Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

Getting the tone of an ad completely wrong – politicalbetting.com

123578

Comments

  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,578
    MISTY said:

    Lamont was chancellor, indeed, but I think I remember the Bundesbank guy saying it was Clark who actually appeared before him in person.

    Clark become chancellor later in the parliament, and very good he was, too.
    Why would it be the Home Secretary? Unless it was a personal touch but it seems a bit unlikely.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,706
    edited August 2022

    Rooftops, especially if they're not South-facing, may not always be the best option though.

    But surely it comes down to personal choice? If a firm like Amazon wants to install solar then that should be their choice and they should be able to do so.

    If a farmer wants to install solar, then that should be their choice, and why should they be denied that choice while Amazon get to choose to do so?
    Good points.

    Because we a country not a simple collection of individuals, and it is quite appropriate that the country has a say in land usage which will preserve its security, and meet its objectives.

    In the UK's case, two particular current pressures are limited land and food security, plus of course recreation resources, so it is reasonable to have some general principles of land use and let free markets work within that regulation. AFAIK every country in the world has some form of control on land use.

    why should they be denied that choice while Amazon get to choose to do so?

    Because a warehouse roof is not the same as an agricultural field. Two different contexts.

    On the South Facing roofs point, most eg warehouse roods or airfields are essentially flat these days, so you can technically point them wherever you want. Or indeed make them sun-seeking for maximum output if the numbers work taking into account the extra gubbins required, and the energy need.

    South facing roofs maximise output for the summer, but E/W facing (for example) give a far better performace in the shoulder (Spring / Autumn) months. You design it for the need, and the circumstances. You can explore that using the PVGIS package.
    https://joint-research-centre.ec.europa.eu/pvgis-photovoltaic-geographical-information-system_en

    My solar panels face East (70%) and West (30%). I'm in the process of adjusting that to be E 30%, S 40%, W 30% for better performance throughout the year - which will require a new veranda.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,725
    IshmaelZ said:

    Again: I look at a fairfew of these things. What you claim may happen in foreign parts, not here. They are all at ground level and fenced like Colditz.
    This report has some good pictures, including outbuildings and fences required:

    https://solargrazing.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Solar-Sheep-REPORT.pdf
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,239
    edited August 2022
    MISTY said:

    Lamont was chancellor, indeed, but I think I remember the Bundesbank guy saying it was Clark who actually appeared before him in person.

    Clark become chancellor later in the parliament, and very good he was, too.
    Ken Clarke became Chancellor in a government with no economic policy at all after the ERM debacle.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    So yes, objected to by contemptible NIMBY scum objecting to "views", not the farmer with the land.

    NIMBY fuckwits really are a pox upon this country.
    You are lovely when you are angry.

    The thing is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. your unlimited immigration stance tends to increase the value of your house. You can't take your "assume maximum bad faith" stance against others, and claim immunity yourself.

    Parasite.

    Oh and by the way, unlimited development everywhere on balance increases the value of my house as people flee to the comparative protection of the national parks, so I would scarcely be against it for that reason. And secondly there *is* development even here, and near me, and in 30 years do you know how many proposals I have objected to or petitioned against? Guess.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,891
    Outside PB and Twitter no one cares about Brexit. It’s the major issue for about 5-10% of the population - and that is falling

    It really is a harvest of misery to care passionately about something - Rejoin - that is vanishingly unlikely in the lifetime of anyone here

    Don’t do it
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,578

    Ken Clarke became Chancellor in a government with no economic policy at all after the ERM debacle.
    Bit like the incoming Chancellor then?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,891
    That was a public service announcement
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    In which case, a fairly obvious solution presents itself.
    (Guessing, putting the panels low down is done to reduce the visual blight.)
    Cheaper. Why put a heavy windcatching thing on stilts if you don't have to?

    But you can't retrofit this, so why are new applications not subject to a sheep may safely graze clause?
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,168
    edited August 2022
    Leon said:

    Outside PB and Twitter no one cares about Brexit.

    I posted a comment about an article in the Telegraph

    And you collectively shit yourselves, for 2 entire threads
  • BTW:

    Is he plural of 'roof' roofs or rooves?

    I was taught 'rooves', but it always looks wrong to me when written, but better when spoken.

    Still lifes or still lives?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,891
    Scott_xP said:

    I posted a comment about an article in the Telegraph

    And you collectively shit yourself, for 2 entire threads

    Of course I did. In other news you are a tragic fuck and I am having a large glass of Picpoul at City airport
  • Leon said:

    That was a public service announcement

    Rejoining would be the 21st century answer to the Restoration of 1660.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,306
    Leon said:

    Outside PB and Twitter no one cares about Brexit. It’s the major issue for about 5-10% of the population - and that is falling

    It really is a harvest of misery to care passionately about something - Rejoin - that is vanishingly unlikely in the lifetime of anyone here

    Don’t do it

    On the contrary.

    Polling for Rejoin is very strong. No major party in England will be proposing it in their manifesto for GE 2024, but it cannot be ignored forever.

    Sooner or later the fly encrusted unflushable turd of Brexit will be dealt with.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,266
    IshmaelZ said:

    Again: I look at a fairfew of these things. What you claim may happen in foreign parts, not here. They are all at ground level and fenced like Colditz.
    This (somewhat old) report claims otherwise, with some case studies.
    https://www.bre.co.uk/filelibrary/nsc/Documents Library/NSC Publications/NSC_-Guid_Agricultural-good-practice-for-SFs_0914.pdf

    Not sure how intensively grazed though - one case study speaks of "more than 20 geese" (so probably <25) on a 4 hectare site. Anecdotally, there are solar panels on a farm near us, which are at ground level and grazed by sheep, but I don't know how many sheep or what impact the panels have on that (observed on a walk a few weeks back).
  • Rejoining would be the 21st century answer to the Restoration of 1660.
    When did that go from impossible to inevitable? Things often do that.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,407
    carnforth said:

    This report has some good pictures, including outbuildings and fences required:

    https://solargrazing.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Solar-Sheep-REPORT.pdf
    There's a solar farm right outside our village, and it isn't too intrusive.

    Especially when compared to the massive amount of land taken up by coniferous woodland, under which little sodding else grows if it's too intensive.
  • MattW said:

    Good points.

    Because we a country not a simple collection of individuals, and it is quite appropriate that the country has a say in land usage which will preserve its security, and meet its objectives.

    In the UK's case, two particular current pressures are limited land and food security, plus of course recreation resources, so it is reasonable to have some general principles of land use and let free markets work within that regulation. AFAIK every country in the world has some form of control on land use.

    why should they be denied that choice while Amazon get to choose to do so?

    Because a warehouse roof is not the same as an agricultural field. Two different contexts.

    On the South Facing roofs point, most eg warehouse roods or airfields are essentially flat these days, so you can technically point them wherever you want. Or indeed make them sun-seeking for maximum output if the numbers work taking into account the extra gubbins required, and the energy need.

    South facing roofs maximise output for the summer, but E/W facing (for example) give a far better performace in the shoulder (Spring / Autumn) months. You design it for the need, and the circumstances. You can explore that using the PVGIS package.
    https://joint-research-centre.ec.europa.eu/pvgis-photovoltaic-geographical-information-system_en

    My solar panels face East (70%) and West (30%). I'm in the process of adjusting that to be E 30%, S 40%, W 30% for better performance throughout the year - which will require a new veranda.
    If limited land and food security were seriously the issue and not the excuse they really are surely we'd be looking to abolish bio fuels? And reduce the proportion of bio fuels put into Unleaded etc rather than doubling it?

    Funny how the NIMBY scum object to electricity being provided instead of food security but don't object to bio fuels being provided instead of food security.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,891
    Not wrong


    “The approaching tsunami of addictive AI-created content will overwhelm us”



    “”Move 37”, as it became known, marked a key moment in machine learning, because it really was a point where the system went beyond what humans could devise.”

    https://socialwarming.substack.com/p/the-approaching-tsunami-of-addictive
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,706
    edited August 2022
    Pulpstar said:

    Sheep are quite happy to wonder in and around solar panels.
    Absolutely correct, however the shade does reduce the grass growth and therefore the number of sheep. It's a hybrid model a little parallel to hybrid open forest / pasture agricultural systems being explored for the last few years.

    There is some interesting stuff about solar panels in drier fields, and whether they can actually help improve the quality of the pasture.

    One interesting thing in the news - has anyone else noted the extensive use of linear woodlands (where the forces hide) on the steppe in Ukraine, presumably to abate the wind and help the agriculture?
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    carnforth said:

    This report has some good pictures, including outbuildings and fences required:

    https://solargrazing.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Solar-Sheep-REPORT.pdf
    It does. it also supports the thesis that these fields are not in practice grazed and could only in theory be with a lot of retrofitting. The faarmers currently can't be arsed, for a reason.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,706

    In which case, a fairly obvious solution presents itself.
    (Guessing, putting the panels low down is done to reduce the visual blight.)
    Or to reduce the cost of structures.

    It's also quite common to use highish hedges to hide the panels.
  • Foxy said:

    On the contrary.

    Polling for Rejoin is very strong. No major party in England will be proposing it in their manifesto for GE 2024, but it cannot be ignored forever.

    Sooner or later the fly encrusted unflushable turd of Brexit will be dealt with.
    It's funny though as didn't you and other Remoaners used to say that Brexit polled badly because only the unprompted polling mattered? And that forced choice polls weren't significant, the fact that people weren't listing Brexit as an unprompted issue showed it didn't matter?

    How is Rejoin polling presently as an issue on unprompted polls?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,306
    dixiedean said:

    In some ways yes. In others no.
    You're far closer in terms of computer literacy, being on social media, and music tastes. 65 isn't that old.
    Leon is a classic Boomer. Old but clinging to the tastes of his youth.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,313
    The other day I said you could put solar panels on warehouses, factories, industrial estates, etc. You don't need to put them on farmland.
  • MISTYMISTY Posts: 1,594
    edited August 2022
    ydoethur said:

    Why would it be the Home Secretary? Unless it was a personal touch but it seems a bit unlikely.
    Yes indeed, but Clark was passionately pro-Europe, and maybe wanted to take a personal hand in trying to rescue the EMS or at least underpin the European project to some extent.

    Or maybe I misremembered.

    Many who experienced the EMS crisis thought it had put paid to the notion of the euro for good, but along it came anyway.

    Still,for me, the whole project has massive flaws, as the ECB's predicament now illustrates. I imagine they'll get through it though, they always do.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,706

    You think farmers in rural constituencies (where the hustings started) are not Conservative members? That they are not worried about the loss of CAP subsidies and the impact of trade deals increasing competition from Australia and in future America? They are not complaining about solar panels, they are complaining (or even threatening) that they may be forced into them if traditional agriculture dies.
    That particular scheme sounds under-considered by the promoter.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,277
    MattW said:

    Or to reduce the cost of structures.

    It's also quite common to use highish hedges to hide the panels.
    Or use a belt of trees?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,579

    So yes, objected to by contemptible NIMBY scum objecting to "views", not the farmer with the land.

    NIMBY fuckwits really are a pox upon this country.
    But they are now a core LibDem constituency.....
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,964
    HYUFD said:

    We didn't go to war with Germany when they took over Austria or Czechoslovakia did we, only when Hitler invaded Poland. Hitler also didn't have nuclear weapons unlike Putin
    Just what I was saying, young HY. Our Conservative Government did not go to war at the right time, while Hitler was relatively weak..... They went in for appeasement, as you want to do now.

    On the second point, Putin does not have a Luftwaffe..... This was for everyday use, as it were, and absolutely terrifying. You probably do not remember.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,141

    You think farmers in rural constituencies (where the hustings started) are not Conservative members? That they are not worried about the loss of CAP subsidies and the impact of trade deals increasing competition from Australia and in future America? They are not complaining about solar panels, they are complaining (or even threatening) that they may be forced into them if traditional agriculture dies.
    There is zero chance of a trade deal between Truss and Biden anyway
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    If limited land and food security were seriously the issue and not the excuse they really are surely we'd be looking to abolish bio fuels? And reduce the proportion of bio fuels put into Unleaded etc rather than doubling it?

    Funny how the NIMBY scum object to electricity being provided instead of food security but don't object to bio fuels being provided instead of food security.
    First rule of debating: if you say scum, you lose.

    Pleased I have seen through your little immigration/house price inflation scam. Can't see your name now without getting a MARRS "Pump up the value" earworm.
  • Andy_JS said:

    The other day I said you could put solar panels on warehouses, factories, industrial estates, etc. You don't need to put them on farmland.

    You don't "need" to put anything, anywhere.

    If farmers want to put solar panels on their land, they should have that prerogative.

    If warehouses which are glorified tin cans can't support the weight of a solar panel and their owners don't want to install them, that should be their prerogative.

    Why should a farmer be denied the right to choose to install solar panels, if they want to do so? And if the answer is food security, should we be banning bio fuels too?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,579

    Or use a belt of trees?
    Only on the northern boundary. Anything else will block sunlight, especially in winter and if conifers.
  • MattW said:

    Very fair comment.

    From what I see, portal frame buildings are likely to be the least suitable, and perhaps old and small ones - our 7000 sqft gym, for example, is in a medium height former warehouse (ceiling 6-9m). But if a roof is carrying aircon, water, and heating, then it bears a look.

    There is also surrounding land, and surrounding car parks.

    I think there are various unaddressed opportunities - perhaps airfields is one of the most obvious. Heathrow is 2 square miles, for example.

    I agree. I think there is huge scope here.

    I also come back to my long term gripe. Why do we not insist that every new house built in the UK has solar panels fitted as standard at the time of building. Economies of scale would make it much cheaper, there would also not be the hassle of retrofitting and if you are paying £200K for a new house then to be honest the difference between £199K and £202K is bugger all when you are going for a mortgage.

    I do understand that certain properties might not be suitable and also that there is a debate about what sort of solar panelling is used but all of that applies to retrofitting as well.

    So my first environmental action when I become dictator for life: All suitable new build developments must include solar panels.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,168

    If limited land and food security were seriously the issue and not the excuse they really are surely we'd be looking to abolish bio fuels? And reduce the proportion of bio fuels put into Unleaded etc rather than doubling it?

    Funny how the NIMBY scum object to electricity being provided instead of food security but don't object to bio fuels being provided instead of food security.
    I thought that most biofuels were imports - woodchips from Poland for electricity generation and palm oil from Indonesia for road fuel. Perfect for the NIMBYs.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,141
    ClippP said:

    Just what I was saying, young HY. Our Conservative Government did not go to war at the right time, while Hitler was relatively weak..... They went in for appeasement, as you want to do now.

    On the second point, Putin does not have a Luftwaffe..... This was for everyday use, as it were, and absolutely terrifying. You probably do not remember.
    They had red lines as we do now, Hitler went too far and tried to conquer and occupy all of Europe rather than staying in the German sphere. Putin has not started marching across Europe yet beyond Ukraine.

    The Luftwaffe could not destroy millions with 1 bomb as Putin could with a nuclear missile
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,839
    Leon said:

    Of course I did. In other news you are a tragic fuck and I am having a large glass of Picpoul at City airport
    One way ticket or are you planning to come back at some point?
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277

    It's funny though as didn't you and other Remoaners used to say that Brexit polled badly because only the unprompted polling mattered? And that forced choice polls weren't significant, the fact that people weren't listing Brexit as an unprompted issue showed it didn't matter?

    How is Rejoin polling presently as an issue on unprompted polls?
    The issue of the EU was nowhere for years so the argument around unprompted polls isn’t really salient . Regardless I don’t think there’s a great deal of appetite to revisit the issue for the timebeing . I think it would need a huge majority for re-join in polling and a party to make this a cornerstone of their election platform . So I think it’s for future generations to make those decisions . It’s a shame though that the Tories have embarked on a conscious effort to destroy EU UK relations , this just pisses off Remainers . Brexit could be less of an issue if Labour was in charge as they would try and mend those relations .
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,168
    kinabalu said:

    One way ticket or are you planning to come back at some point?
    He won't come back until PB has gone three days - in a row - without mentioning Brexit.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560

    This looks like the most recent poll on Rejoin/Stay Out. Deltapoll, Mail on Sunday, end of last month;




    https://whatukthinks.org/eu/questions/should-the-united-kingdom-join-the-european-union-or-stay-out-of-the-european-union/

    There is a slice of "we're out, it's a mistake, but it's too late." But that slice is smaller than I thought. And I wouldn't want to do a Euroreferendum on those numbers.

    But- to return to my main point- look at that age profile.
    They will grow up. And in 20 years time they will have forgotten the before time - and the next cohort will never have known it.

    It's easy to say in an opinion poll now "rejoin" - is the question doesn't specify that the rejoin terms of membership would be very different to the previous terms of membership, the question is worthless.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,959
    Root gone.
    Big trouble.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,758

    I agree. I think there is huge scope here.

    I also come back to my long term gripe. Why do we not insist that every new house built in the UK has solar panels fitted as standard at the time of building. Economies of scale would make it much cheaper, there would also not be the hassle of retrofitting and if you are paying £200K for a new house then to be honest the difference between £199K and £202K is bugger all when you are going for a mortgage.

    I do understand that certain properties might not be suitable and also that there is a debate about what sort of solar panelling is used but all of that applies to retrofitting as well.

    So my first environmental action when I become dictator for life: All suitable new build developments must include solar panels.
    I'm surprised they aren't standard - adding solar panels is the easiest way to game that BREEAM score and maximise a buildings EPC rating....
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,747

    It's funny though as didn't you and other Remoaners used to say that Brexit polled badly because only the unprompted polling mattered? And that forced choice polls weren't significant, the fact that people weren't listing Brexit as an unprompted issue showed it didn't matter?

    How is Rejoin polling presently as an issue on unprompted polls?
    YouGov has data where people can select 3 issues from a long list. “Britain leaving the EU” is at 21% there. Issues around Europe was at 18% in IpsosMORI’s Jan 2022 poll. I can’t find anything that teases out rejoin, however.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,313

    You don't "need" to put anything, anywhere.

    If farmers want to put solar panels on their land, they should have that prerogative.

    If warehouses which are glorified tin cans can't support the weight of a solar panel and their owners don't want to install them, that should be their prerogative.

    Why should a farmer be denied the right to choose to install solar panels, if they want to do so? And if the answer is food security, should we be banning bio fuels too?
    If farmers want to install them they should be allowed to do so. Stupid if politicians are saying they can't.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,173
    Council workers been on strike for one day in Edinburgh and the bins are already a disaster.

    Another 12 days like this and it'll end up looking like Glasgow.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,168
    Driver said:

    They will grow up. And in 20 years time they will have forgotten the before time - and the next cohort will never have known it.

    It's easy to say in an opinion poll now "rejoin" - is the question doesn't specify that the rejoin terms of membership would be very different to the previous terms of membership, the question is worthless.
    I don't think that the terms of rejoining are going to be important. The terms of Brexit weren't important in the 2016 referendum. It will be an identity question again.

    I don't know which way it will go. It could be that the next generation will find the idea of joining the EU as fanciful as joining the US. Or they might see joining the EU as symbolic of embracing a more optimistic future.

    The question is not going to turn on the minutiae of the terms of accession.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    ydoethur said:

    You mean, they're meant to be fenced but in reality the sheep get through them all the time?
    Yes, but only in the TV series.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,409
    Leon said:


    Of course I did. In other news you are a tragic fuck and I am having a large glass of Picpoul at City airport
    I'm not sure that the fact you are at an airport and having a large glass of an alcoholic beverage counts as news.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,168
    eek said:

    I'm surprised they aren't standard - adding solar panels is the easiest way to game that BREEAM score and maximise a buildings EPC rating....
    As far as I can tell it's quite common for new houses to have a pointless pair of solar panels, rather than filling the roof with them, presumably because it's the minimum required to tick a box.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,872
    Foxy said:

    On the contrary.

    Polling for Rejoin is very strong. No major party in England will be proposing it in their manifesto for GE 2024, but it cannot be ignored forever.

    Sooner or later the fly encrusted unflushable turd of Brexit will be dealt with.
    This is a silly metaphor because it doesn't capture the reality that the absence of the EU is the normal state rather than vice versa.

    Unreconciled Remainers have this idea that Brexit is some great edifice that needs continuing support from true believers in order to persist, but in reality it's simply the state of not being in the EU. It doesn't need to be believed in, propped up or justified. It just is.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    IshmaelZ said:

    Yes, but only in the TV series.
    Must be difficult getting the sheep to line up in neat rows for Appel every morning and evening.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,306

    It's funny though as didn't you and other Remoaners used to say that Brexit polled badly because only the unprompted polling mattered? And that forced choice polls weren't significant, the fact that people weren't listing Brexit as an unprompted issue showed it didn't matter?

    How is Rejoin polling presently as an issue on unprompted polls?
    I don’t think that I have ever said that about polling. Do you have a reference?

    "Brexit" will be seen to be behind every bad thing that happens in this country for the foreseeable future. Not fair of course, but that is the reality of politics. Brexit already has a bad name and it is only going to get worse. It will be seen as symbolic of the old contempt for the young and working age. A sore that will fester and supparate, further toxifying generational conflict.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,197
    Pretty poor timing for Root to have a very ordinary game although, in fairness, he was somewhat overdue.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Carnyx said:

    Must be difficult getting the sheep to line up in neat rows for Appel every morning and evening.
    German shepherds...
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    edited August 2022
    Leon said:

    Outside PB and Twitter no one cares about Brexit. It’s the major issue for about 5-10% of the population - and that is falling

    It really is a harvest of misery to care passionately about something - Rejoin - that is vanishingly unlikely in the lifetime of anyone here

    Don’t do it

    If that’s the case then stop going on about it then. Or send Scott a private message. Because you’re the only people who spend all this time on this board about it. Suggesting that Rejoiners are in some way mentally unwell is very crude.

    The undeniable fact, hidden behind faux concern for others mental health is that you are actually quite worried. You’ve openly stated on here that you fear a Starmer Govt could take us into the SM at least. And if only 5%-10% (evidence beyond Primrose Hill dinner parties?) of the population care then the other 90%-95% won’t mind rejoining.

    You keep saying “Rejoice, we have a Brexited”. Why do you need to tell us that? It’s been a shitshow. In 20 years time when you are in a nursing home, plastic beaker of Scotch in hand, letching over a care worker newly arrived from Ukraine as a result of both our countries EU accession you will finally overcome this monomania.

  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,706
    edited August 2022

    I agree. I think there is huge scope here.

    I also come back to my long term gripe. Why do we not insist that every new house built in the UK has solar panels fitted as standard at the time of building. Economies of scale would make it much cheaper, there would also not be the hassle of retrofitting and if you are paying £200K for a new house then to be honest the difference between £199K and £202K is bugger all when you are going for a mortgage.

    I do understand that certain properties might not be suitable and also that there is a debate about what sort of solar panelling is used but all of that applies to retrofitting as well.

    So my first environmental action when I become dictator for life: All suitable new build developments must include solar panels.
    I've never explored the reasons why that was not done.

    Suspect it is because in the UK we prefer to set a hands-off goal, and leave the regulated to find the most effective route to meet it in all the circumstances.

    Here, for example, the Energy Performance is regulated via Building Regs and the as-designed SAP modelling, and extra solar for a whole estate could pick up a cost to be met by the developer for upgrading the local Electricity Grid (which happens even to individual householders who only have a right to install 3.68 kWp of solar if, eg, they want to install 10 kWp) which would make super-insulating a more cost effective option for that development.

    Such costs can be *very* substantial, of the order of 6 or 7 figures (ie 000s or 0000s per house) for a moderately sized estate.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814

    I don't think that the terms of rejoining are going to be important. The terms of Brexit weren't important in the 2016 referendum. It will be an identity question again.

    I don't know which way it will go. It could be that the next generation will find the idea of joining the
    EU as fanciful as joining the US. Or they might
    see joining the EU as symbolic of embracing a
    more optimistic future.

    The question is not going to turn on the minutiae
    of the terms of accession.
    Genuinely bizarre to me that after its performance and that of its members across 2021 and 2022, anyone could see the eu as symbolic of an optimistic future. I know people do. Just find it hard to see why.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,168
    Eabhal said:

    Council workers been on strike for one day in Edinburgh and the bins are already a disaster.

    Another 12 days like this and it'll end up looking like Glasgow.

    Huh. News to me. Why is this then?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,838
    HYUFD said:

    We didn't go to war with Germany when they took over Austria or Czechoslovakia did we, only when Hitler invaded Poland. Hitler also didn't have nuclear weapons unlike Putin
    Yes, and the Sudetenland was just a border dispute...
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    MattW said:

    I've never explored the reasons why that was not done.

    Suspect it is because in the UK we prefer to set a hands-off goal, and leave the regulated to find the most effective route to meet it in all the circumstances.

    Here, for example, the Energy Performance is regulated via Building Regs and the as-designed SAP modelling, and extra solar for a whole estate could pick up a cost to be met by the developer for upgrading the local Electricity Grid (which happens even to individual householders who only have a right to install 3.68 kWp of solar if, eg, they want to install 10 kWp) which would make super-insulating a more cost effective option for that development.

    Such costs can be *very* substantial, of the order of 6 or 7 figures (ie 000s or 0000s per house) for a moderately sized estate.
    I asked my surveyor for my current house what the value would have been without panels. Absolubtely no difference he amazingly came back with.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,959
    edited August 2022
    Leon said:

    Not wrong


    “The approaching tsunami of addictive AI-created content will overwhelm us”



    “”Move 37”, as it became known, marked a key moment in machine learning, because it really was a point where the system went beyond what humans could devise.”

    https://socialwarming.substack.com/p/the-approaching-tsunami-of-addictive

    Thanks. Don't understand much of that.
    But Move 37 he hasn't understood at all.
    It didn't go beyond what a human could devise at all. In fact. It's the kind of move beginners play instinctively. It had merely been "coached out" of the consideration of the top class player. Shoulder hits that central were a no no.
    But when it was played, Lee Sidol was astonished. But not uncomprehending. He saw instantly that is was the correct move. Just one he had been trained since a toddler simply not to consider.
    Compare the re-emergence of the ramp shot in cricket. Played by kids. Now by pros too.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,838
    dixiedean said:

    Can he bat five?
    Yes, but I hear his judge of length is not infallible.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    Foxy said:

    On the contrary.

    Polling for Rejoin is very strong. No major party in England will be proposing it in their manifesto for GE 2024, but it cannot be ignored forever.

    Sooner or later the fly encrusted unflushable turd of Brexit will be dealt with.
    Only because the vast majority of people are assuming that Rejoin on the previous terms would be possible, which it wouldn't.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,173

    Huh. News to me. Why is this then?
    They only got offered 3.5%. it's a highly effective move during the fringe, place is a mess anyway with all the visitors.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,168

    Unreconciled Remainers have this idea that Brexit is some great edifice that needs continuing support from true believers in order to persist

    Brexiteers are the ones shitting themselves that Brexit dies with BoZo
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    MattW said:

    I've never explored the reasons why that was not done.

    Suspect it is because in the UK we prefer to set a hands-off goal, and leave the regulated to find the most effective route to meet it in all the circumstances.

    Here, for example, the Energy Performance is regulated via Building Regs and the as-designed SAP modelling, and extra solar for a whole estate could pick up a cost to be met by the developer for upgrading the local Electricity Grid (which
    happens even to individual householders who only have a right to install 3.68 kWp of solar if, eg, they want to install 10 kWp) which would make super-insulating a more cost effective option for that development.

    Such costs can be *very* substantial, of the order of 6 or 7 figures (ie 000s or 0000s per house) for a moderately sized estate.
    I’ve got the solar man round next week to size up installing in-roof solar (and battery) on the annexe that’s going up next year. What’s ridiculous is it requires another planning application (with another fee to the council ) to be allowed to do it, even though the annexe is already approved. All the same, it makes economic sense as it means on the slopes with panels there will be minimal roof tiling to pay for, and the scaffolding will be up anyway. And importantly gives a degree of redundancy against grid outages, which happen several times a year in a good year round here.

  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,706
    edited August 2022
    Pulpstar said:

    I asked my surveyor for my current house what the value would have been without panels. Absolubtely no difference he amazingly came back with.
    I suspect that has now changed.

    Houses with rentaroof solar used to be devalued, as the paperwork for the extra contract was extra buggeration.

    Houses with early solar (ie 2012 ish - 40p per unit or so) used to give around here an approx 1% extra yield for a similar purchase price due to the Feed in Tariff, but I think that ship has now sailed.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,579
    This is quite a change from what had been happening - and can't end well for the Russian military.

    https://twitter.com/MarkRid89403375/status/1560595940431450112
  • Nigelb said:

    Yes, but I hear his judge of length is not infallible.
    Michael Gove is apparently coming in at number six.

    He's impressed selectors with his experience of line, if not length.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,838
    IshmaelZ said:

    They can philosophise pretty much anywhere. In practice they are rigorously excluded to stop them banging in to and damaging things, and anyway you can't have your insolation and eat it. You get grass or electric, not both.
    Actually not true.
    They call it agrivoltaics:
    https://www.nrdc.org/stories/made-shade-promise-farming-solar-panels
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,872
    Scott_xP said:

    Brexiteers are the ones shitting themselves that Brexit dies with BoZo
    I think you'll find it was people like Andrew Adonis who were spreading that idea. You must have come across his tweets.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    Scott_xP said:

    Brexiteers are the ones shitting themselves that Brexit dies with [Boris]
    Nonsense. Truss ain't rejoining. Sir Keir ain't rejoining. Your wishful thinking is quite sad, really.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,891
    Scott_xP said:

    Brexiteers are the ones shitting themselves that Brexit dies with BoZo
    Please explain how it “dies” after Boris?

    Honestly. It’s just bonkers
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,964
    HYUFD said:

    They had red lines as we do now, Hitler went too far and tried to conquer and occupy all of Europe rather than staying in the German sphere. Putin has not started marching across Europe yet beyond Ukraine.

    The Luftwaffe could not destroy millions with 1 bomb as Putin could with a nuclear missile
    But the Luftwaffe had millions of bombs. It was pretty terrifying if you were sitting under them.

    But our Conservative Government did not have red lines that were credible. That is why Hitler was surprised when we declared war when he invaded Poland.

    And the present government that we have is not credible in any way, shape or form.
  • RichardrRichardr Posts: 99
    Scott_xP said:

    Brexiteers are the ones shitting themselves that Brexit dies with BoZo
    The chances of us re-joining the EU (or most EU countries allowing us to do so) is nil in the short to medium term. Thus, strictly speaking, Brexit will not die.

    Other policies, not strictly Brexit dependent, now that is a different story.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,959
    Bairstow gone.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,891

    I'm not sure that the fact you are at an airport and having a large glass of an alcoholic beverage counts as news.
    Fair
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,706
    edited August 2022
    Pulpstar said:

    I asked my surveyor for my current house what the value would have been without panels. Absolubtely no difference he amazingly came back with.
    That's because the market is low information, and full of ignorami who just look at kitchens and bathrooms, in the first 90 seconds. Same reason that almost no one thinks about insulation until they get huge heating bills.

    There are still people trying to sell rental investments to landlords where they have tarted-up a class E EPC house (which is legal to rent out for a year or two longer) with some new kitchen and bathroom and superficial renovation.

    That is going to have to be an EPC C by 2030, or maybe 2025, 2026 or 2028 depending when the music stops, and a level D earlier. And all the money spent on the tart-up will be wasted, because it will need to be partially gutted and done from the fabric. No idea if anyone is still stupid enough to buy these.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,306
    Driver said:

    Only because the vast majority of people are assuming that Rejoin on the previous terms would be possible, which it wouldn't.
    Until we restart accession negotiations we won't know the terms.

    But I agree with you, we had an excellent deal tailored to our politics that would be hard to match.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,838
    ydoethur said:

    'Roofs' is American, 'rooves' is proper English.

    Therefore, almost everyone including autocorrect uses 'roofs.'
    I haven't used 'rooves' in thirty years.
    'Proper' is a constantly moving target.
  • DavidL said:

    Pretty poor timing for Root to have a very ordinary game although, in fairness, he was somewhat overdue.

    Always preferred Angier to Root.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    Foxy said:

    Until we restart accession negotiations we won't know the terms.

    But I agree with you, we had an excellent deal tailored to our politics that would be hard to match.
    We had such an "excellent deal tailored to our politics" that the Remain campaign couldn't even try to sell it!
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    MattW said:

    That's because the market is low information, and full of ignorami who just look at kitchens and bathrooms, in the first 90 seconds. Same reason that almost no one thinks about insulation until they get huge heating bills.

    There are still people trying to sell rental investments to landlords where they have tarted-up a class E EPC house (which is an offence to rent out) with some new kitchen and bathroom and superficial renovation.

    That is going to have to be an EPC C by 2030, or maybe 2026 or 2028. And all the money spent on the tart-up will be wasted, because it will need to be gutted and done from the fabric. No idea if anyone is still stupid enough to buy these.
    The other amazing thing about how UK housing is sold is the eternal focus on #s of bedrooms rather than what's actually important - sq feet. It's led to a fetish for tiny rooms.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,168
    Driver said:

    the vast majority of people are assuming that Rejoin on the previous terms would be possible, which it wouldn't.

    Are you not sick and tired of people talking Britain down like this?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,277
    ClippP said:

    But the Luftwaffe had millions of bombs. It was pretty terrifying if you were sitting under them.

    But our Conservative Government did not have red lines that were credible. That is why Hitler was surprised when we declared war when he invaded Poland.

    And the present government that we have is not credible in any way, shape or form.
    If you look at the diaries of those around Hitler, he knew that invading Poland would kick of a general war. And he didn't care - in fact he wanted it.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,487
    Mr. Driver, to be fair, Remain could have done a much, much better job. Whether you're on one side or the other, the failure of the pro-EU campaign is and was pretty obvious. It was astonishingly bad, and they really should've won.

    A little more time on economic benefits and a little less back of the queue/Little England tittering would've done it.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,891
    Foxy said:

    Until we restart accession negotiations we won't know the terms.

    But I agree with you, we had an excellent deal tailored to our politics that would be hard to match.
    We will end up like all the other rich western countries outside the EU - Switzerland, Norway, Iceland. We will be in constant negotiation about our status vis a vis them, but we will never contemplate joining again

    The EU’s position in UK life will be like the USA to Canada. A giant neighbour that we have to pay attention to, often in an irritating way, but Canada still cherishes its independence and would never consider becoming another US state

  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,706
    edited August 2022
    Foxy said:

    Until we restart accession negotiations we won't know the terms.

    But I agree with you, we had an excellent deal tailored to our politics that would be hard to match.
    Disagree.

    The EU is a procedure-bound organisation that very rarely changes its spots. I think we would be able to tell quite closely.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    Scott_xP said:

    Are you not sick and tired of people talking Britain down like this?
    It's not talking Britain down to recognise that if we are going to be members, we will have to be full members. Not least because if we're going to be members we should want to be full members.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560

    Mr. Driver, to be fair, Remain could have done a much, much better job. Whether you're on one side or the other, the failure of the pro-EU campaign is and was pretty obvious. It was astonishingly bad, and they really should've won.

    A little more time on economic benefits and a little less back of the queue/Little England tittering would've done it.

    Unfortunately I can't tell what this is in reply to.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,168

    A little more time on economic benefits and a little less back of the queue/Little England tittering would've done it.

    No, it wouldn't.

    The millions of people who voted for Nigel Fucking Farage and his racist posters didn't care about that
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,838
    .
    Carnyx said:

    Must be difficult getting the sheep to line up in neat rows for Appel every morning and evening.
    Completely OT.
    The only arguable agricultural connection was a cast member called Richard Heffer.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,512
    Driver said:

    We had such an "excellent deal tailored to our politics" that the Remain campaign couldn't even try to sell it!
    That's the most awful thing about it. We didn't know enough how good it was before we left. Now we are up sh*t creek without a paddle.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    Scott_xP said:

    No, it wouldn't.

    The millions of people who voted for Nigel Fucking Farage and his racist posters didn't care about that
    A few million voted for Farage, granted. But millions of others were persuadable by a competent Remain campaign. But they had nothing to sell, so they were always struggling.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,512

    Mr. Driver, to be fair, Remain could have done a much, much better job. Whether you're on one side or the other, the failure of the pro-EU campaign is and was pretty obvious. It was astonishingly bad, and they really should've won.

    A little more time on economic benefits and a little less back of the queue/Little England tittering would've done it.

    or even a few less lies and anti-immigration racism would've done it...
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,141
    Driver said:

    It's not talking Britain down to recognise that if we are going to be members, we will have to be full members. Not least because if we're going to be members we should want to be full members.
    If being in the Euro had been a requirement of continued EU membership then I would have voted Leave not Remain. At that point our economic policy would be decided in Berlin, Frankfurt and Brussels effectively not Westminster
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,706
    ydoethur said:

    'Roofs' is American, 'rooves' is proper English.

    Therefore, almost everyone including autocorrect uses 'roofs.'
    Looking forward to two grooves becoming "groofs" !
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,959
    86-6.
    A deeper hole than ever. Some bowling this.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,532
    Leon said:

    Please explain how it “dies” after Boris?

    Honestly. It’s just bonkers
    Brexit certainly does not depend upon Boris. There is no appetite on our side to reopen the battles of 1960 to 1975, and 2005 - 16, and no appetite on the EU side to have us rejoin.
This discussion has been closed.