils - 85% if memory serves - never got to grammar schools anyway!
  • EXC: Penny Mordaunt is about to endorse Liz Truss from the podium at the Exeter hustings. Stop Rishi bandwagon growing.

    She already has. There is a live feed of the hustings at
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5OPe6qzlzLg
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    ydoethur said:

    The vast majority of pupils - 85% if memory serves - never got to grammar schools anyway!
    Hence most comprehensives are effectively secondary moderns in all but name (though grammar intakes tend to range from top 10% to top 25%)
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,183

    Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 44% (+3)
    CON: 30% (=)
    LDM: 10% (-5)
    GRN: 8% (+2)

    Via
    @IpsosUK
    , 21-27 Jul.
    Changes w/ 22-29 Jun.

    BJO please explain?

    BJO is too busy studying Redfield and Wilton. He is about to type "CHB, please explain".
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,186
    Is it just me, or is there something very Alan Partridge about Sunak's delivery?
  • agingjb2agingjb2 Posts: 122
    Leon said:

    This climatologist from UCL thinks it is too late already. Catastrophic climate change is in the post

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/jul/30/total-climate-meltdown-inevitable-heatwaves-global-catastrophe

    Perhaps this is the year we will see the first signs of truly irreversible warming
    Yes, it may well be too late (we can just about still hope, but).

    So the question is not which lot of politicians can stop it, but which lot of politicians will be best most effective in helping us to deal with the calamity (and that in the face of continuing well funded denial as the world suffers).

  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,183
    Mortimer said:

    Is it just me, or is there something very Alan Partridge about Sunak's delivery?

    Aha!
  • Rishi is useless. He has forgotten he trailed the income tax cut in the budget, which would make it obvious it was not a weekend u-turn.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    HYUFD said:

    Hence most comprehensives are effectively secondary moderns in all but name (though grammar intakes tend to range from top 10% to top 25%)
    You mean, they are basically secondary moderns but with the top 15% added back in? How could that not be the case?
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331

    Nothing wrong with foxhunting and never was.

    A load of waffley sentimentality. Wolves hunt animals in packs in the Yukon. Perfectly natural and normal.

    Deal with it.
    It was dealt with about 20 years ago. It's now illegal.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,183
    HYUFD said:

    Might have been but the vast majority of the pupils wouldn't have been and the ethos of the school will be mainly directed towards them
    Was this post written in code that only full seven year alumni of Grammar Schools can understand? 'Cos I am struggling.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    Theresa May.
    Leon said:

    One of the most disturbing articles about climate change in recent years was in the Times only the other day. Describing daily life in Iraq and Kuwait

    Unfortunately, it is paywall, but it is powerful

    "Outside, in Basra and Kuwait, the heat is everywhere, like soup in your mouth or stinging fire in your throat — depending on the humidity. At its worst, you hold your tongue to the back of your front teeth because it hurts to breathe in the air directly. Your eyes prickle, their surfaces drying.

    "It didn’t used to be like this. This part of southern Mesopotamia, where the Tigris and Euphrates rivers flow into the Persian Gulf, was once so fertile that scholars have suggested it could have been the location of the biblical Garden of Eden."

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/under-a-burning-sun-kuwait-keeps-cool-as-iraq-reaches-boiling-point-bnjmqlgrh


    I don't see how the Middle East can remain habitable

    In fairness that is probably the best solution to date.

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    IshmaelZ said:

    Mind you:

    I was talking to a mate who runs a small commercial pheasant shoot the other day who said she was putting down 5,000 birds this year. To be shot. And after they are thwacked, they are landfill or cat food. And every single person thwacking them is a rich fuck, vs about 20% of the average mounted hunting field.

    And what really pisses me off, is the likes of Nick Palmer are well informed and intelligent and realise all this is true. And are prepared to leverage sheer dishonesty to advance their case. I do utterly loathe an intelligent liar.
    Seriously, do they not eat the pheasants? That's a criminal waste. I often eat pheasant and other game from Lothian and the Borders.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,186

    Aha!
    I know what it is.

    Its the smug smiling and nodding when people clap him....
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450
    IshmaelZ said:

    What you are rightly saying, is that the human race has been irretrievably fucked by the industrial revolution.

    The doubters said that the transatlantic slave trade was the pinnacle of our national achievement. but I said, Be patient!
    Outside of the top 2% or so, very few people would welcome a return to the standard of living we had pre-1780.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331

    Wait for the ewe-turn.
    No, she'll want to ram it through.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Was this post written in code that only full seven year alumni of Grammar Schools can understand? 'Cos I am struggling.
    No, only alumni of Posh "Public Schools", I think. I think?!
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    This Tory election is so funny. Currently our resident Tories are ramping Truss, someone they were saying was going to deliver certain defeat just a few days ago.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    It was dealt with about 20 years ago. It's now illegal.
    Yes. Because you are a whiney ill informed cocksucker with an overtly racist preference for foxy woxies over birdy wirdies.

    It must be awful being poor and stupid. Sympathy.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115
    kle4 said:

    The fertile crescent has seen better and more fertile days.
    Egypt was the Ukraine of its day, biggest bread basket in the known world.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,143
    IshmaelZ said:

    Mind you:

    I was talking to a mate who runs a small commercial pheasant shoot the other day who said she was putting down 5,000 birds this year. To be shot. And after they are thwacked, they are landfill or cat food. And every single person thwacking them is a rich fuck, vs about 20% of the average mounted hunting field.

    And what really pisses me off, is the likes of Nick Palmer are well informed and intelligent and realise all this is true. And are prepared to leverage sheer dishonesty to advance their case. I do utterly loathe an intelligent liar.
    I am breaking my rule to reply to you on this to say, I totally agree.

    It's a triumph of sentimentality over reason.

    Almost everyone who actually goes foxhunting in reality realises this, including its opponents.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    Jonathan said:

    This Tory election is so funny. Currently our resident Tories are ramping Truss, someone they were saying was going to deliver certain defeat just a few days ago.

    Ramping she will get a bounce as new PM is not the same thing as saying she will win the next general election
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,251
    HYUFD said:

    Might have been but the vast majority of the pupils wouldn't have been and the ethos of the school will be mainly directed towards them
    I don't really understand your comment.

    My comprehensive school, with an upper sixth of perhaps 60 kids, got four kids into Oxbridge in my year. And, by the way, this was a school with a very high proportion of free school meals, and where English wasn't the first language.

    But we also had a number of extremely smart, extremely competitive kids (of which I was one). I can see the advantage of putting more smart, competitive kids together.

    Would I have really enjoyed a Grammar school?

    Yep.

    But my school also streamed extremely aggressively. I'm not sure my GCSE maths class would have been any more advanced. Pretty much the entire top set maths did A Level maths. And other than me, pretty much all got As at A Level.

    The question is: how much do grammar schools improve the educational outcomes of the top 20%? And do they do so at the expense of the rest?
  • Any evidence Truss is winning back voters yet or just speaking to the converted
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    No, she'll want to ram it through.
    Wedder she's pandering to the members or not, yowe'd need to be pretty daft to believe she was serious about it being either/or. The sheep would love the shelter from the panels, for a start. And they'd stop the grass and scrub getting long enougfh to shade the panels at early/late hours.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    Sandpit said:

    It really isn’t that bad, perfectly liveable in a city if you’re a white-collar desk jockey. Building sites work split shifts or night shifts in the summer, to avoid the worst of the heat. Winter is lovely though.
    Is The Line going to happen or is it just a concept to sell shares in Neom?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kz5vEqdaSc

    And Oxagon?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_p3kl6FHDY
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,243
    Truss adds: “The best thing to do with Nicola Sturgeon is to ignore her. She is an attention seeker. That is what she is.”


    JFC. You don't have to be @StuartDickson to think that the Prime Minister of the UK deciding to "ignore" the elected leader of the Scottish Parliament is probably not the way that devolution was meant to work.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,418
    Nandy is 10 for next leader.

    I think that is value after today's "difficulties" with Sir K.

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,143

    It was dealt with about 20 years ago. It's now illegal.
    Yes, and that was wrong then and it's wrong now.

    It's never going to be repealed - too much ignorant sentiment against it - but I don't agree with it, and never will.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    DavidL said:

    Egypt was the Ukraine of its day, biggest bread basket in the known world.
    No wonder the Roman emperors never delegated its government to a senator, but only to an equestrian - in other wirds a middle class type with no hope of ever making himself Emperor.
  • Nandy is 10 for next leader.

    I think that is value after today's "difficulties" with Sir K.

    She's the Rishi Sunak of Labour, a complete non-entity
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,183

    It was dealt with about 20 years ago. It's now illegal.
    Mr Paul O'Shea just learned today at Chelmsford Magistrates court that being a cruel b@$7@rd to foxy earns a custodial sentence (suspended).
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Carnyx said:

    Seriously, do they not eat the pheasants? That's a criminal waste. I often eat pheasant and other game from Lothian and the Borders.
    There just isn't the demand. They backed off from the just burying them when people started noticing, but mostly they become catfood.

    Whereas fox hunting only ever polished off 2 or 3 a day, and those were the unhealthy ones.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331
    rcs1000 said:

    Those are excellent points: but they equally mean that the 80% of kids left behind at Secondary Moderns suffer more from the problems you identify.

    Because, let us be clear, the problem is not grammar schools (which are great), but how you avoid a situation where the people left behind get a worse education.

    In a large comprehensive, there will be lots of movement between the second and third deciles: a significant number of kids will drop from first set maths to second... And vice versa. That's really tough to do when the sets are at different schools. Essentially you end up ossifying kids into two groups at a very early age.

    And, of course, it's ok for me. If my 10 year old fails the 11+, well I can put him in private education. But what if yours has a bad day? Or is a late developer? It's much much harder for them to climb out of the Secondary Modern into a Grammar.

    Finally, there's the issue of kids who are great at one thing, but not another. I was dreadful at languages (bottom in German Tanbridge School 1987!), but excellent at maths. How do you allocate people who are great at one set of subjects, but average (or worse) at another?

    Kate Clanchy's 'Some kids I taught ...' is really good on this issue. Amazing the attempts to get the book cancelled, despite it being the absolute epitome of left-liberalism. It's actually a superb and very moving piece of writing.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    rcs1000 said:

    I don't really understand your comment.

    My comprehensive school, with an upper sixth of perhaps 60 kids, got four kids into Oxbridge in my year. And, by the way, this was a school with a very high proportion of free school meals, and where English wasn't the first language.

    But we also had a number of extremely smart, extremely competitive kids (of which I was one). I can see the advantage of putting more smart, competitive kids together.

    Would I have really enjoyed a Grammar school?

    Yep.

    But my school also streamed extremely aggressively. I'm not sure my GCSE maths class would have been any more advanced. Pretty much the entire top set maths did A Level maths. And other than me, pretty much all got As at A Level.

    The question is: how much do grammar schools improve the educational outcomes of the top 20%? And do they do so at the expense of the rest?
    How many of those who entered the school at 11 though got good GCSE passes? 4 kids into Oxbridge, while better than most comps, is still less than 10% even of the upper sixth. Many top grammars would get more into Oxbridge than that
This discussion has been closed.