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Has Campbell got this right – Hunt’s now PM in all but name – politicalbetting.com

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  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    edited October 2022

    I’m arguing anyone who peddles Labour Party lies that Kwarteng and Truss mini budget crashed the markets I am calling an idiot peddling a myth, and sure I can win this argument.

    I’ve been drinking all afternoon, don’t anyone want to take me on?
    And then lay siege to Petersfield...

    Edit bugger I hate the way edits get incorporated into quotes. To rescue the joke your last line used to read "I’ve been drinking all afternoon, don’t anyone want to take Meon?"

    you bin 2 de races or watching on telly?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,087

    Won't that lead to conflict if a customer thinks they should have them but the pharmacist doesn't?
    GPs already get aggressive patients demanding all kinds of stuff.

    My old GP would prescribe anything you asked him for. He would give me antibiotics unprompted. A couple of times I asked - hang on, I have a virus. Are you worried about an infection as well?

    I used to joke that I should ask for some diamorphine - just to see if he would hand it out.

    His daughter, who took over, is much better.

    In a number of countries I have visited, pharmacies will hand out medicines that are prescription only in the U.K. I’m pretty sure antibiotics are among them.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,654
    HYUFD said:

    Yes, all 4 grammar school educated. Truss the first PM educated fully at a comprehensive for secondary education.

    Starmer also educated at private and grammar school
    People who went to school before the advent of comprehensives didn't go to a comprehensive. What a revelation.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Definitely not @Dura_Ace, who would have preferred this method of ascent:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y20CLumT2Sg
    What's the vacuum cleaner hose doing on the steering wheel?
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    Monkeys said:

    As an aside on rabbits, when I was a kid I lived in a very specific middle of nowhere where nothing ever happens, and my father gave my sister tortoiseshell rabbits that were kept in a hutch. My sister was a hippy from birth, and she released them all into the wild, and in the end there was massive amounts of tortoiseshell rabbits living wild.

    “a very specific middle of nowhere where nothing ever happens”

    Sounds like Lincolnshire.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,699

    Won't that lead to conflict if a customer thinks they should have them but the pharmacist doesn't?
    No more so than with doctors
  • Ishmael_Z said:

    The pheasent (sic) bloody don't, except out of tins by cats. An absolutely cracking example of ignorant bigotry, well done.
    You don't know what the fuck you are talking about. Loads of pheasant get eaten. Go into any rural butchers and you will see they are selling them. We eat more pheasant and partridge than almost any other meat during the winter.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192
    Ishmael_Z said:

    The pheasent (sic) bloody don't, except out of tins by cats. An absolutely cracking example of ignorant bigotry, well done.
    Au Contraire. My in-laws often get pheasants from the shoots near their farm. It is not grouse country, so none of them.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,699
    HYUFD said:

    Truss went to a comprehensive not Eton. The only Tory major winners in the last 40 years went to Eton
    Thatcher 83/87
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    HYUFD said:

    The membership largely agrees with them and they have the numbers to get a candidate to the membership again
    So what exactly do the membership make of the current Truss administration? Is it the analysis that she had the correct ideas but was compromised by 'centrist' elements, and what is really needed is someone even more radical; with a purge of the Sunakesque centrists?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353

    Au Contraire. My in-laws often get pheasants from the shoots near their farm. It is not grouse country, so none of them.
    Everyone is very happy go lucky?
  • A bit of friendly advice to our Tory contributors...

    Your party is in deep, deep shit. Reopening the hunting debate is not likely to help.

    How about a compromise?

    Let us hunt Brexiteers!
  • ydoethur said:

    It's totally foxed. up.
    No one is going down that route. Not least because in reality fox hunting has never stopped. It goes on day in day out.

  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    In every post you demonstrate your Corbyn like ideology and frankly it is time conservatives called out those in the ERG and Farage group as a very present danger to the extinction of the party
    To be very very honest, I’ve never associated HY politics with Farage and Blukip, but with Team Boris and that being a very different thing.

    Borisism just as unrealistic, stupid and with unsavoury bits, yet still very different than Farage and blukip
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    edited October 2022

    Just a polite question, why do you bother reading it
    I don't Big G.

    It was a main story link from The Guardian who referenced their source, which was very decent of them although I see they've now dropped it.

    I avoid the mail but it's a big story, hence why The Guardian covered it.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,654

    GPs already get aggressive patients demanding all kinds of stuff.

    My old GP would prescribe anything you asked him for. He would give me antibiotics unprompted. A couple of times I asked - hang on, I have a virus. Are you worried about an infection as well?

    I used to joke that I should ask for some diamorphine - just to see if he would hand it out.

    His daughter, who took over, is much better.

    In a number of countries I have visited, pharmacies will hand out medicines that are prescription only in the U.K. I’m pretty sure antibiotics are among them.
    Daughter of a doctor got a place at Med School. Fancy that.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353

    No one is going down that route. Not least because in reality fox hunting has never stopped. It goes on day in day out.

    That's a drag.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    Ishmael_Z said:

    And then lay siege to Petersfield...

    Edit bugger I hate the way edits get incorporated into quotes. To rescue the joke your last line used to read "I’ve been drinking all afternoon, don’t anyone want to take Meon?"

    you bin 2 de races or watching on telly?
    Watching on telly today but going to Cheltenham for Friday and Saturday like I did last year.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    A bit of friendly advice to our Tory contributors...

    Your party is in deep, deep shit. Reopening the hunting debate is not likely to help.

    A friendly rejoinder: I am not a tory, the hunting debate is done and dusted, but ignorance, stupidity and ill informed prejudice are to combatted wherever they appear. This really shouldn't be difficult for someone like you who claim to have general ecological interests rather than the petty minded spite which motivates BigG: is it better to have people who want there to be a reasonable number of foxes so they can kill 4 a week, or people who want there to be no foxes and pay people to kill 20 a night?
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,479
    HYUFD said:

    Private school parents already pay tax for state schools despite sending their children private
    And many childless people pay tax for educating state school children. We are childless and for the last 20 years of my teaching career I worked in the independent sector so the county wasn't paying my wages either.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,449
    Evening all :)

    Reflecting on yesterday's events - let's be fair, Kwarteng isn't the first Chancellor to be sacked or "asked to stand aside" to use the euphemism in recent times. We've had Sunak, Lawson and Lamont to name but three.

    The one thing the change of Chancellor (voluntary or otherwise) is supposed to do is demonstrate the authority of the Prime Minister (primus inter pares) and it strengthens the notion of that authority to be seen to be able to dismiss someone as senior as the Chancellor.

    Indeed, go back to the "Night of the Long Knives" and the dismissal of Thorneycroft, Birch and Powell by Harold MacMillan in 1958 (could one argue they were the first real Thatcherites?) and you see how a "little local difficulty" can build a Prime Minister's authority.

    Yet the more I look at the circumstances of Kwarteng's resignation the more I see not a confirmation of Prime Ministerial authority but a confirmation of Prime Ministerial weakness. This isn't Blair giving Brown a free hand on the economy - this was a Prime Minister and Chancellor "in lockstep" so we were told.

    An ill-timed and poorly communicated policy change which badly misread the public mood and the market reaction has claimed the carer of its creator (so we are to believe). Pace MacMillan, Truss has taken a axe to the "pro-growthers" ad cleared them out from the stables.

    I can only assume Hunt has exacted a heavy price from Truss for taking this on - Campbell may be right to a point but Truss still has plenty of allies in Cabinet who can either defend her or join in the feeding frenzy.

    However, to paraphrase Oscar Wilde, "to lose one Prime Minister may be regarded as misfortune, to lose two might be considered careless". Will enough people want a careless party in charge to allow the Conservatives another term in office?
  • Watching on telly today but going to Cheltenham for Friday and Saturday like I did last year.
    See you there.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    Watching on telly today but going to Cheltenham for Friday and Saturday like I did last year.
    Enjoy.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,449


    Watching on telly today but going to Cheltenham for Friday and Saturday like I did last year.

    I don't move in such exalted circles, Windsor for me on Monday and my autumn jumping diet of Plumpton, Lingfield, Fontwell and perhaps a trip to Huntingdon beckons...
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353

    People who went to school before the advent of comprehensives didn't go to a comprehensive. What a revelation.
    Major would have come within the comprehensive era, although I'm not sure how many there were in London at the time. Not the others.

    Wasn't Brown technically at a comp as well, albeit in the fast stream of it?
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,699

    I was very much involved in the core group who worked on the ban. Nobody to my recollection ever mentioned posh twats - it's an explanation put around by hunting fans to evade the issue that hunting animals for fun is morally indecent. We banned hare coursing at the same time, which was a traditional working class sport. The class of the people doing something cruel is really irrelevant.
    IIRC Tony Banks made a bit of a thing of it

  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    Reflecting on yesterday's events - let's be fair, Kwarteng isn't the first Chancellor to be sacked or "asked to stand aside" to use the euphemism in recent times. We've had Sunak, Lawson and Lamont to name but three.

    The one thing the change of Chancellor (voluntary or otherwise) is supposed to do is demonstrate the authority of the Prime Minister (primus inter pares) and it strengthens the notion of that authority to be seen to be able to dismiss someone as senior as the Chancellor.

    Indeed, go back to the "Night of the Long Knives" and the dismissal of Thorneycroft, Birch and Powell by Harold MacMillan in 1958 (could one argue they were the first real Thatcherites?) and you see how a "little local difficulty" can build a Prime Minister's authority.

    Yet the more I look at the circumstances of Kwarteng's resignation the more I see not a confirmation of Prime Ministerial authority but a confirmation of Prime Ministerial weakness. This isn't Blair giving Brown a free hand on the economy - this was a Prime Minister and Chancellor "in lockstep" so we were told.

    An ill-timed and poorly communicated policy change which badly misread the public mood and the market reaction has claimed the carer of its creator (so we are to believe). Pace MacMillan, Truss has taken a axe to the "pro-growthers" ad cleared them out from the stables.

    I can only assume Hunt has exacted a heavy price from Truss for taking this on - Campbell may be right to a point but Truss still has plenty of allies in Cabinet who can either defend her or join in the feeding frenzy.

    However, to paraphrase Oscar Wilde, "to lose one Prime Minister may be regarded as misfortune, to lose two might be considered careless". Will enough people want a careless party in charge to allow the Conservatives another term in office?

    Off top my head, Sunak not sacked and knight of Long Knives wasn’t 58, it was sixties when Super Mac in trouble?
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    No one is going down that route. Not least because in reality fox hunting has never stopped. It goes on day in day out.
    No it doesn't, trail hunting is trail hunting. I know this because I do it regularly. As with fox hunting, you have never done it, you don't know a thing about it, you just don't like people on horses.
  • Absolutely correct. Anyone who knows anything about the subject is well aware that the banning of digging out was at the core of the legislation and that's very much NOT the pastime that the "posh twats" indulge in. The Hunting Act has had very little effect on fox populations because fox hunting still continues. I've monitored over 20 hunts this season since the end of August and its full on fox hunting.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    Absolutely correct. Anyone who knows anything about the subject is well aware that the banning of digging out was at the core of the legislation and that's very much NOT the pastime that the "posh twats" indulge in. The Hunting Act has had very little effect on fox populations because fox hunting still continues. I've monitored over 20 hunts this season since the end of August and its full on fox hunting.

    Oooh, a MONITOR.

    Get a life.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    Ishmael_Z said:

    The pheasent (sic) bloody don't, except out of tins by cats. An absolutely cracking example of ignorant bigotry, well done.
    I'm pretty certain most pheasants shot aren't eaten by humans.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,699

    I was very much involved in the core group who worked on the ban. Nobody to my recollection ever mentioned posh twats - it's an explanation put around by hunting fans to evade the issue that hunting animals for fun is morally indecent. We banned hare coursing at the same time, which was a traditional working class sport. The class of the people doing something cruel is really irrelevant.
    Hoey references it - but from the defence - in this article from 2003

    https://amp.theguardian.com/politics/2003/jul/01/immigrationpolicy.hunting

  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    Off top my head, Sunak not sacked and knight of Long Knives wasn’t 58, it was sixties when Super Mac in trouble?
    To you he was knight of Long Knives, to me he will always be Sir Lance a Lot.
  • mickydroymickydroy Posts: 316
    stodge said:

    I don't move in such exalted circles, Windsor for me on Monday and my autumn jumping diet of Plumpton, Lingfield, Fontwell and perhaps a trip to Huntingdon beckons...
    I'm going to Plumpton on the 14th November, is it to be recommended
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,654
    Ishmael_Z said:

    A friendly rejoinder: I am not a tory, the hunting debate is done and dusted, but ignorance, stupidity and ill informed prejudice are to combatted wherever they appear. This really shouldn't be difficult for someone like you who claim to have general ecological interests rather than the petty minded spite which motivates BigG: is it better to have people who want there to be a reasonable number of foxes so they can kill 4 a week, or people who want there to be no foxes and pay people to kill 20 a night?
    You are offering a false choice. My answer is "neither".

    We are miles apart on this so best that we accept this and banter on other issues.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    I was very much involved in the core group who worked on the ban. Nobody to my recollection ever mentioned posh twats - it's an explanation put around by hunting fans to evade the issue that hunting animals for fun is morally indecent. We banned hare coursing at the same time, which was a traditional working class sport. The class of the people doing something cruel is really irrelevant.
    Was it ever considered in core group that foxes are not very nice creatures at all, just 110% menace with no redeeming features and if they all died out in UK to only exist in France instead that wouldn’t be such a bad thing for this country at all?

    Well, as a perfect solution to the core groups opposition to hunting them.
  • Ishmael_Z said:

    No it doesn't, trail hunting is trail hunting. I know this because I do it regularly. As with fox hunting, you have never done it, you don't know a thing about it, you just don't like people on horses.
    Which fake "trail" hunt would that be? You're wither hugely gullible or a liar
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,087
    Ishmael_Z said:

    No, they do work. I assume because the officer class nicks all the good stuff and ebays it in the west.
    Years ago, I knew someone who killed foxes for the farmers. Used a reproduction Sharps in 50-90. With a vast flash suppressor, and a night vision scope. Hand loads with a (relatively) flashless powder.

    The theory was that if you hit the fox, no matter where, it was dead.

    Daughter of a doctor got a place at Med School. Fancy that.
    Child tends to follow parents trade. As has happened since trades were invented.

    Film at 11
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    stodge said:

    I don't move in such exalted circles, Windsor for me on Monday and my autumn jumping diet of Plumpton, Lingfield, Fontwell and perhaps a trip to Huntingdon beckons...
    We have a friend in Cheltenham who lives on a long road by a police station who can put us up so we can enjoy a good long leisurely weekend of it. There is good boutique shopping in Cheltenham too, though food and nite life nowhere good as London imo
  • mickydroy said:

    I'm going to Plumpton on the 14th November, is it to be recommended
    Great little track, but Fontwell is better.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,654
    Off topic, I am currently enjoying a soothing cup of camomile tea. Made all the nicer by the addition of a dash of milk.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,913
    Carnyx said:

    What's the vacuum cleaner hose doing on the steering wheel?
    You mean the electronic gear control wire? Best to have that fairly robust. I wonder what would happen if you shorted it out at 240kmh...

    That time has been beaten now - someone cheated by using an EV car, which has no loss of power at altitude.

    Unlike @Leon I would guess. Doing anything at all at that kind of height without acclimatising is difficult.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    Off topic, I am currently enjoying a soothing cup of camomile tea. Made all the nicer by the addition of a dash of milk.

    Milk in camomile tea is just weird. Sorry.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192
    ydoethur said:

    Everyone is very happy go lucky?
    They seem happy with the pheasants - they are even offered as raffle prizes in the village hall from time to time.

    Nobody grouses about it......
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    I was very much involved in the core group who worked on the ban. Nobody to my recollection ever mentioned posh twats - it's an explanation put around by hunting fans to evade the issue that hunting animals for fun is morally indecent. We banned hare coursing at the same time, which was a traditional working class sport. The class of the people doing something cruel is really irrelevant.
    Yes, but your fundamental dishonesty is not in doubt. You are far too intelligent and well informed not to know that the big commercial pheasant shoots are putting down 30,000 birds a year, deliberately bred to shoot for fun, and that the vast majority of those at one stage were bulldozed into burial pits and , now they have realised that is a bit unacceptable, become tinned catfood. And as part of that, 10x as many foxes are shot these days as hounds ever killed. You may not have felt prejudice against posh twats yourself, but you weaponised it in others like BigG to produce an outcome which utterly predictably increased animal suffering a hundredfold. One has to ask, why?
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    Ishmael_Z said:

    To you he was knight of Long Knives, to me he will always be Sir Lance a Lot.
    Whatever you’ve taken this evening, you’ve never had it so good 😆
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,396
    HYUFD said:

    Nandy is a complete lightweight, had she been leading Labour not Starmer I doubt Labour would now be 25% ahead in the polls
    She's actually anything but. You're as guilty as I am in rushing to judgements without the facts. She's well educated bright and has had a distinguished career in public service. Knowing you to be a snob you might also be impressed that her Grandfather was a Lord. Furthermore she's a Mancunian and it's common knowledge that most of the brightest and most creative originate in Manchester
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    Roger said:

    She's actually anything but. You're as guilty as I am in rushing to judgements without the facts. She's well educated bright and has had a distinguished career in public service. Knowing you to be a snob you might also be impressed that her Grandfather was a Lord. Furthermore she's a Mancunian and it's common knowledge that most of the brightest and most creative originate in Manchester
    You from Manchester Roger?
  • All true but there is also the fact that the public has been educated to the dangers of increasing the deficit. That will make it very difficult for Starmer to promise large increases in public expenditure because the funding will have to be genuinely realistic now even during an election campaign.

    In my opinion here is only one area of relatively pain free expenditure savings and boosting of living standards and that is watering down or abandoning Net Zero. I'm not sure any of the major parties are up for that (yet). Unfortunately the current Net Zero Plans look certain to fail so will have to be changed drastically but that will probably only happen when things really hit the fan in a couple of years.
    I suggest that the Covid pandemic and the ongoing Energy crisis has clearly demonstrated to the public that considerable flexibility is possible in managing the public finances when the need is sufficiently great. Johnson was very little concerned at the scale of public borrowing - and pretty well got away with it to the extent hat it raises serious questions as to whether Osborne's Austerity policies during the Coalition years were necessary after all. Increasingly they appear to have been a policy choice rather than an economic necessity.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,654

    Years ago, I knew someone who killed foxes for the farmers. Used a reproduction Sharps in 50-90. With a vast flash suppressor, and a night vision scope. Hand loads with a (relatively) flashless powder.

    The theory was that if you hit the fox, no matter where, it was dead. Child tends to follow parents trade. As has happened since trades were invented.

    Film at 11
    I have no problem with the daughter wanting to go into medicine. It is the fact that it is so much easier for someone in her position to get into Med School than for those without the connections to facilitate the CV enhancing shadowing and work experience that pisses me off.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    HYUFD said:

    Truss went to a comprehensive not Eton. The only Tory major winners in the last 40 years went to Eton
    One of a number of reasons to bring back Grammar schools.....
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,654

    Milk in camomile tea is just weird. Sorry.
    That's the sort of response I usually get. Same when I put milk in green tea.

    But I do prefer it.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,734
    @elonmusk
    The hell with it … even though Starlink is still losing money & other companies are getting billions of taxpayer $, we’ll just keep funding Ukraine govt for free


    https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1581345747777179651
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    Milk in camomile tea is just weird. Sorry.

    Off topic, I am currently enjoying a soothing cup of camomile tea. Made all the nicer by the addition of a dash of milk.

    Jesus Christ. Surely the most disturbing post in the history of PB?
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,673

    Was it ever considered in core group that foxes are not very nice creatures at all, just 110% menace with no redeeming features and if they all died out in UK to only exist in France instead that wouldn’t be such a bad thing for this country at all?

    Well, as a perfect solution to the core groups opposition to hunting them.
    I'm doubtful about attributing niceness or otherwise to wild animals and I don't think that ever came up either. I'm against hunting anything for fun - rats, toads, bluebottles, whatever. It's not in any case an efficient form of fox control (and is not intended to be - it's a sport for enjoyment, not a serious culling operation). My uncle was a keen huntsman - he conceded that it wasn't useful and "not very nice for the fox" but felt it was a glorious spectacle.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    That's the sort of response I usually get. Same when I put milk in green tea.

    But I do prefer it.
    Milk in a green tea is arguably even worse.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    Roger said:

    She's actually anything but. You're as guilty as I am in rushing to judgements without the facts. She's well educated bright and has had a distinguished career in public service. Knowing you to be a snob you might also be impressed that her Grandfather was a Lord. Furthermore she's a Mancunian and it's common knowledge that most of the brightest and most creative originate in Manchester
    I know this isn't really important. But in all the zoom calls with politicians during lockdown I thought Lisa Nandy had the nicest room.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    I’m all in favour of fox hunting.
    Fox are pests.
    I’ve no idea why it’s such a shibboleth in the UK.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    I know this isn't really important. But in all the zoom calls with politicians during lockdown I thought Lisa Nandy had the nicest room.
    https://twitter.com/bcredibility/status/1253820870574956544?lang=en-GB
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    Whatever you’ve taken this evening, you’ve never had it so good 😆
    :lol:
    2 x gin and red vermouth, 1 x glass Chilean pinot noir, 1 x and counting Cotes du Rhone Villages. Signing off now to watch a zombie movie. I have a 55" with stereo now, and a pretty big TV.

    PS the way to approach Pinot Noir is to think of it as still, red champagne. Which is what it is.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,183
    edited October 2022

    Truss is hardly the great advert for comprehensive education. Be a while before the next, you'd think. Which is annoying. Going to be giving the posho wankers a clear run at it for decades....
    Truss has explained how her hateful Comprehensive Education has been a millstone she has had to overcome through hard work and graft.

    You are making the very fair assumption that after the magnificent Conservative renaissance over the last 24 hours, Labour remain very much unelectable, and will for
    generations to come, by which time Prime Minister HYUFD will have restored the Grammar School system.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182

    I know this isn't really important. But in all the zoom calls with politicians during lockdown I thought Lisa Nandy had the nicest room.
    Actually it is important. You can tell a lot about a politician from their decor.

    Reference Nadine Dorries’s ghastly curtains, which told anyone who didn’t know already that she shouldn’t have been allowed anywhere near Parliament, let alone Cabinet.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    I'm doubtful about attributing niceness or otherwise to wild animals and I don't think that ever came up either. I'm against hunting anything for fun - rats, toads, bluebottles, whatever. It's not in any case an efficient form of fox control (and is not intended to be - it's a sport for enjoyment, not a serious culling operation). My uncle was a keen huntsman - he conceded that it wasn't useful and "not very nice for the fox" but felt it was a glorious spectacle.
    but not pheasants.

    As I say, there are shoots putting down 30,000 birds a year. Not a squeak from you lot. Why not?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    kle4 said:

    Something everyone conveniently forgets iis that Boris decided not to even enter the 2016 contest, therefore he should really not have been allowed to enter the 2019 contest at all. Past performance is everything.
    3 year gap with that example. Hunt got 18 votes 3 or 4 months ago.
  • stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    Reflecting on yesterday's events - let's be fair, Kwarteng isn't the first Chancellor to be sacked or "asked to stand aside" to use the euphemism in recent times. We've had Sunak, Lawson and Lamont to name but three.

    The one thing the change of Chancellor (voluntary or otherwise) is supposed to do is demonstrate the authority of the Prime Minister (primus inter pares) and it strengthens the notion of that authority to be seen to be able to dismiss someone as senior as the Chancellor.

    Indeed, go back to the "Night of the Long Knives" and the dismissal of Thorneycroft, Birch and Powell by Harold MacMillan in 1958 (could one argue they were the first real Thatcherites?) and you see how a "little local difficulty" can build a Prime Minister's authority.

    Yet the more I look at the circumstances of Kwarteng's resignation the more I see not a confirmation of Prime Ministerial authority but a confirmation of Prime Ministerial weakness. This isn't Blair giving Brown a free hand on the economy - this was a Prime Minister and Chancellor "in lockstep" so we were told.

    An ill-timed and poorly communicated policy change which badly misread the public mood and the market reaction has claimed the carer of its creator (so we are to believe). Pace MacMillan, Truss has taken a axe to the "pro-growthers" ad cleared them out from the stables.

    I can only assume Hunt has exacted a heavy price from Truss for taking this on - Campbell may be right to a point but Truss still has plenty of allies in Cabinet who can either defend her or join in the feeding frenzy.

    However, to paraphrase Oscar Wilde, "to lose one Prime Minister may be regarded as misfortune, to lose two might be considered careless". Will enough people want a careless party in charge to allow the Conservatives another term in office?

    Peter Thorneycroft and his Treasury team were not dismissed by Macmillan in 1958 - they resigned!
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    I'm doubtful about attributing niceness or otherwise to wild animals and I don't think that ever came up either. I'm against hunting anything for fun - rats, toads, bluebottles, whatever. It's not in any case an efficient form of fox control (and is not intended to be - it's a sport for enjoyment, not a serious culling operation). My uncle was a keen huntsman - he conceded that it wasn't useful and "not very nice for the fox" but felt it was a glorious spectacle.
    Not cruel, that said.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    edited October 2022
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Jesus Christ. Surely the most disturbing post in the history of PB?
    PBers posting a real insights into their psyche this evening, aren’t they Z?

    And it’s not a comfortable read is it? Not at all.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    I’m all in favour of fox hunting.
    Fox are pests.
    I’ve no idea why it’s such a shibboleth in the UK.

    It is a shibboleth if you are on a horse otherwise it's open season.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,143

    I’m all in favour of fox hunting.
    Fox are pests.
    I’ve no idea why it’s such a shibboleth in the UK.

    Class.
  • Off top my head, Sunak not sacked and knight of Long Knives wasn’t 58, it was sixties when Super Mac in trouble?
    Correct . Sunak resigned - and the Night of the Long Knives was Summer 1962 when Selwyn Lloyd was dismissed.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    TOPPING said:

    It is a shibboleth if you are on a horse otherwise it's open season.
    Very vigorous 8 a.m. ride this morning. Also, my main lot's OM, so 11 a.m. from Tue onwards, yay!
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    I'm doubtful about attributing niceness or otherwise to wild animals and I don't think that ever came up either. I'm against hunting anything for fun - rats, toads, bluebottles, whatever. It's not in any case an efficient form of fox control (and is not intended to be - it's a sport for enjoyment, not a serious culling operation). My uncle was a keen huntsman - he conceded that it wasn't useful and "not very nice for the fox" but felt it was a glorious spectacle.
    But you see my point though, as a New Labour MP? Tough on fox hunting, tough on causes of fox hunting? Which of course is the existence of foxes in this country. Logically, you sign a deal with a foreign country, who promise to treat them well and look after them okay through life, and fly them out there. Without ever revealing how much it costs overall, and avoiding a vote in the House of Commons.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,396

    You from Manchester Roger?
    What a good guess without even a clue.
  • Anyone watch Andrew Neil? What was said?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited October 2022
    Ishmael_Z said:

    :lol:
    2 x gin and red vermouth, 1 x glass Chilean pinot noir, 1 x and counting Cotes du Rhone Villages. Signing off now to watch a zombie movie. I have a 55" with stereo now, and a pretty big TV.

    PS the way to approach Pinot Noir is to think of it as still, red champagne. Which is what it is.
    "I have a 55" with stereo now, and a pretty big TV."

    Hold on. If you have a pretty big TV what does the 55" refer to.

    Am in a nice post-h*****g fug (3pm meets as is the way these days) right now as we're sharing, with a glass of Waitrose Bourgogne blanc and a bottle of Ch. Tour St Bonnet 2010 waiting for later
  • Leon said:

    Dude




    Pikes Peak or Bust!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pikes_Peak

    The band of Ute people who called the Pikes Peak region their home were the Tabeguache, whose name means the "People of Sun Mountain".[4] Tava or "sun", is the Ute word that was given by these first people to the mountain that we now call Pikes Peak. It is thought that the Ute people first arrived in Colorado about 500 A.D.,[citation needed] however their oral history states that they were created on Tava. In the 1800s, when the Arapaho people arrived in Colorado, they knew the mountain as Heey-otoyoo' meaning "Long Mountain".[5]

    Throughout its history, European peoples have called the mountain El Capitán, Grand Peak, Great Peak, James Peak, Long Mountain, and Pike's Peak.[3]

    Early Spanish explorers named the mountain "El Capitán," meaning "The Leader". American explorer Zebulon Pike named the mountain "Highest Peak" in 1806, and the mountain was later commonly known as "Pike's Highest Peak." American explorer Stephen Harriman Long named the mountain "James Peak" in honor of Edwin James who climbed to the summit during Long's Expedition of 1820. The mountain was later renamed "Pike's Peak" in honor of Pike. The name was simplified to "Pikes Peak" by the United States Board on Geographic Names in 1890.

    SSI - Current common name for this mountain, testifies to the American love of alliteration.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pikes_Peak_Cog_Railway

    Note that you can also take a cog railway to the top of Mount Washington, New Hampshire

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Washington_Cog_Railway
  • Apparently the Sunday Times is reporting that the cut in the 20% standard rate is to be postponed.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,087
    A

    Off topic, I am currently enjoying a soothing cup of camomile tea. Made all the nicer by the addition of a dash of milk.

    Wtf
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,153
    edited October 2022

    @elonmusk
    The hell with it … even though Starlink is still losing money & other companies are getting billions of taxpayer $, we’ll just keep funding Ukraine govt for free


    https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1581345747777179651

    If the companies making NLAWs and Javelins are being paid I'm not sure why Starlink isn't, but Musk should really cheer up about this. The use of Starlink by Ukraine in this war has been great advertising for them. We've been looking at houses in rural Ireland, and it's noticeable that there's a price differential for those without access to decent broadband, and Starlink looks like a practical alternative, and it's not even that much more expensive than Irish broadband prices.

    A recommendation from the soldiers of Ukraine is pretty good in my book.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    TOPPING said:

    "I have a 55" with stereo now, and a pretty big TV."

    Hold on. If you have a pretty big TV what does the 55" refer to.

    Am in a nice post-h*****g fug (3pm meets as is the way these days) right now as we're sharing, with a glass of Waitrose Bourgogne blanc and a bottle of Ch. Tour St Bonnet 2010 waiting for later
    Do you know it’s just occurred to me, Leon in the states is now on Wild West time, he’ll only be posting overnight. Arguing with RCS. We will miss it all.

    Oh dear.
  • maxhmaxh Posts: 1,576

    I’m arguing anyone who peddles Labour Party lies that Kwarteng and Truss mini budget crashed the markets I am calling an idiot peddling a myth, and sure I can win this argument.

    I’ve been drinking all afternoon, don’t anyone want to take me on?
    You're probably sleeping it off right now, but just in case, I will!

    You and @Luckyguy1983 are making a similar argument, and its nonsense.

    You're arguing two different things. The first is a straw man, and obviously false: "Anyone want to own the claim if the mini budget is reversed, annulled, reset, the trajectory on the borrowings chart graph would be down when it hasn’t been all year?" Nah, no thanks, the economy was already getting worse before the Trustterf*ck.

    The second argument obviously doesn't follow: "I’m arguing anyone who peddles Labour Party lies that Kwarteng and Truss mini budget crashed the markets I am calling an idiot peddling a myth, and sure I can win this argument." Nah you can't. The markets were already pretty unhappy, they dropped a Trussterbomb in the middle of it. They bear full responsibility for moving the markets from 'err...we don't really like this

    If I was to say, sorry about that clusterbomb I dropped last week, I'll just clean up all the shrapnel from my clusterbomb and pretend it never happened, the maimed children might have something to say about it.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited October 2022
    The Lab hunting ban was like Brexit. At its core a few people who were principled but everyone else just prejudiced. And each group benefited from the other.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,396

    I know this isn't really important. But in all the zoom calls with politicians during lockdown I thought Lisa Nandy had the nicest room.
    Extremely important. All clues. If only voters had seen Truss curtsy before electing her a catastrophe may have been avoided
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,661
    Leon said:

    Dude




    Jealous. I have been on the Mount Washington Cog Railway though, which is narrow guage and in fact the oldest in the world:


  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,734
    @BethRigby
    I had heard via sources that Truss team had sounded out Javid. As a former CX who’d backed Truss, he’d have been an obvious choice for CX. When you need to win the party, this sort of briefing so damaging.


    https://twitter.com/BethRigby/status/1581350588540805120

    image
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    Roger said:

    What a good guess without even a clue.
    🙄

    You are never one to blow your own oboe, are you
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    edited October 2022

    Class.
    I’m a liberal.
    And as regards animal welfare, I’d prefer to do something meaningful like a complete ban on battery caging for hens.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    I'm doubtful about attributing niceness or otherwise to wild animals and I don't think that ever came up either. I'm against hunting anything for fun - rats, toads, bluebottles, whatever. It's not in any case an efficient form of fox control (and is not intended to be - it's a sport for enjoyment, not a serious culling operation). My uncle was a keen huntsman - he conceded that it wasn't useful and "not very nice for the fox" but felt it was a glorious spectacle.
    Technically, a keen hunting man. There's only one huntsman, the bloke with the hunting horn.

    This is v interesting, you are the only PBer about whom I know which public school their father attended, and you resent your uncle (his brother?) too. My question is this: what have a hundred foxes a year got that 30 000 pheasants haven't? Think what you would say if a hunt bred 30,000 foxes a year and aimed to kill 25,000 of them. If you think birds are in some way inferior to mammals google BF Skinner. Why the complete and utter silence on this topic? Except that you've fucked them toffs on horses who remind you of your dad, so job done?
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,298

    @BethRigby
    I had heard via sources that Truss team had sounded out Javid. As a former CX who’d backed Truss, he’d have been an obvious choice for CX. When you need to win the party, this sort of briefing so damaging.


    https://twitter.com/BethRigby/status/1581350588540805120

    image

    The knives are out. This sort of briefing will continue until she leaves Number 10. It's inevitable and it's imminent.
  • GPs already get aggressive patients demanding all kinds of stuff.

    My old GP would prescribe anything you asked him for. He would give me antibiotics unprompted. A couple of times I asked - hang on, I have a virus. Are you worried about an infection as well?

    I used to joke that I should ask for some diamorphine - just to see if he would hand it out.

    His daughter, who took over, is much better.

    In a number of countries I have visited, pharmacies will hand out medicines that are prescription only in the U.K. I’m pretty sure antibiotics are among them.
    Other countries are even more strict, though, on what can be bought "over the counter".
    When I worked in Norway and was going home for weekends, work colleagues would ask me to smuggle in Benylin.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,087

    I have no problem with the daughter wanting to go into medicine. It is the fact that it is so much easier for someone in her position to get into Med School than for those without the connections to facilitate the CV enhancing shadowing and work experience that pisses me off.
    My GF was first in her family to go to uni, straight into med school and currently looking after people in an Edinburgh A&E.

    Slight problem - she went to a grammar school. Now, I get the rationale behind not supporting them. But everyone I know from that background who has done really well has had some sort of leg up (eg foster kid on bursary at Gordonstoun) or went into the OPITO/Merchant Navy
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353

    I’m a liberal.
    And as regards animal welfare, I’d prefer to do something meaningful like a complete ban on battery caging for hens.
    That would be an eggsplosive action.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    I know this isn't really important. But in all the zoom calls with politicians during lockdown I thought Lisa Nandy had the nicest room.
    The account 'Bookcase credibility' judging public figures' backdrops during lockdown was a hoot, shame it had to naturally peter out.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182

    @BethRigby
    I had heard via sources that Truss team had sounded out Javid. As a former CX who’d backed Truss, he’d have been an obvious choice for CX. When you need to win the party, this sort of briefing so damaging.


    https://twitter.com/BethRigby/status/1581350588540805120

    image

    To be fair to Truss, Javid is a bit shit.

    With the sad exception of his recent comments about his brother’s suicide, I’ve never heard him say a single thing either useful or interesting.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,183
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Ignorance and prejudice often cluster in families.
    The North Ledbury Hunt took the stirrup cup in the car park of the Crown in Cradley, almost opposite where I lived. The hounds lost the scent of the fox in our back garden. How my father laughed as 30 dogs trampled his perfectly manicured garden. I thought good on the fox who had leapt the fences half an hour earlier. A very angry Assistant Hunt Master had to dismount and come into our garden and collect his dogs. I suggested "this one got away", to which he retorted "we'll dig the bastard out and feed him to the dogs anyway" which didn't seem very sporting. Anyway the fox had the last laugh, because when she died Last Wachter, the Hunt Master had all her horses and hounds put down as part of her will.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,608
    Monkeys said:

    I've seen it suggested urban foxes are developing the sorts of signs of neoteny that are seen in domestication.
    I watched a YouTube documentary that described the evidence for fox domestication in the Bronze Age and late Neolithic.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    edited October 2022

    Correct . Sunak resigned - and the Night of the Long Knives was Summer 1962 when Selwyn Lloyd was dismissed.
    Yes.

    I recall he made 48 before being turned inside out and edging to gully. And so it started, Knight of long Nightlife’s, or something 34 years before I was born.

    The gruesome phrase, so inappropriate on anniversary of Sir David’s death, I presume is a Shakespeare reference?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353
    kle4 said:

    The account 'Bookcase credibility' judging public figures' backdrops during lockdown was a hoot, shame it had to naturally peter out.
    I wonder what they'd make of me - three bookcases, one with history, one with history and theology, and one with music.
This discussion has been closed.