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An early by-election in Nadine’s seat? – politicalbetting.com

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  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,425
    edited August 2022
    TOPPING said:

    It depends. If the trade deal contained provisions for terms to change under certain conditions then the trade deal itself would change. It all depends upon the terms of agreement when it was entered into. Whether that is a trade deal or membership of something or other.

    So again, what is the biggest benefit of Brexit. What have in your opinion we now done or received or been given that didn't or couldn't have happened in the EU.
    So trade agreements aren't clubs as you've defined them which is a distinct advantage to not being in a club.

    The biggest benefit of Brexit is that Parliament controls the laws now, not a "club".
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    rcs1000 said:

    Indeed.

    However, like all trolls, he/she/they/it has talking points they are obliged to slip in, in particular the regular use of the phrase "Neo-Nazi".
    I still don't get why this site is so worried about the transmission mechanism of certain views rather than the views themselves.

    Weren't people all in a tizzy because they thought @Heathener was somehow a troll or something on account of their ISP?

    Just discuss the views - we are all robust enough not to worry about who or what may be putting them forward.

    If I said the moon was made out of cheese no one would care a damn, nor I'm guessing argue with me (hey @BartholomewRoberts) because it is transparent rubbish. So apply the same test to posts on here. If they are transparent rubbish don't engage and if they have some merit then do engage.
  • rcs1000 said:

    Indeed.

    However, like all trolls, he/she/they/it has talking points they are obliged to slip in, in particular the regular use of the phrase "Neo-Nazi".
    Dura_Ace or Dynamo?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    So trade agreements aren't clubs as you've defined them which is a distinct advantage to not being in a club.

    The biggest benefit of Brexit is that Parliament controls the laws now, not a "club".
    Oh jesus and back we go. We control our laws. That is what parliament is for. And what about NATO controlling our armed forces. All good with that?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400
    TOPPING said:

    I still don't get why this site is so worried about the transmission mechanism of certain views rather than the views themselves.

    Weren't people all in a tizzy because they thought @Heathener was somehow a troll or something on account of their ISP?

    Just discuss the views - we are all robust enough not to worry about who or what may be putting them forward.

    If I said the moon was made out of cheese no one would care a damn, nor I'm guessing argue with me (hey @BartholomewRoberts) because it is transparent rubbish. So apply the same test to posts on here. If they are transparent rubbish don't engage and if they have some merit then do engage.
    We allow people to spout all kinds of rubbish on here. But there are a few rules, which I have posted before. And I am generally very suspicious of people whose IPs come up in blacklists.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,507
    TOPPING said:

    I still don't get why this site is so worried about the transmission mechanism of certain views rather than the views themselves.

    Weren't people all in a tizzy because they thought @Heathener was somehow a troll or something on account of their ISP?

    Just discuss the views - we are all robust enough not to worry about who or what may be putting them forward.

    If I said the moon was made out of cheese no one would care a damn, nor I'm guessing argue with me (hey @BartholomewRoberts) because it is transparent rubbish. So apply the same test to posts on here. If they are transparent rubbish don't engage and if they have some merit then do engage.
    Haven't seen Heathener on a while.
  • rcs1000 said:

    Water Companies CEOs don't get their stock prices up by improving water supplies and sewage treatment facilities, they get them up by cutting costs.
    Though fines for poor treatment of sewage is a cost, so the CEO gets their stock price up by improving sewage treatment up to the required standards.

    Which is part of why river quality improved so dramatically post privatisation. When water provision was state owned there was no incentive for the water firm to actually apply the legal standards in the same way.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,273
    rcs1000 said:

    Do you have any proof that Musk has not landed a man on Mars?
    Did he specify which Mars? Mars, Pennsylvania is quite do-able.
  • TOPPING said:

    Oh jesus and back we go. We control our laws. That is what parliament is for. And what about NATO controlling our armed forces. All good with that?
    We control our laws now post Brexit. We didn't pre Brexit. That's why Brexit was a good thing.

    NATO doesn't control our armed forces. NATO can not compel any nations forces to take any actions they don't want to take. That is something the Americans were absolutely adamant be adopted in NATO from it's very foundation onwards.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    .
    rcs1000 said:

    The US Senate polling is not looking great for Republicans. They are currently behind in Pennsylvania (by 11 points), Ohio (4 points) and Wisconsin (2 points) - all of which they currently hold.

    Now, I suspect that they will only take Pennsylvania of those three, but the fact that we're even talking about the Democrats possibly gaining Senate seats is extraordinary.

    The House, on the other hand, is another matter. I expect that will be comfortably taken by the Republicans.
    I have a fair position laying a GOP Senate majority - and I've recently taken a small punt on the House, as the long odds look just a bit too long.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,507
    edited August 2022
    rcs1000 said:

    The US Senate polling is not looking great for Republicans. They are currently behind in Pennsylvania (by 11 points), Ohio (4 points) and Wisconsin (2 points) - all of which they currently hold.

    Now, I suspect that they will only take Pennsylvania of those three, but the fact that we're even talking about the Democrats possibly gaining Senate seats is extraordinary.

    The House, on the other hand, is another matter. I expect that will be comfortably taken by the Republicans.
    The Republicans have had quite the track record since 2010, of selecting candidates so batshit that they throw away entirely winnable Senate seats.

    I chattered online with a journalist from Alabama who said that he doubted if Roy Moore even knew how to feed and dress himself.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,273
    TOPPING said:

    I still don't get why this site is so worried about the transmission mechanism of certain views rather than the views themselves.

    Weren't people all in a tizzy because they thought @Heathener was somehow a troll or something on account of their ISP?

    Just discuss the views - we are all robust enough not to worry about who or what may be putting them forward.

    If I said the moon was made out of cheese no one would care a damn, nor I'm guessing argue with me (hey @BartholomewRoberts) because it is transparent rubbish. So apply the same test to posts on here. If they are transparent rubbish don't engage and if they have some merit then do engage.
    Nasa beg to differ:

    https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap020401.html
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    edited August 2022

    Dura_Ace or Dynamo?
    No, the former is a proud and open subversive - note the accounts of his Parish Council activities. :smile:
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    rcs1000 said:

    Indeed.

    However, like all trolls, he/she/they/it has talking points they are obliged to slip in, in particular the regular use of the phrase "Neo-Nazi".
    “Azov Regiment” being the key phrase. They’re taking about what was a few hundred Ukranian defenders, of the lands Russia took in 2014, but in Russian minds they are the Nazis that dominate Eastern Ukraine, and against whom the Russians went for Kiev are fighting in the Donbass.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,553
    Dura_Ace said:

    The Ukrainians have made all sorts of mad bullshit claims since day one of the SMO - all of which have been faithfully regurgitated by their useless idiots on here.
    The US are briefing that Russian dead and injured in Ukraine are around 75,000.

    What number ore you briefing?
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,507
    Nigelb said:

    .

    I have a fair position laying a GOP Senate majority - and I've recently taken a small punt on the House, as the long odds look just a bit too long.
    The generic polling is level-pegging, but I suspect will break somewhat towards the Republicans by November. Even a tie would give the Republicans a reasonable majority in the House, on current boundaries.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    Nigelb said:

    We'll see.

    The Kansas result suggests that some Republican stances are really unpopular when their consequences become obvious.
    The entire GOP effort this cycle has been to try to stymie any legislation by the Democrats irrespective of its contents. The video I posted earlier of a Republican Senator speaking movingly of her two diabetic siblings, and the inequity of insulin pricing, back in 2020 - juxtaposed with her vote yesterday against a cap on that pricing is a small but neat illustration.
    They might shrug off any consequences, but if there's any uptick in the economy, they might take a significant hit.
    Like you I live in hope. But like @rcs1000 I think that the House has almost certainly gone (despite the Dems winning the popular vote once again) thanks to remarkable gerrymandering. The Senate may be closer but given how close it is now I suspect that the Republicans will still end up with a tiny majority.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,852
    All 17 requests to suspend Schröder’s SPD membership on grounds of his Kremlin ties have been declined. He may remain a party member.

    Schröder is “not so far removed from the principles of the SPD” with his statements that it would warrant suspension


    https://twitter.com/minna_alander/status/1556632838925160449
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,507
    DavidL said:

    Like you I live in hope. But like @rcs1000 I think that the House has almost certainly gone (despite the Dems winning the popular vote once again) thanks to remarkable gerrymandering. The Senate may be closer but given how close it is now I suspect that the Republicans will still end up with a tiny majority.
    A bigger problem than gerrymandering is the way the Democrats keep piling up ever greater leads in cities with more than a million people. Their vote is badly distributed.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,155

    Haven't seen Heathener on a while.
    Didn’t Leon finally retire “her” when someone posted that Heathener was Leon?

    I seem to remember his rather relieved “finally” post in response!

  • All 17 requests to suspend Schröder’s SPD membership on grounds of his Kremlin ties have been declined. He may remain a party member.

    Schröder is “not so far removed from the principles of the SPD” with his statements that it would warrant suspension


    https://twitter.com/minna_alander/status/1556632838925160449

    The issue is with the SPD not just Schroder then.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    Sean_F said:

    A bigger problem than gerrymandering is the way the Democrats keep piling up ever greater leads in cities with more than a million people. Their vote is badly distributed.
    Its these huge majorities in specific locations that make gerrymandering so worthwhile. Even worse, those elected in those super safe seats may well be quietly content with the system. If a state has 5 congressmen you set it up so 1 seat is 90:10 but the other 4 are 60:40 in your favour. Simples.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,373
    Sandpit said:

    “Azov Regiment” being the key phrase. They’re taking about what was a few hundred Ukranian defenders, of the lands Russia took in 2014, but in Russian minds they are the Nazis that dominate Eastern Ukraine, and against whom the Russians went for Kiev are fighting in the Donbass.
    Near the start of the war, there was a piece saying that the Russians see 'Nazi' very differently to us, and it has a different association. For us, it is a particular form of fascism that started in 1930s Germany. For them, it is anyone who dares be anti-Russian or anti-Slavic, particularly from lands to the west. They also apparently split 'Nazism' from 'anti-Semitism', for ... reasons.

    In addition, I think it claimed that before the fall of the Berlin wall, 'fascist' was the insult of choice, and preferable to 'Nazi'. That slowly changed after 1990.

    I daresay our resident Russian experts can say more. ;)
  • MISTYMISTY Posts: 1,594
    edited August 2022
    Sean_F said:

    The generic polling is level-pegging, but I suspect will break somewhat towards the Republicans by November. Even a tie would give the Republicans a reasonable majority in the House, on current boundaries.
    Go back to late summer 2020. Some polls showed Biden was going to sweep Florida, NC, Ohio, Iowa and Texas.
  • boulay said:

    Didn’t Leon finally retire “her” when someone posted that Heathener was Leon?

    I seem to remember his rather relieved “finally” post in response!

    I missed that if so, but wasn't it long speculated that Heathener was Leon?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569
    Sean_F said:

    A bigger problem than gerrymandering is the way the Democrats keep piling up ever greater leads in cities with more than a million people. Their vote is badly distributed.
    The level of gerrymandering in the United States is quite frankly shameful. The country has no right to call itself a democracy.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,373

    An ambition and a promise are two very different things.

    Autopilot has never been promised AFAIK.
    People are spending thousands of dollars buying it as an extra!
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,155

    I missed that if so, but wasn't it long
    speculated that Heathener was Leon?
    Maybe we all are!

  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Sean_F said:

    The generic polling is level-pegging, but I suspect will break somewhat towards the Republicans by November. Even a tie would give the Republicans a reasonable majority in the House, on current boundaries.
    I laid the GOP Senate majority at around 1.55 on Betfair; it's now around 2.35 (which still makes them favourite, ahead of NOC).
    A GOP House majority is 1.18 to lay; I'm on at 1.15.
  • People are spending thousands of dollars buying it as an extra!
    But they're buying it "as is" are they not? Any ambitions on future versions are not promised are they?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    Nigelb said:

    No, the former is a proud and open subversive - note the accounts of his Parish Council activities. :smile:
    And also, on his own account, the remarkable efforts to bring Ukranian refugees to this country which, if true, is worthy of considerable admiration. Personally, I choose to believe it.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    We control our laws now post Brexit. We didn't pre Brexit. That's why Brexit was a good thing.

    NATO doesn't control our armed forces. NATO can not compel any nations forces to take any actions they don't want to take. That is something the Americans were absolutely adamant be adopted in NATO from it's very foundation onwards.
    We controlled our laws pre-Brexit and post-Brexit. You are tilting at windmills and, aside from that wholly spurious distinction have failed to describe any tangible benefit of Brexit.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    rcs1000 said:

    The US Senate polling is not looking great for Republicans. They are currently behind in Pennsylvania (by 11 points), Ohio (4 points) and Wisconsin (2 points) - all of which they currently hold.

    Now, I suspect that they will only take Pennsylvania of those three, but the fact that we're even talking about the Democrats possibly gaining Senate seats is extraordinary.

    The House, on the other hand, is another matter. I expect that will be comfortably taken by the Republicans.
    My impression is that this is the most favourable cycle for Democrats because of the States involved and Republicans have overachieved in them in the past. I expect the Senate elections in 2024 and 2026 to be much harder for the Democrats.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    edited August 2022
    A very old story of factional political strife during times of economic pain for the masses, offered as a rough historical analogue for our current politics.
    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/blue-versus-green-rocking-the-byzantine-empire-113325928/

    Readers may come up with their own ideas about the notorious stage act.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,320
    Nigelb said:

    No, the former is a proud and open subversive - note the accounts of his Parish Council activities. :smile:
    I have pretty much managed to destroy it in a functional sense as an executive body.

    Hope lies in the ashes of empires.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    No way @Heathener was @Leon.

    She had much better taste in music for a start.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    DavidL said:

    And also, on his own account, the remarkable efforts to bring Ukranian refugees to this country which, if true, is worthy of considerable admiration. Personally, I choose to believe it.
    I wasn't sitting in judgment on his subversion, but rather offering it in his defence.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,317
    TOPPING said:

    No way @Heathener was @Leon.

    She had much better taste in music for a start.

    ...and a more lucid writing style.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792

    People are spending thousands of dollars buying it as an extra!
    I think it was about 2k extra on mine and it does work. Kind of scary really on the couple of occasions i have tried it. I tend to drive slightly to the right of the lane and it pulls you back into dead centre. It then follows the road and slows down if a vehicle ahead is slower to a distance that you can preprogram. You then put your indicator on to overtake (if on dual carriageway) and it manoeuvres when it believes it to be safe. You just hold onto the wheel and the car does the rest until you hit the break or pull the control stalk down.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    Nigelb said:

    I wasn't sitting in judgment on his subversion, but rather offering it in his defence.
    Yes I got that and I was agreeing with you.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    In our house Father Christmas only gives some low grade presents, things like books, stationery, fruit and chocolate, enough to fill the stockings. Serious presents come from real people. I have never told my kids that Father Christmas isn't real but I think they have all worked it out, just like I did. Same with the tooth fairy. I don't think there's any harm in it, it helps to create a little bit of magic and mystery that somehow lingers on even after you work out the truth.
    Yep, I still remember - and I mean it, I really do - the thrill of early Christmas morning and seeing that my stocking at the foot of the bed was bulging. Or if not "bulging" exactly, had something in it. It usually turned out to be some tangerines but was I disappointed? No, I was not. In fact I was disappointed when my dad stopped doing it, saying "look you're 15 now".
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,630

    Anyway - the Wiltshire fields looked pretty parched on Saturday evening:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y94UwQ5au9Y

    Here is the view from the balcony at Chippenham after my Saturday match.



    Outfield now tending towards 1976 brown.
  • TOPPING said:

    We controlled our laws pre-Brexit and post-Brexit. You are tilting at windmills and, aside from that wholly spurious distinction have failed to describe any tangible benefit of Brexit.
    No, we didn't. The EU Parliament did for many laws. Otherwise, why do you think the EU Parliament existed.

    Now Parliament controls all laws, both those it formerly controlled and those previously controlled by the EU. That is the tangible benefit of Brexit.

    Unless we sign a trade deal that comes with its own Parliament that can rewrite its own rules in the same way, no trade deals are not the same as the EU.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    rcs1000 said:

    Do you have any proof that Musk has not landed a man on Mars?
    Fair point.

    Although I would rate the odds that he would have done so without posting some stupid meme on his Twitter account as very low.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792

    All 17 requests to suspend Schröder’s SPD membership on grounds of his Kremlin ties have been declined. He may remain a party member.

    Schröder is “not so far removed from the principles of the SPD” with his statements that it would warrant suspension


    https://twitter.com/minna_alander/status/1556632838925160449

    No body cares
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,689
    Dura_Ace said:

    I have pretty much managed to destroy it in a functional sense as an executive body.

    Hope lies in the ashes of empires.
    Other Parish Councils have managed to achieve that without your intervention.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733

    The level of gerrymandering in the United States is quite frankly shameful. The country has no right to call itself a democracy.
    Though note their executive has achieved a considerably larger share of the popular vote than has ours in any recent elections. Even, on occasion, a majority. :smile:
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,548


    My impression is that this is the most favourable cycle for Democrats because of the States involved and Republicans have overachieved in them in the past. I expect the Senate elections in 2024 and 2026 to be much harder for the Democrats.
    The GOP is behind in Penn because Trump backed a TV doctor who does not live in the state and the opponent is a "man of the people" and a top campaigner. It is going to be one to watch for sure.

  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    The mid terms re the Senate especially are so volatile that anything could happen .

    What happens with inflation and gas prices could have a big impact but against that the GOP have dug themselves a hole choosing some real nutjobs as candidates . The abortion issue is going to cause them problems and voting against the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 will be in many Dem campaign ads . Refusing to cap insulin prices will also give the Dems plenty of ammunition .

    If inflation edges down and the jobs data remains good then the GOP could actually lose Senate seats .

    The house looks better for the GOP but even there they’ve lost their poll lead although because of gerrymandering the Dems would need to be much further ahead .
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    kinabalu said:

    Yep, I still remember - and I mean it, I really do - the thrill of early Christmas morning and seeing that my stocking at the foot of the bed was bulging. Or if not "bulging" exactly, had something in it. It usually turned out to be some tangerines but was I disappointed? No, I was not. In fact I was disappointed when my dad stopped doing it, saying "look you're 15 now".
    Our youngest (and most cynical) reaching that age did nothing to stop the tradition around here. Its a part of Christmas.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792

    We control our laws now post Brexit. We didn't pre Brexit. That's why Brexit was a good thing.

    NATO doesn't control our armed forces. NATO can not compel any nations forces to take any actions they don't want to take. That is something the Americans were absolutely adamant be adopted in NATO from it's very foundation onwards.
    Er...an attack on one is an attack on all.
  • No body cares
    If "No body cares" that Germany's ruling party wants to pander to Putin like that then thank goodness we're not in a political union with Germany anymore.

    Even if Putin apologists like you think otherwise.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,373

    I think it was about 2k extra on mine and it does work. Kind of scary really on the couple of occasions i have tried it. I tend to drive slightly to the right of the lane and it pulls you back into dead centre. It then follows the road and slows down if a vehicle ahead is slower to a distance that you can preprogram. You then put your indicator on to overtake (if on dual carriageway) and it manoeuvres when it believes it to be safe. You just hold onto the wheel and the car does the rest until you hit the break or pull the control stalk down.
    I think the UK version is different to the US's one, is it not?

    Besides, what are you getting over and above the driver-assistance aids by GM, Merc etc?

    (Heck, Mrs J's Hyundai I20 has quite a good lane-keeping ability. Although you notice where and when it doesn't work...)
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,630
    boulay said:

    Maybe we all are!

    Also been speculated on before...
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    edited August 2022
    Sandpit said:

    Those who thought that self-driving cars were an 80/20 problem, have spent the last decade learning that they’re a 99.999/0.001 problem.
    I know it is my favourite example but a South Korean professor built a self driving car using a 386 processor back in the early 90s which he took on a city to city drive.

    https://techwireasia.com/2021/04/this-self-driving-car-drove-safely-all-over-south-korea-in-1993/

    We are not appreciably further forward.
  • Er...an attack on one is an attack on all.
    Is a principle, not a compelled action. NATO can't compel action, that is a founding principle of NATO.

    America could in theory turn around and say they consider an attack on a European nation as an attack on them, but they've chosen to do nothing militarily about it. America has been open and adamant on that principle since day one, since they were wanting to avoid getting dragged into conflicts based on imperial possessions etc
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806

    Also been speculated on before...
    You can't all be me, because I am just the idle creation of a bored @Mysticrose
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    IshmaelZ said:

    Yes, I know that. My point is a lorry is such a different deal from a car I think I, and everyone else driving them, should have had training and passed a specific test.
    Yes. I passed my test in 86 and I did not know, and am a little perturbed to now know, that I am allowed to drive a lorry about the place.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    I’m Heathener.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Dura_Ace said:

    I have pretty much managed to destroy it in a functional sense as an executive body.

    Hope lies in the ashes of empires.
    We're living in one such pile.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,373

    But they're buying it "as is" are they not? Any ambitions on future versions are not promised are they?
    Not really. Features are 'promised' for the future - which is why the lie about the 2017 coast-to-coast drive was so bad. People would have spent thousands on autopilot/FSD on the back of that, thinking they would have it good enough to be a demo in a year. They haven't managed it five years later. By which time many people would have got a new car anyway.

    I'm sadly expecting bait-and-switch on FSD.

    But seriously, would we expect this from any other area of life? "They promised a four bedroom home, but I got a two bedroom that catches afire occasionally. I'm fine with it though, because it's branded with the company I like..."

    Witness also the massive backlog they have for Tesla solar roofs, and their shitty attempts to put up prices for those who have ordered, but are waiting.

    https://electrek.co/2021/09/20/tesla-agrees-finally-honor-solar-roof-prices-signed-contracts/
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792

    If "No body cares" that Germany's ruling party wants to pander to Putin like that then thank goodness we're not in a political union with Germany anymore.

    Even if Putin apologists like you think otherwise.
    I am a Putin apologist? lol. Point out one post you keyboard warrior fuckwit?

    Actually, do yourself and the rest of us a favour and go and get yourself a job you lazy twat and then you might have something useful to say on here from a perspective of experience instead of what you read in the Daily Express. You add nothing to this site other than to give the peabrained perspective of the average monumentally gullible and emotionally retarded right wing pillock.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,373
    Alistair said:

    I know it is my favourite example but a South Korean professor built a self driving car using a 386 processor back in the early 90s which he took on a city to city drive.

    https://techwireasia.com/2021/04/this-self-driving-car-drove-safely-all-over-south-korea-in-1993/

    We are not appreciably further forward.
    This.

    The original DARPA Grand Challenge was awesome, though, and I think we've gone a long way since then.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DARPA_Grand_Challenge
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062
    edited August 2022

    Is a principle, not a compelled action. NATO can't compel action, that is a founding principle of NATO.

    America could in theory turn around and say they consider an attack on a European nation as an attack on them, but they've chosen to do nothing militarily about it. America has been open and adamant on that principle since day one, since they were wanting to avoid getting dragged into conflicts based on imperial possessions etc
    If any NATO nation is attacked then all other NATO nations are expected to defend it, including the US. Ukraine is not in NATO and since NATO was founded in 1949 no NATO nation has been invaded so the theory has not been tested but that is the iron law of NATO.

    However if a NATO nation was invaded and any NATO nation refused to defend it by definition it would be expelled from NATO for having broken the core rule of the alliance
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,677

    Near the start of the war, there was a piece saying that the Russians see 'Nazi' very differently to us, and it has a different association. For us, it is a particular form of fascism that started in 1930s Germany. For them, it is anyone who dares be anti-Russian or anti-Slavic, particularly from lands to the west. They also apparently split 'Nazism' from 'anti-Semitism', for ... reasons.

    In addition, I think it claimed that before the fall of the Berlin wall, 'fascist' was the insult of choice, and preferable to 'Nazi'. That slowly changed after 1990.

    I daresay our resident Russian experts can say more. ;)
    I hesitate to engage on this stuff as it's so wrapped up in ulterior motives, but there isn't really any dispute that Azov was set up as a neo-Nazi organisation and that it had an unhealthy overlap with Ukrainian ultra-nationalism. The founder, Andriy Biletsky, said in 2010 that the Ukrainian nation's mission is to "lead the white races of the world in a final crusade … against Semite-led Untermenschen". Equally, there isn't any doubt that efforts have been made to tone it down. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azov_Regiment#Neo-Nazism for what looks like a reasonably balanced discussion.

    It's also true that Russians tend to think of the Nazis primarily as the people who slaughtered millions of Russians for ultra-nationalist reasons, so groups like this are useful to Putin to whip up feeling against Ukrainian nationalism. But does any of that justify the invasion? No.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    Also been speculated on before...
    Heathener is (was) Mystic Rose and neither are Fruity Leon.

    You can trust me on this. It's one of my specialities.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806

    No, we didn't. The EU Parliament did for many laws. Otherwise, why do you think the EU Parliament existed.

    Now Parliament controls all laws, both those it formerly controlled and those previously controlled by the EU. That is the tangible benefit of Brexit.

    Unless we sign a trade deal that comes with its own Parliament that can rewrite its own rules in the same way, no trade deals are not the same as the EU.
    I honestly don't know why you guys are bothering to have this debate for the XXXth time

    It is like listening to Catholics argue with Protestants - during the Early Reformation

    You have such differing conceptions of reality there can be no meeting ground, and no one will ever be persuaded to change their mind. Sovereigntist Brexiteers - like you and me - sincerely believe that to restore British democracy and sovereignty we had to leave the fundamentally undemocratic EU. Obviously

    Committed EU-philes believe we had complete sovereignty in the EU, and that is proven by the fact we were eventually able to leave it (albeit taking a beating on the way out). To my mind that is a preposterous idea that borders on the infantile, nevertheless I will afford my fellow PB-ers the respect of honouring this as a "truth" they genuinely believe

    But if that's the way they see the world then they are in a parallel universe to us, and never the twain shall meet. So we could all save a lot of tine for more interesting chat about aliens if we abandoned this particular unresolvable dispute
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,012
    Just before the Olympics when Putin had already assembled his invasion force and had his tête-à-tête with Xi it seemed that they might operate as a tag team versus Ukraine/Taiwan, as I commented at the time.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,823
    DavidL said:

    Our youngest (and most cynical) reaching that age did nothing to stop the tradition around here. Its a part of Christmas.
    My wife and I are compatible in almost every respect, but we come from different traditions on this one. My Christmas was as described above - one of my Dad's old climbing socks hung at the end of the bed, thrillingly bulging in the morning. Tangerines, polos, maybe a book, some Highland Toffee... giddiliy exciting. Anything bigger would be from my mum and dad, and was under the tree. (I'm 47 now, and they still bring cintrive to get Father Christmas to bring me and the wife a stocking each, bless 'em.) This to me is the how far Santa's should go. Whereas in her house, Santa brought an absolute shed load of gifts for the kids, piled up high and all opened before breakfast. Only one token present from the parents. What we do with the kids is an uneasy balance between the two which neither of us, in all honesty, are entirely happy with.
    Still, by the time it comes to start prepping lunch and dis-ease is long in the past.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806
    I've suddenly realised that @Dynamo is clearly @malcolmg

    Of course!

    This is fun
  • DynamoDynamo Posts: 651

    I am a Putin apologist? lol. Point out one post you keyboard warrior fuckwit?

    Actually, do yourself and the rest of us a favour and go and get yourself a job you lazy twat and then you might have something useful to say on here from a perspective of experience instead of what you read in the Daily Express. You add nothing to this site other than to give the peabrained perspective of the average monumentally gullible and emotionally retarded right wing pillock.
    Some things don't change from one generation to another:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MfzwIms-M5M

    So lefties aren't all traitors and Britain haters who either know they love Putin or who are his useful idiots, who won't even stand up and salute for God Save the Queen, and who want to encourage every little boy to wonder if he was born a little girl, etc., etc., as they plot to commit the wickedest filthiest sin of all possible sins by raising taxes on income received by hardworking business owners and genuine contributors to society and even on their estates after they die, so that the money can be given in handouts to degenerates living on council estates? :-)

    Mind you, anyone who has watched the Manchurian Candidate knows that sometimes where assets of foreign governments are concerned it's a case of "he who smelled it, dealt it".

    Khrushchev said that if he were British he would vote Tory.
    No prizes for guessing who Tories would support now, and which party they would have supported in the past, if they were Russian.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733

    I hesitate to engage on this stuff as it's so wrapped up in ulterior motives, but there isn't really any dispute that Azov was set up as a neo-Nazi organisation and that it had an unhealthy overlap with Ukrainian ultra-nationalism. The founder, Andriy Biletsky, said in 2010 that the Ukrainian nation's mission is to "lead the white races of the world in a final crusade … against Semite-led Untermenschen". Equally, there isn't any doubt that efforts have been made to tone it down. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azov_Regiment#Neo-Nazism for what looks like a reasonably balanced discussion.

    It's also true that Russians tend to think of the Nazis primarily as the people who slaughtered millions of Russians for ultra-nationalist reasons, so groups like this are useful to Putin to whip up feeling against Ukrainian nationalism. But does any of that justify the invasion? No.
    It's also true that Russia has its own rather more significant lot of neo-Nazis in the Wagner Group. We have some of our own in this country.
    But as far as invading other nations is concerned, that's completely irrelevant.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,373
    edited August 2022

    I hesitate to engage on this stuff as it's so wrapped up in ulterior motives, but there isn't really any dispute that Azov was set up as a neo-Nazi organisation and that it had an unhealthy overlap with Ukrainian ultra-nationalism. The founder, Andriy Biletsky, said in 2010 that the Ukrainian nation's mission is to "lead the white races of the world in a final crusade … against Semite-led Untermenschen". Equally, there isn't any doubt that efforts have been made to tone it down. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azov_Regiment#Neo-Nazism for what looks like a reasonably balanced discussion.

    It's also true that Russians tend to think of the Nazis primarily as the people who slaughtered millions of Russians for ultra-nationalist reasons, so groups like this are useful to Putin to whip up feeling against Ukrainian nationalism. But does any of that justify the invasion? No.
    I agree with that. But I'd also add Russia's own (ahem) neo-Nazi problem. Which backs up the view that Russians define Nazism differently. *Their* neo-Nazis are fine, as long as they fight for Russia and the regime.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited August 2022
    A Woolie is Arya Stark of Winterfell and i'm going home.

    Truss leads Starmer 38 to 35 as best PM, LLG still 57, ConRef ticks back up to 38, but still nothing over 35 for Con since March's Kantar, they will need 37/38 plus to get anywhere near 300 seats

    Labour leads by 5%.

    Westminster Voting Intention (7 August):

    Labour 40% (–)
    Conservative 35% (+3)
    Liberal Democrat 12% (-1)
    Green 5% (+1)
    Scottish National Party 4% (–)
    Reform UK 3% (-1)
    Plaid Cymru 1% (–)
    Other 1% (-1)

    Changes +/- 4 August

    https://t.co/r0DzGHMZYe https://t.co/w2nJiVzs0f
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062
    edited August 2022
    Leon said:

    I honestly don't know why you guys are bothering to have this debate for the XXXth time

    It is like listening to Catholics argue with Protestants - during the Early Reformation

    You have such differing conceptions of reality there can be no meeting ground, and no one will ever be persuaded to change their mind. Sovereigntist Brexiteers - like you and me - sincerely believe that to restore British democracy and sovereignty we had to leave the fundamentally undemocratic EU. Obviously

    Committed EU-philes believe we had complete sovereignty in the EU, and that is proven by the fact we were eventually able to leave it (albeit taking a beating on the way out). To my mind that is a preposterous idea that borders on the infantile, nevertheless I will afford my fellow PB-ers the respect of honouring this as a "truth" they genuinely believe

    But if that's the way they see the world then they are in a parallel universe to us, and never the twain shall meet. So we could all save a lot of tine for more interesting chat about aliens if we abandoned this particular unresolvable dispute
    To an extent it still is, 90% of EU Eurozone nations are Roman Catholic in terms of their largest religious group, the UK is Protestant plurality. Most of the Protestant Lutheran plurality nations are in Scandinavia now and not in the Eurozone or in EFTA but not the EU.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,373
    Nigelb said:

    It's also true that Russia has its own rather more significant lot of neo-Nazis in the Wagner Group. We have some of our own in this country.
    But as far as invading other nations is concerned, that's completely irrelevant.
    As a teenager I knew someone who, allegedly, had been a neo-Nazi a decade earlier. He was never anything other than polite and kind to me, and to a couple of foreign-born girlfriends of mine. The rumour might just have been that-a nasty rumour. I'd like to think he was Thatcher's secret agent against neo-Nazism: no-one would ever join any political group he was in. ;)
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Regarding the midterms....

    U.S. consumers' inflation outlooks drop sharply, NY Fed survey shows
    https://www.reuters.com/markets/us/us-consumers-inflation-outlooks-drop-sharply-ny-fed-survey-shows-2022-08-08/
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,823
    Cookie said:

    My wife and I are compatible in almost every respect, but we come from different traditions on this one. My Christmas was as described above - one of my Dad's old climbing socks hung at the end of the bed, thrillingly bulging in the morning. Tangerines, polos, maybe a book, some Highland Toffee... giddiliy exciting. Anything bigger would be from my mum and dad, and was under the tree. (I'm 47 now, and they still bring cintrive to get Father Christmas to bring me and the wife a stocking each, bless 'em.) This to me is the how far Santa's should go. Whereas in her house, Santa brought an absolute shed load of gifts for the kids, piled up high and all opened before breakfast. Only one token present from the parents. What we do with the kids is an uneasy balance between the two which neither of us, in all honesty, are entirely happy with.
    Still, by the time it comes to start prepping lunch and dis-ease is long in the past.
    *any* dis-ease.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    Leon said:

    I honestly don't know why you guys are bothering to have this debate for the XXXth time

    It is like listening to Catholics argue with Protestants - during the Early Reformation

    You have such differing conceptions of reality there can be no meeting ground, and no one will ever be persuaded to change their mind. Sovereigntist Brexiteers - like you and me - sincerely believe that to restore British democracy and sovereignty we had to leave the fundamentally undemocratic EU. Obviously

    Committed EU-philes believe we had complete sovereignty in the EU, and that is proven by the fact we were eventually able to leave it (albeit taking a beating on the way out). To my mind that is a preposterous idea that borders on the infantile, nevertheless I will afford my fellow PB-ers the respect of honouring this as a "truth" they genuinely believe

    But if that's the way they see the world then they are in a parallel universe to us, and never the twain shall meet. So we could all save a lot of tine for more interesting chat about aliens if we abandoned this particular unresolvable dispute
    ts'easy.

    Europhobes: no confidence in their country; deeply insecure, need tangible reassurance about their place in the world, always worried what the big boys are saying.

    Europhiles: supremely at ease with the world and their place in it, cool, laid back, confident, are the big boys.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806
    Talking of MAZEBOMBS old music, this impromptu version of Whole Lotta Love - with one guy on a guitar and another just shrieking into a mic - is incredible


    https://twitter.com/BrianRoemmele/status/1555905631764168705?s=20&t=uOJghHE_thQMQZKGSior6Q
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Leon said:

    I've suddenly realised that @Dynamo is clearly @malcolmg

    Of course!

    This is fun

    Malcolm is pithier, and talk far more sense.
  • MISTYMISTY Posts: 1,594
    HYUFD said:

    To an extent it still is, 90% of EU Eurozone nations are Roman Catholic in terms of their largest religious group, the UK is Protestant plurality. Most of the Protestant Lutheran plurality nations are in Scandinavia now and not in the Eurozone or in EFTA but not the EU.

    Henry VIII's break with Rome was the Brexit of its day?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806
    TOPPING said:

    ts'easy.

    Europhobes: no confidence in their country; deeply insecure, need tangible reassurance about their place in the world, always worried what the big boys are saying.

    Europhiles: supremely at ease with the world and their place in it, cool, laid back, confident, are the big boys.
    Yes dear. Have another Chocolate Hobnob
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062

    A Woolie is Arya Stark of Winterfell and i'm going home.

    Truss leads Starmer 38 to 35 as best PM, LLG still 57, ConRef ticks back up to 38, but still nothing over 35 for Con since March's Kantar, they will need 37/38 plus to get anywhere near 300 seats

    Labour leads by 5%.

    Westminster Voting Intention (7 August):

    Labour 40% (–)
    Conservative 35% (+3)
    Liberal Democrat 12% (-1)
    Green 5% (+1)
    Scottish National Party 4% (–)
    Reform UK 3% (-1)
    Plaid Cymru 1% (–)
    Other 1% (-1)

    Changes +/- 4 August

    https://t.co/r0DzGHMZYe https://t.co/w2nJiVzs0f

    Starmer leads Sunak 40% to 34%
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    Meanwhile, the Stranglers are on tour. Right this minute. OK well 1/4 of the originals (JJ Burnel) but they are on tour.

    There are zillions of old bands now on the touring circuit including Sham 69 god help us and other blasts from the past.

    Given our discussions about Ukraine/Russia I hope not Skrewdriver et al.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062
    edited August 2022
    MISTY said:


    Henry VIII's break with Rome was the Brexit of its day?
    https://www.jstor.org/stable/90015886

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpegKeUWicY
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806
    edited August 2022
    MISTY said:


    Henry VIII's break with Rome was the Brexit of its day?
    The comparison has oft been made, and is quite apt, right down to the Remoaners being recusants, conspiring with foreign powers - Catholic Spain/Brussels - to take Protestant Brexity Britain back into the Roman fold

    They failed then, and they will fail again
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,135
    TOPPING said:

    Europhobes: no confidence in their country; deeply insecure, need tangible reassurance about their place in the world, always worried what the big boys are saying.

    Brexit encapsulated.

    "Mummy, mummy, mummy, mummy, are we the best?"
  • juniusjunius Posts: 73
    Have informed HMRC that I am on holiday so won't be paying any taxes until until, or if, I return on 5th September.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    HYUFD said:

    Starmer leads Sunak 40% to 34%
    Is he still a thing?!
  • Leon said:

    The comparison has oft been made, and is quite apt, right down to the Remoaners being recusants, conspiring with foreign powers - Catholic Spain/Brussels - to take Protestant Brexity Britain back into the Roman fold

    They failed, and they will fail again
    Rejoining would be the 21st century answer to the Restoration of 1660.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,273
    Leon said:

    I honestly don't know why you guys are bothering to have this debate for the XXXth time

    It is like listening to Catholics argue with Protestants - during the Early Reformation

    You have such differing conceptions of reality there can be no meeting ground, and no one will ever be persuaded to change their mind. Sovereigntist Brexiteers - like you and me - sincerely believe that to restore British democracy and sovereignty we had to leave the fundamentally undemocratic EU. Obviously

    Committed EU-philes believe we had complete sovereignty in the EU, and that is proven by the fact we were eventually able to leave it (albeit taking a beating on the way out). To my mind that is a preposterous idea that borders on the infantile, nevertheless I will afford my fellow PB-ers the respect of honouring this as a "truth" they genuinely believe

    But if that's the way they see the world then they are in a parallel universe to us, and never the twain shall meet. So we could all save a lot of tine for more interesting chat about aliens if we abandoned this particular unresolvable dispute
    Last headcount had 3 people switching sides after 6 years of intense debate, for a net change of 1 poster. Fuhgeddaboudit.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    Last headcount had 3 people switching sides after 6 years of intense debate, for a net change of 1 poster. Fuhgeddaboudit.
    Yeah but how they switched. Made up in energy for around 100 posters apiece.
  • Interesting, thanks for that. I have had my Tesla (which I love) for just over a year and had the full monty autopilot put on it but have never really used it. Possibly too much of a control freak!
    Here is a driving instruction channel on Youtube trying Tesla Autopilot round Liverpool. Basically, it reacts late and gets confused by street markings; adaptive cruise control is better.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jDLE9oRqOk
  • @Sunil_Prasannan - a late huge congrats for completing the UK rail network. Correct me if I'm wrong, this is basically all the rail lines, plus all tube/metro/tram?

    I assume you drew the line at preserved railways?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    Rejoining would be the 21st century answer to the Restoration of 1660.
    It would lead to a violent revolution against the leadership in 30 years time?
  • Scott_xP said:

    Brexit encapsulated.

    "Mummy, mummy, mummy, mummy, are we the best?"
    "No, your grandpa is still better, becuase he fought an actual war against an actual tyranny."
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806
    TOPPING said:

    Yeah but how they switched. Made up in energy for around 100 posters apiece.
    @williamglenn is the only Remain > Leave switcher I think?

    @kinabalu and @RochdalePioneers went the other way. I vaguely remember one more?

    Not sure how we'd count @HYUFD
  • Leon said:

    @williamglenn is the only Remain > Leave switcher I think?

    @kinabalu and @RochdalePioneers went the other way. I vaguely remember one more?

    Not sure how we'd count @HYUFD
    Remain > Leave
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    Leon said:

    I honestly don't know why you guys are bothering to have this debate for the XXXth time

    It is like listening to Catholics argue with Protestants - during the Early Reformation

    You have such differing conceptions of reality there can be no meeting ground, and no one will ever be persuaded to change their mind. Sovereigntist Brexiteers - like you and me - sincerely believe that to restore British democracy and sovereignty we had to leave the fundamentally undemocratic EU. Obviously

    Committed EU-philes believe we had complete sovereignty in the EU, and that is proven by the fact we were eventually able to leave it (albeit taking a beating on the way out). To my mind that is a preposterous idea that borders on the infantile, nevertheless I will afford my fellow PB-ers the respect of honouring this as a "truth" they genuinely believe

    But if that's the way they see the world then they are in a parallel universe to us, and never the twain shall meet. So we could all save a lot of tine for more interesting chat about aliens if we abandoned this particular unresolvable dispute
    Take the 'tone' out of this and I agree. Brexit was fuelled - at it's intellectual Dan Hannon end - by the idea that EU membership was incompatible with true national sovereignty. Now for me that's a noddy archaic view of what sovereignty means in this complicated superconnected world, but still, it's not something that can be called plain wrong.

    Interestingly, a couple of weeks ago Northern Monkey wrote a post illustrating exactly this, using an analogy of a bloke he knew with a desperate yearning, come what may, to be his own boss rather than an employee. It was a v good post and got lots of likes. Yet Leavers such as Casino Royale went ape about it, saying it was rubbish and all those who'd 'liked' it were a disgrace.

    Fragile fragile Leavers.
This discussion has been closed.