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The US Midterms are looking more challenging for the GOP – politicalbetting.com

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  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793
    edited September 2022
    thart said:

    yes and i havent even mentioned Putin once if you look at my posts.....
    Horse clearly isn't a troll because he's been here for years and we know something of his foibles.

    thart may or may not be a troll but he is newly arrived and he punctuates and capitalises in a very similar manner to some we have had from Russia in the past. Let's give him the benefit of the doubt for now and see what happens :smiley:
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,253
    edited September 2022
    Cookie said:

    How much better, and why? What is coming on stream?

    Just got one step further towards solar panels on my house today - hopefully from next Spring my draw on the grid will be minimal. So that will help too!
    The gas share will drop because we won't be able to afford any!
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181
    Selebian said:

    I remember my brother recounting a story (likely apocryphal) of a shed retailer that sought to get around English Sunday trading laws by on Sunday opening only the coffee shop, which was permitted. Some of the more expensive (three or four figures) coffees on the menu entitled the buyer to a free shed, which was delivered a day or two later. In the story the relevant authorities took a dim view of the scheme.
    Many are the schemes through history like that.

    When supermarkets started selling petrol, they were going to give it away free, with X amount of shopping. Since this would reduce the tax payable on it, parliament acted very fast. To make the tax payable on petrol even if given away as a promotion.
  • DynamoDynamo Posts: 651

    Indeed. https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/populationandmigration/internationalmigration/datasets/populationoftheunitedkingdombycountryofbirthandnationalityunderlyingdatasheets has the details, but would require some processing to get useful numbers out of it!

    But the top 5 countries of origin for people born outside the UK and now living in the UK are...

    1. India
    2. Poland
    3. Pakistan
    4. Ireland
    5. Germany

    But the top 5 nationalities for immigrants are...

    1. Poland
    2. India
    3. Ireland
    4. Italy
    5. Romania
    Either quite a few immigrants to Britain from India etc. hold Italian or Romanian citizenship or else I'm missing something. What is an immigrant if not someone born outside the country who now lives in it?
  • thartthart Posts: 139
    Still think nhs workers leading the parade for the Queens funeral is a very bad idea....it politicises what should be a solemn national occasion
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181

    No, he's a troll because he's been trolling for the past 24 hours and is seriously trying to claim that there's no evidence of Trump engaging in vote rigging.

    Trump is on the record, repeatedly, trying to rig the last election. I thought you knew that?
    And further, this built on a pyramid of deliberate, documented, ongoing vote rigging/suppression of the most odious kind by the Republican party.

    The latest cherry on this one is putting election officials and judges in place to allow the state legislatures to over turn the results of presidential elections and send their own slate of electors.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,166
    Cookie said:

    How much better, and why? What is coming on stream?

    Just got one step further towards solar panels on my house today - hopefully from next Spring my draw on the grid will be minimal. So that will help too!
    The 2 biggest offshore wind farms in the world are due to come online next year, namely Hornsea 2 (Hornsea 1 is currently the biggest and only came online at the end of August) and Dogger Bank.
  • thart said:

    yes and i havent even mentioned Putin once if you look at my posts.....
    OK, Pinocchio, sure you haven't. Sure this is your first account here, isn't it?
  • DynamoDynamo Posts: 651

    I’d disagree with that.

    kle4 trolled you there.
    Voting in the Commons is part of an MP's job and not part of a staffer's job.
    Plonkering to a dead queen's coffin is just being a d*ckhead, whoever does it.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,467
    thart said:

    Still think nhs workers leading the parade for the Queens funeral is a very bad idea....it politicises what should be a solemn national occasion

    You have to work somewhere. (Retired people, and small people aside)
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    thart said:

    the Queen was loved agreed....but the views on Charles are much more mixed and that is what the establishment are worried about if these theories have any truth
    Oh please.

    Of course the monarchy and the establishment, whatever that means in this context, are 'worried'. The discipline of the Queen was because the institution could be rocked at any moment. It's why Charles knows and said he could not speak as much on his causes, he knows the new role would make that riskier.

    That people are invested in not being complacent about the monarchy is not a conspiracy. It's how it keeps going.

    And they sure as shit dont need to manufacture crowds and queues. It's an historic occasion, people want to take part - I bet plenty are Republicans.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Cookie said:

    Horse clearly isn't a troll because he's been here for years and we know something of his foibles.

    thart may or may not be a troll but he is newly arrived and he punctuates and capitalises in a very similar manner to some we have had from Russia in the past. Let's give him the benefit of the doubt for now and see what happens :smiley:
    I feel slightly responsible for him because he leapt into action when I posted some innocent (I thought) musings about the onlookers as HMQ went BP to P of W. I can't help seeing parallels between his findings of racism in the UK and a well known tyranny's diagnosis of Nazism in countries it proposes to invade.
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,378
    I've been quietly impressed by Biden, mostly by his Ukraine performance. For someone on the verge of dementia, Sleepy Joe has played a blinder.

    He may have someone behind him manipulating the strings, but long may they continue. Trump looks to be a walking heart attack and he looks favourite in the rush to the grave.
  • kle4 said:

    Classic 'were you lying or an idiot?' Vibes.
    Finally one I know the answer to. Both.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    thart said:

    Still think nhs workers leading the parade for the Queens funeral is a very bad idea....it politicises what should be a solemn national occasion

    That's because you are an arse. NHS has the George Cross, so has to be represented like all the other GCs and VCs.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited September 2022
    IshmaelZ said:

    I feel slightly responsible for him because he leapt into action when I posted some innocent (I thought) musings about the onlookers as HMQ went BP to P of W. I can't help seeing parallels between his findings of racism in the UK and a well known tyranny's diagnosis of Nazism in countries it proposes to invade.
    I think both Dynamo and theart have been to a few GRU lunches, or dinners at St Petersburg. Strange that the site here should be considered so important ; though I suppose there's an awful lot of lower-level trolling going on the Daily Mail and Twitter all the time as well.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    edited September 2022

    I’d disagree with that. There’s nothing that they have done which gives them any preference over other citizens

    Privy counsellors if you must but not MPs


    They have been elected to collectively govern this country. I call that meriting preference over other citizens for such an event personally. They have to swear an oath to the crown, i do not. They exercise or hold to account executive power.

    MPs dont need or deserve a load of preferential treatment, but a harmless 'perk' like skipping a long queue?

    They can get more work serving citizens done if they skip it.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507

    And further, this built on a pyramid of deliberate, documented, ongoing vote rigging/suppression of the most odious kind by the Republican party.

    The latest cherry on this one is putting election officials and judges in place to allow the state legislatures to over turn the results of presidential elections and send their own slate of electors.
    Frankly, I'm a bit surprised anyone tries to dispute it. The Republicans aren't even bothering to hide it now. They could barely be more blatant if they said 'Votes don't matter, we're going to win whatever happens.'

    Even Robert Mugabe was usually more subtle than this.

    (Although he had something in common with the Republicans - he couldn't believe that despite all his efforts to rig the vote, he'd still lost, badly, so he used violence to change the result.)
  • thartthart Posts: 139
    IshmaelZ said:

    That's because you are an arse. NHS has the George Cross, so has to be represented like all the other GCs and VCs.
    its going down very badly on social media though
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    IshmaelZ said:

    That's because you are an arse. NHS has the George Cross, so has to be represented like all the other GCs and VCs.
    Who's Malta sending?
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    ydoethur said:

    Who's Malta sending?
    https://timesofmalta.com/articles/view/judge-represent-george-cross-island-association-queens-funeral.981113
  • Wend It Like Beckham?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544

    I hate Putin and I think the Queen stuff is now ridiculous. Come at me

    Royal stuff is inherently ridiculous. It always has been.

    But a lot of us like the ridiculous, which can still be moving and powerful.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674
    IshmaelZ said:

    I feel slightly responsible for him because he leapt into action when I posted some innocent (I thought) musings about the onlookers as HMQ went BP to P of W. I can't help seeing parallels between his findings of racism in the UK and a well known tyranny's diagnosis of Nazism in countries it proposes to invade.
    In general I think we should refrain from the troll-hunting stuff, as it can act as a deterrent against legitimate posters expressing views that they're perfectly entitled to hold. It's one of those irregular verbs:

    I am the epitome of moderate opinion
    You are batshit crazy
    He is a troll
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    thart said:

    its going down very badly on social media though
    that is conclusive. My mistake.
  • kle4 said:

    They have been elected to collectively govern this country. I call that meriting preference over other citizens for such an event personally. They have to swear an oath to the crown, i do not. They exercise or hold to account executive power.

    MPs dont need or deserve a load of preferential treatment, but a harmless 'perk' like skipping a long queue?

    They can get more work serving citizens done if they skip it.
    I would compromise and allow them to run the route.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    IshmaelZ said:

    that is conclusive. My mistake.
    You might get a sanction for being wrong.

    Could you face booking?
  • FossFoss Posts: 1,394

    LAB: 40% (=)
    CON: 28% (=)
    LDM: 10% (+1)
    GRN: 6% (-1)
    RFM: 5% (+1)
    SNP: 4% (-1)

    Via @PeoplePolling, 13 Sep.
    Changes w/ 7 Sep.

    No change with the new boys

    They've also got some polling on the monarchy

    Do you think Britain should continue to have a monarchy or should it be replaced by an elected head of state?

    Monarchy: 77%
    Elected head of state: 23%

  • The stunning success of Ukraine’s recent counteroffensive has exposed the rotten reality behind Russia’s reputation as a military superpower. More than six months since the onset of Vladimir Putin’s Ukraine invasion, it is now obvious that his army is in fact a deeply flawed institution that bears almost no resemblance to the immaculate fighting force of Red Square parades and Kremlin propaganda. Instead, the Russian military suffers from endemic corruption, low morale, and poor leadership, with individual initiative in short supply and commanders deeply reluctant to accept personal responsibility. Last week’s disastrous defeat in northeastern Ukraine will only worsen the situation, with officers gripped by fear as Moscow seeks scapegoats for what is shaping up to be one of the most shameful military defeats in Russian history.

    https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/ukrainian-victory-shatters-russias-reputation-as-a-military-superpower/
  • thartthart Posts: 139
    Foss said:

    They've also got some polling on the monarchy
    any polls on monarchy at the present time will likely give a false view...people are trapped in the emotion and spectacle
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    In general I think we should refrain from the troll-hunting stuff, as it can act as a deterrent against legitimate posters expressing views that they're perfectly entitled to hold. It's one of those irregular verbs:

    I am the epitome of moderate opinion
    You are batshit crazy
    He is a troll
    You are right of course. All we are seeing here is low effort contrarianism.
  • RobD said:

    Any births in The Queue yet?
    I think it's the conceptions that PB wants to know about.
  • IshmaelZ said:

    You are right of course. All we are seeing here is low effort contrarianism.
    Oh no we're not.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507

    Oh no we're not.
    You're both wrong about that.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    IshmaelZ said:

    You are right of course. All we are seeing here is low effort contrarianism.
    Still, it all reminds me of the neighbour's young cat desperate to get at the two crows who have been watching him for the last fifteen minutes and know exactly where he is and what he is doing.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    You're both wrong about that.
    I know ****ing Sainsburys were trying to push mince pies at me yesterday but this is just not Christmas yet.
  • The stunning success of Ukraine’s recent counteroffensive has exposed the rotten reality behind Russia’s reputation as a military superpower. More than six months since the onset of Vladimir Putin’s Ukraine invasion, it is now obvious that his army is in fact a deeply flawed institution that bears almost no resemblance to the immaculate fighting force of Red Square parades and Kremlin propaganda. Instead, the Russian military suffers from endemic corruption, low morale, and poor leadership, with individual initiative in short supply and commanders deeply reluctant to accept personal responsibility. Last week’s disastrous defeat in northeastern Ukraine will only worsen the situation, with officers gripped by fear as Moscow seeks scapegoats for what is shaping up to be one of the most shameful military defeats in Russian history.

    https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/ukrainian-victory-shatters-russias-reputation-as-a-military-superpower/

    Yet we were assured by some PBers that Putin was winning this not a month ago.

  • FossFoss Posts: 1,394
    thart said:

    any polls on monarchy at the present time will likely give a false view...people are trapped in the emotion and spectacle
    Perhaps. But it's above trend and any return to trend will make the news.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    thart said:

    any polls on monarchy at the present time will likely give a false view...people are trapped in the emotion and spectacle
    Yes and No.

    Yes, there will be a boost, but support was already pretty high so it isnt as if its
    unusual.

    Republicans shouldn't act like monarchy support will inevitably fade in a significant way, but should not despair since if there was a crisis things could change quickly.

    So it's a question of how likely a crisis? I say low. Until said crisis polling is a useful indicator and even without a new crown bump Charles was no longer despised.
  • thartthart Posts: 139

    Oh no we're not.
    like a pantomine on here.....looks hes behind you lol
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,634
    Selebian said:

    I remember my brother recounting a story (likely apocryphal) of a shed retailer that sought to get around English Sunday trading laws by on Sunday opening only the coffee shop, which was permitted. Some of the more expensive (three or four figures) coffees on the menu entitled the buyer to a free shed, which was delivered a day or two later. In the story the relevant authorities took a dim view of the scheme.
    There was a cafe near me that wanted to open for food & coffee 24hrs, but the council wouldn't give them a license. So they started selling photo's of the food & coffee with which you got a 'free' bit of food & coffee.

    It'd didn't end well, but it tickled me all the same.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,467
    Carnyx said:

    I know ****ing Sainsburys were trying to push mince pies at me yesterday but this is just not Christmas yet.
    I think that an amnesty for any and all mince pie sins is wise.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,359
    Leon said:

    No, if you think about it - properly - anything other than what they did would have been hideously complex and open to abuse, and might not have worked. It also rules out old people who don't understand the net and so on and so forth. It would favour the young. Daft

    This queueing has worked before, it is tried and trusted, it is simple and visibly fair, so they did it again. Why would you do anything else

    Are they pleased there's a huge turnout and the public veneration for the Q is now a public spectacle of quasi-religious pilgrimage? Of course they are. But that's a fortunate by-product, a spandrel, it is not some evil scheme by Brexiteering lizard people
    Oh please.

    It wouldn't have been complex - we manage such systems at airports, amusement parks and the like without problems.

    You could even have had a separate queue for people who didn't want to use to automated system.
  • rcs1000 said:

    Oh please.

    It wouldn't have been complex - we manage such systems at airports, amusement parks and the like without problems.

    You could even have had a separate queue for people who didn't want to use to automated system.
    Not very British though.
  • thartthart Posts: 139
    rcs1000 said:

    Oh please.

    It wouldn't have been complex - we manage such systems at airports, amusement parks and the like without problems.

    You could even have had a separate queue for people who didn't want to use to automated system.
    maybe the suffering is part of the experience for many people...14 hours of penance for HMQ
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,395
    edited September 2022
    Who is in the queue?

    Thread:

    Much speculation about who’s in #TheQueue and why, but little evidence. That is, until a doughty band of @uniessexgovt researchers began a survey (using the kinds of methods developed for studying protests). Survey ongoing but here are snippets based on the first 300 responses.

    https://twitter.com/robjohns75/status/1570756794015948802
  • It's amazing he thought he could line up incognito, or queue anon as I believe it is called.
    Credit to him for doing the full 12 hours, when I’m sure he could easily have wangled a VIP wave through.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    James O'Brien is now spreading conspiracy theories about the queue.

    @LBC
    'They could have conducted the ticketing system in a way that did not involve an enormous queue snaking through London.'

    James O'Brien deems ‘The Establishment’s’ choice to cause enormous queues to enter Westminster Hall 'completely deliberate’.


    https://twitter.com/LBC/status/1570713491195166721

    Asking questions about whether the queue could have been set up or managed better is not a conspiracy theory.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,088
    rcs1000 said:

    Oh please.

    It wouldn't have been complex - we manage such systems at airports, amusement parks and the like without problems.

    You could even have had a separate queue for people who didn't want to use to automated system.
    I said that yesterday, but there is a growing number of commentators pointing out that the queue is the point. The hardship is what makes the experience memorable, and valuable. The pilgrimage is nothing without the walk...
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154

    The stunning success of Ukraine’s recent counteroffensive has exposed the rotten reality behind Russia’s reputation as a military superpower. More than six months since the onset of Vladimir Putin’s Ukraine invasion, it is now obvious that his army is in fact a deeply flawed institution that bears almost no resemblance to the immaculate fighting force of Red Square parades and Kremlin propaganda. Instead, the Russian military suffers from endemic corruption, low morale, and poor leadership, with individual initiative in short supply and commanders deeply reluctant to accept personal responsibility. Last week’s disastrous defeat in northeastern Ukraine will only worsen the situation, with officers gripped by fear as Moscow seeks scapegoats for what is shaping up to be one of the most shameful military defeats in Russian history.

    https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/ukrainian-victory-shatters-russias-reputation-as-a-military-superpower/

    I was thinking about that today. In the past the shadow of the “Spetnaz” loomed and was always referenced alongside SAS, Seals, Delta etc etc in guides to the world’s top special forces.

    Yet up to now I’ve seen or heard nothing that suggests they even still exist.

    Where are the Long Range Desert Group type operations carried out by these special forces attacking supply lines of western kit behind enemy lines, commando assaults in the dead of night in far flung Ukrainian air bases?

    Maybe it’s a cunning plan and they are biding their time and (to paraphrase The Usual Suspects) “The greatest trick the Spetnaz ever pulled was convincing the world they didn't exist,"


  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    Carnyx said:

    I know ****ing Sainsburys were trying to push mince pies at me yesterday but this is just not Christmas yet.
    Morrisons too, ever since September 1st.

    Can't see those gorgeous Belgian chocolate yule logs yet though :frowning:
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    Morrisons too, ever since September 1st.

    Can't see those gorgeous Belgian chocolate yule logs yet though :frowning:
    Oh really? Morrisons? Recommended?
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Carnyx said:

    I know ****ing Sainsburys were trying to push mince pies at me yesterday but this is just not Christmas yet.
    I like mince pies, wish you could get them all year round. Also blue Stilton is my favourite cheese (actually you can get that all year, it just plummets in price in December).
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Andy_JS said:

    Asking questions about whether the queue could have been set up or managed better is not a conspiracy theory.
    We're not going to be waiting 70 years for the next one, so there is a brutally practical side to it.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    I'm starting to think London civil servants and officials honestly didn't expect so many people to want to queue up in this way. They're genuinely surprised by it. They shouldn't be.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,531
    edited September 2022
    BigRich said:

    As in the price of gas?

    I've been following the Gas storage rates every day for the passed couple of weeks, on this website:

    https://gas.kyos.com/gas/eu

    Short version: the EU storage is now 85.7% full, (fractionally above normal for this time of year). and is filling at about 0.3% a day, again consistently above the normal for this time of year.

    The Russians shutting off 'Nord Stream 1' may have made gas more expensive but does not seem to be affecting the filling of the storage.
    The fun will be when the Russians want to turn Nord Stream 1 back on but Europe says "No, we're fine now thanks..."

    Russia destroying its customer base will be the most dramatic outcome of Putin's little Ukrainian adventure.

    Putin has done more for reducing greenhouse gas consumption than a million Greta Thunbergs.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    edited September 2022
    Carnyx said:

    Oh really? Morrisons? Recommended?
    They're delicious, although Tesco and Asda sell them too. Never seen them in Sainsbury's.
  • Andy_JS said:

    I'm starting to think London civil servants and officials honestly didn't expect so many people to want to queue up in this way. They're genuinely surprised by it. They shouldn't be.

    There were stewards and police all the way up the route to Southwark Park a day before the queues had gone past London Bridge. They were exceptionally well prepared.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    I think it's the conceptions that PB wants to know about.
    They'd have to work very fast, or someone would be tapping them on the shoulder and pointing out the queue is moving on.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507

    The fun will be when the Russians want to turn Nord Stream 1 back on but Europe says "No, we're fine now thanks..."

    Russia destroying its customer base will be the most dramatic outcome of Putin's little Ukrainian adventure.

    Putin has done more for reducing greenhouse gas consumption than a million Greta Thunbergs.
    How much of it will still be produced, but burned off?
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,685
    Top class London hotels doing very nicely for the funeral. The Savoy, Mandarin, Claridges etc. are quoting about £1300 per night for ordinary rooms, up from maybe £600 before.

    The only "5 star" hotel I've ever stayed in in London, which was not very five star, is quoting £290 up from the usual £110 or so.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,634

    There are a lot of misconceptions in the queue; mainly about the monarchy!

    And good afternoon one and all; late today, due to a hospital visit. Turned out very well; I'm lined up for an operation in the near future. Maybe I'll get at least some use of my hands back. Apparently the odds on success are 3-1 .

    That sounds like good news! Good luck OKC!
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    IshmaelZ said:

    I like mince pies, wish you could get them all year round. Also blue Stilton is my favourite cheese (actually you can get that all year, it just plummets in price in December).
    Me too, which is the problem.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Latest official advice:

    "Entry to the queue has resumed
    Expected queueing time is 24 hours
    Overnight temperatures will be cold"

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJxDwDzAwEs
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    They're delicious, although Tesco and Asda sell them too. Never seen them in Sainsbury's.
    The expertise one finds on PB. Ta muchly.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    Carnyx said:

    Me too, which is the problem.
    I buy mincemeat and puddings in bulk after Christmas when they cost literally pennies and then just have them as and when.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,560
    ohnotnow said:

    That sounds like good news! Good luck OKC!
    Thanks all!
  • thartthart Posts: 139
    Andy_JS said:

    Latest official advice:

    "Entry to the queue has resumed
    Expected queueing time is 24 hours
    Overnight temperatures will be cold"

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJxDwDzAwEs

    wow even more suffering for the die hard masochists...
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,531
    ydoethur said:

    How much of it will still be produced, but burned off?
    If they think it will fuck up the West, as much as they can.

    I don't know what proportion of their gas is a by-product of producing oil. They probably haven't worried too much about reinjecting gas; Europe would buy all they could produce.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,732
    Scott_xP said:

    I said that yesterday, but there is a growing number of commentators pointing out that the queue is the point. The hardship is what makes the experience memorable, and valuable. The pilgrimage is nothing without the walk...
    +1 - it's one of those times when the old fashioned approach (queuing) works way better than any modern system which would be gamed in various ways instantly.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    carnforth said:

    Top class London hotels doing very nicely for the funeral. The Savoy, Mandarin, Claridges etc. are quoting about £1300 per night for ordinary rooms, up from maybe £600 before.

    The only "5 star" hotel I've ever stayed in in London, which was not very five star, is quoting £290 up from the usual £110 or so.

    which is that last hotel if you arent keeping it a secret for yourself? not heading to london this weekend but we do like to. would you recommend it?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,734

    In general I think we should refrain from the troll-hunting stuff, as it can act as a deterrent against legitimate posters expressing views that they're perfectly entitled to hold. It's one of those irregular verbs:

    I am the epitome of moderate opinion
    You are batshit crazy
    He is a troll
    Yes, completely right


    There are entirely sane sensible people who think Putin has a point, Corbyn was a nice guy, communism was OK actually, and so on

    Let’s not drive them off the site

    I’m serious! Troll hunting is as bad as doxxing. PB flourishes because we tolerate all opinions until and unless you break one of the relatively few rules
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    Carnyx said:

    We're not going to be waiting 70 years for the next one, so there is a brutally practical side to it.
    i really don't see Charles's/Charles' (let's not start that again) funeral being anything like as momentous an event with the level of reaction from the public.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,734
    carnforth said:

    Top class London hotels doing very nicely for the funeral. The Savoy, Mandarin, Claridges etc. are quoting about £1300 per night for ordinary rooms, up from maybe £600 before.

    The only "5 star" hotel I've ever stayed in in London, which was not very five star, is quoting £290 up from the usual £110 or so.

    I am due to fly home tomorrow, but the Sevillean sun is so gorgeous I thought: ooh, one more day, maybe fly home Sunday?

    Flights to London, on Sunday, have tripled in price. On Tuesday they are normal again
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    Scott_xP said:

    I said that yesterday, but there is a growing number of commentators pointing out that the queue is the point. The hardship is what makes the experience memorable, and valuable. The pilgrimage is nothing without the walk...
    exactly. demand outstrips supply already. yes you could almost certainly make it easier but then how would you ration who got in and who didnt?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,734
    rcs1000 said:

    Oh please.

    It wouldn't have been complex - we manage such systems at airports, amusement parks and the like without problems.

    You could even have had a separate queue for people who didn't want to use to automated system.
    You’re being obtuse

    It all sounds good in theory but when you think about it in practice there are zillions of potential problems

    The organizers went for safety and simplicity and a tried, trusted method, Can’t blame them

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Leon said:

    You’re being obtuse

    It all sounds good in theory but when you think about it in practice there are zillions of potential problems

    The organizers went for safety and simplicity and a tried, trusted method, Can’t blame them

    I agree — except they've only had 70 years to plan this out properly.
  • thartthart Posts: 139

    exactly. demand outstrips supply already. yes you could almost certainly make it easier but then how would you ration who got in and who didnt?
    you would give tickets out online...obviously some times would be more popular than others....you would have a good chance of getting a 4am slot
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,685

    which is that last hotel if you arent keeping it a secret for yourself? not heading to london this weekend but we do like to. would you recommend it?
    The Chilworth, London Paddington. Perpetually the cheapest "5 star" in London. I stayed during the pandemic for £65. It's basically four and a bit star. Excellent (and cheap) Indian small-plates restaurant off the lobby though.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    thart said:

    wow even more suffering for the die hard masochists...
    Can we agree that they are not doing you or anyone else any positive harm? You sound as if you envy them qualities like enterprise, courage and loyalty in which you perhaps feel yourself deficient. As to whether you actually are deficient, I couldn't possibly comment.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,734
    Has anyone been on a “volcano tour” of Iceland?

    The Gazette has just asked me if I want to do one in late October. It\s quite intense. 8 days of yomping up and down volcs and glaciers with talks on volcanos in between, plus aurora spotting and Arctic waterfalls and the like

    Pros: it’s travel. NEVER TURN DOWN TRAVEL OR SEX

    Cons: I’ve been to Iceland several times. I’ve seen the best volcano in the world (Sirte Ale in Ethiopia). It will be fucking freezing

    Hmm….
  • thart said:

    Still think nhs workers leading the parade for the Queens funeral is a very bad idea....it politicises what should be a solemn national occasion

    Bullshit
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    thart said:

    you would give tickets out online...obviously some times would be more popular than others....you would have a good chance of getting a 4am slot
    the 4am slot tonight is "fully booked" by people in the queue already. and they deserve it more than some keyboard jockey who can hit "book now" faster than someone else.
  • Who is in the queue?

    Thread:

    Much speculation about who’s in #TheQueue and why, but little evidence. That is, until a doughty band of @uniessexgovt researchers began a survey (using the kinds of methods developed for studying protests). Survey ongoing but here are snippets based on the first 300 responses.

    https://twitter.com/robjohns75/status/1570756794015948802

    60% Remain!
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited September 2022
    There isn't going to be enough time for everyone to view the coffin who wants to do so. Regrettable.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    Leon said:

    Has anyone been on a “volcano tour” of Iceland?

    The Gazette has just asked me if I want to do one in late October. It\s quite intense. 8 days of yomping up and down volcs and glaciers with talks on volcanos in between, plus aurora spotting and Arctic waterfalls and the like

    Pros: it’s travel. NEVER TURN DOWN TRAVEL OR SEX

    Cons: I’ve been to Iceland several times. I’ve seen the best volcano in the world (Sirte Ale in Ethiopia). It will be fucking freezing

    Hmm….

    I'll do it if you won't...
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    edited September 2022
    Andy_JS said:

    Asking questions about whether the queue could have been set up or managed better is not a conspiracy theory.
    James O'Brien deems ‘The Establishment’s’ choice to cause enormous queues to enter Westminster Hall 'completely deliberate’.

    That's not 'asking questions about whether the queue could have been set up or managed better'.

    That's stating that it was deliberately set up and managed poorly by a nebulously defined group he dislikes.

    That is a conspiracy, sorry Andy. He isn't simply asking a question, he's reached a conclusion, and its a crazy one.
  • thartthart Posts: 139
    IshmaelZ said:

    Can we agree that they are not doing you or anyone else any positive harm? You sound as if you envy them qualities like enterprise, courage and loyalty in which you perhaps feel yourself deficient. As to whether you actually are deficient, I couldn't possibly comment.
    check your grammar...its those not them...i thought you went to Oxford.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    Andy_JS said:

    There isn't going to be enough time for everyone to view the coffin who wants to do so. Regrettable.

    Predictable.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    carnforth said:

    The Chilworth, London Paddington. Perpetually the cheapest "5 star" in London. I stayed during the pandemic for £65. It's basically four and a bit star. Excellent (and cheap) Indian small-plates restaurant off the lobby though.
    many thanks. I'll check it out for next time we visit. we dont normally do 5 stars, or even 4. the hotel we used to use never reopened after the pandemic. was pretty basic but we liked it and the location.
  • 60% Remain!
    But would most vote Tory... so a very much Cameroon Conservative queue.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,467
    ydoethur said:

    I'll do it if you won't...
    @Leon Recommed @ydoethur
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    Leon said:

    Has anyone been on a “volcano tour” of Iceland?

    The Gazette has just asked me if I want to do one in late October. It\s quite intense. 8 days of yomping up and down volcs and glaciers with talks on volcanos in between, plus aurora spotting and Arctic waterfalls and the like

    Pros: it’s travel. NEVER TURN DOWN TRAVEL OR SEX

    Cons: I’ve been to Iceland several times. I’ve seen the best volcano in the world (Sirte Ale in Ethiopia). It will be fucking freezing

    Hmm….

    you will be able to keep your white wine cool, unlike on your Portugal trek.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,685

    many thanks. I'll check it out for next time we visit. we dont normally do 5 stars, or even 4. the hotel we used to use never reopened after the pandemic. was pretty basic but we liked it and the location.
    Now that we have online review sites, finding a clean and decent three star somewhere like Victoria is actually quite easy. I hate to think what it must have been like before the internet. Thankfully that was before my time.
  • thartthart Posts: 139

    But would most vote Tory... so a very much Cameroon Conservative queue.
    it would also be interesting if the crowd there was a more anti or pro lockdown crowd
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    Andy_JS said:

    I agree — except they've only had 70 years to plan this out properly.
    Seems like it's gone fine. A bit slow is not a disaster.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    60% Remain!
    London ...
This discussion has been closed.