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Getting Brexit done, badly – politicalbetting.com

SystemSystem Posts: 11,682
edited December 2022 in General
Getting Brexit done, badly – politicalbetting.com

The EU transition period ended on Dec 31st 2020. Since then, do you think Brexit has gone well or badly?Well: 12% (-4 since June)Neither well nor badly: 20% (=)Badly: 59% (+5)https://t.co/GJgshKLMmh pic.twitter.com/vDJhSDTbHI

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  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,987
    First!
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    Dire warning for 'tainted' Tories as bombshell polling reveals Sir Keir Starmer is ahead of Rishi Sunak on 11 out of 12 key issues - including cost of living, NHS, immigration and Brexit
    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11472779/Bombshell-polling-reveals-Sir-Keir-Starmer-ahead-Rishi-Sunak-11-12-key-issues.html
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    More poll news:-

    Women think men with big ears like Gary Lineker make better lovers, poll reveals
    https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/women-think-men-big-ears-28592673
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    AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 19,984
    On topic, yes Brexit is a pile of shite, as many of us wisely predicted.

    But, we aren’t going back into the EU so we need to work out how to make the best of it.

    Regulatory alignment and a benign visa regime for young workers would be the obvious frame.
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    edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,150
    edited November 2022
    I think the trick for Starmer is to let someone pull this from the EU end.

    Have some friendly centrist from one of the member states go around saying, "I'd like to make an invitation to the UK to rejoin the EU". Most likely someone influential in one of the member states will say "No, I don't we should let them back in" or "OK but if they rejoin they're doing it properly, full Euro membership, Schengen, no rebate, the proper thing". Starmer can then say, "whatever you think about the merits of rejoining, it's not possible, so put that box away and close the lid".

    In the unlikely event that all the stars align and the Friendly European Centrist does actually manage to get everybody to agree to a reasonably status-quo-ante-like version of Rejoin, at that point PM Starmer can say, "The EU have put this invitation on the table, let's get it out of the way and have a quick referendum so we can put it to rest one way or the other".
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    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 5,261
    edited November 2022
    Knowing that Labour are going to win the next General Election has nothing to do with hubris.

    It's about psephology, history, data, and above all listening.

    @TSE

    p.s. Starmer has to do and say precisely nothing on Brexit. Like most things. The tories have hung themselves.
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    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 5,261
    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.
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    felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
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    Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,949
    ...
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    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    You keep repeating this banal point. Like you’re the bearer of some unique wisdom

    Yes, Labour are extremely likely to win. I don’t know anyone on here that denies it
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    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    China in trouble?


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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,280
    The first major free trade agreement signed by Britain after Brexit has been branded a failure after new figures showed exports had fallen since it came into force.

    Liz Truss signed a “historic” deal with Japan as trade secretary in October 2020, describing it as a “landmark moment for Britain”. It was claimed it would boost trade by billions of pounds and help the UK recover from the pandemic.

    However, figures collated by the Department for International Trade show exports to Japan fell from £12.3bn to £11.9bn in the year to June 2022. Exports in goods fell 4.9% to £6.1bn and services fell 2% to £5.8bn.
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    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 5,261
    edited November 2022
    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
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    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 5,261
    edited November 2022
    In order to encourage the kind of mental reset required from a few on here, I suggest you stop thinking in terms of 'can Labour do it?' and instead start imagining how big they might go.

    A useful starting exercise would be to picture the House of Commons with fewer than 100 Conservative MPs. Because that's the kind of reality the polls are showing, and the doorstep canvassing reveals.

    Reboot your minds. Those young tory MPs jumping ship know it ...

    And there I shall leave it. Have a nice day.

    xx
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    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
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    felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    IanB2 said:

    The first major free trade agreement signed by Britain after Brexit has been branded a failure after new figures showed exports had fallen since it came into force.

    Liz Truss signed a “historic” deal with Japan as trade secretary in October 2020, describing it as a “landmark moment for Britain”. It was claimed it would boost trade by billions of pounds and help the UK recover from the pandemic.

    However, figures collated by the Department for International Trade show exports to Japan fell from £12.3bn to £11.9bn in the year to June 2022. Exports in goods fell 4.9% to £6.1bn and services fell 2% to £5.8bn.

    Bizarre to assume that no other factors may have affected things over the past 2 years. Unless they factored in the COVID effect.
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,599
    exports to Japan slump after ‘landmark’ free trade deal
    First such accord after leaving EU was predicted to bring £15bn boost but UK now lags rivals
    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/nov/26/brexit-britain-japan-trade-deal-exports-slump

    Have the Tories blamed this on Liz Truss yet ?
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,599
    felix said:

    IanB2 said:

    The first major free trade agreement signed by Britain after Brexit has been branded a failure after new figures showed exports had fallen since it came into force.

    Liz Truss signed a “historic” deal with Japan as trade secretary in October 2020, describing it as a “landmark moment for Britain”. It was claimed it would boost trade by billions of pounds and help the UK recover from the pandemic.

    However, figures collated by the Department for International Trade show exports to Japan fell from £12.3bn to £11.9bn in the year to June 2022. Exports in goods fell 4.9% to £6.1bn and services fell 2% to £5.8bn.

    Bizarre to assume that no other factors may have affected things over the past 2 years. Unless they factored in the COVID effect.
    A comparative analysis of UK-Japan trade figures for 2020 and 2021 by Morita-Jaeger and a colleague states: “In all cases but one, Japanese exports and imports of goods and services with the UK performed worse than the equivalent flows with the EU or the rest of the world.”
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    ChrisChris Posts: 11,122
    That poll might be more helpful if they had also asked "Do you think Brexit has gone?"
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    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
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    FPT - I absolutely love women.

    I probably enjoy their company more than men.
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    Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 12,998
    Very interesting article from the Journal of Record of Brexit (NYT) on weapons to Ukraine. ("Use of Weapons" would have been a better and more amusing title.)

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/26/world/europe/nato-weapons-shortage-ukraine.html

    TLDR: Ukraine and Russia are both expending weapons at rate that runs far in excess of the capacity to replenish them. At least Ukraine are getting them free (EU) or via a payday loan (USA).

    Not mentioned in the article but it occurs to me that it's India's arse that Ukraine should be kissing. They are an artillery army due to Soviet influence and are sitting on reserves of 155mm rounds that are the size of Kangchengjunga.
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    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
  • Options
    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    Those who make serious bets wouldn't make such a bet - you're hoping to make the stakes so high no-one challenges you. Which tells me this is about your excitement and trying to drive a sense of inevitability about what you want to happen, and not a tip for a serious bet.

    I do make serious bets so let me come clean: I've bet on both a Labour OM and also NOM; my big play is to lay Conservative majority. I have over £300 at risk on it on Exchange.

    In my view that covers almost all realistic eventualities, including the possibility of a recovery in 2024, just before the election, as DNV/WNV rally to Sunak and the economy/geopolitical landscape improves, through to Tories being ahead in a hung parliament, Labour being ahead on seats in the same, and even a Labour landslide.

    Care to share your bets and how much youve put at risk?
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,232
    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    You sure it wasn't an all-nighter?
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,280
    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    You’re auditioning for Last of the Summer Wine again?
  • Options
    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    edited November 2022
    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    Nah. The last resort, the only place left to go for broken right wingers is to claim ‘they’re all the same”. It’s a little sad. The brutal truth is that the right screwed up, intoxicated by its own bullshit. Truss and Trump were the inevitable result. It will take years for the right to recover itself. No flowers. You and your ilk should apologise.
  • Options
    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    There's nothing wrong the site.

    The site isn't poorer for losing its bullies and trolls but insightful, intelligent and interesting below the line posters like @Richard_Nabavi @AlastairMeeks @Cyclefree @david_herdson and even @SouthamObserver . We still have many great regulars, of course, but not as many as we'd like to.

    It has been achingly dull the last week or so, and that's because of the World Cup and the fact there's no live politics betting going on.

  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,232
    edited November 2022
    Another one that will undoubtedly attract the ire of @Cyclefree

    Head of the Royal Navy defends handling of rape allegations
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-63770307

    I could pick apart his stupid fails of logic all night, although I'm sure she'd do it much better. But the key point is, he's just said in effect, whether he realises it or not, criminal matters should be investigated by organisations other than law enforcement agencies.

    Which is ludicrous. That's how you get these self-perpetuating situations in the first place.

    As for his talk about 'the context'...I think he's missed the real context, that too many dangerous and predatory men have power over women and have for years misused it with impunity, entirely.
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    Nothing in life is certain.

    I couldn't care to list the number of times I've bet on a "dead cert" only for my position to fall apart in the last 6 hours as it becomes clear that isn't what's going to happen.

    Be careful.
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    Eabhal said:

    HYUFD said:

    ‘Let’s be frank here, the reason unionists are afraid of the Scottish independence referendum is because there is a serious chance they might lose’ Prof John Curtice.

    https://twitter.com/phantompower14/status/1596614632952647681?s=46&t=cvUn00cPOlle94yU0mzFtA

    Any referendum can be lost, we have had far too many of them. We are a parliamentary democracy not a direct democracy based on Westminster sovereignty as the Supreme Court confirmed
    England has democracy. Scotland doesn’t.
    It should be remembered that Scotland has no history of being a democracy at its own hand. The Scots have a clear track record of backing the dictatorial Stuart kings in the War of the Three Kingdoms. They fought against Cromwell’s republican army at Dunbar in 1650 – despite the Lord Protector’s offer of peace if they would just “think again”. Having backed the wrong horse, the Scots then abolished their own corrupt Parliament in 1652 and began returning Scottish MPs to Westminster, only to opt out of that democratic (for its time) system again after 1660. Democracy has always been very much “law from over the Border” for Scotland. Perhaps that history might explain Ms Sturgeon’s failure to grasp what democracy actually means today.

    https://www.scottishlegal.com/articles/alistair-bonnington
    Let's be honest, that's nonsense.

    Scotland is currently conducting an energetic debate over secession from a 300 year old union without bombs going off. It's great. It's entrenched. It's very silly, often.

    We're about the most democratic nation on earth, in a sense.

    The best thing about it is it focuses minds on what we want Scotland to be in the future. I'm quite short-termist in my thinking, which contributes to my unionist tendencies. I actually think a lot of the division is simply timing.

    Nice to have a reflective Unionist on the board.

    I rarely agree with you, but it is refreshing to hear a perspective from someone who doesn’t consistently spout the standard BritNat nonsense.

    If you were more long-termist in your thinking, would you support Scottish independence?
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    Nah. The last resort, the only place left to go for broken right wingers is to claim ‘they’re all the same”. It’s a little sad. The brutal truth is that the right screwed up, intoxicated by its own bullshit. Truss and Trump were the inevitable result. It will take years for the right to recover itself. No flowers. You and your ilk should apologise.
    Lol

    China? Russia? Lula? Islamist regimes? Venezuela?

    Covid was leaked from a lab inside a communist regime, a lab which was funded by the capitalist USA, co-founded by an EU state, and guided by a not-for-profit NGO, Ecohealth

    It is the perfect symbol of our perfect storm. Omnigeddon is way beyond party politics. If you really think “Thatcher” is to blame for our systemic woes then you are a fitting example of modern PB: depressingly stupid
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,121

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    There's nothing wrong the site.

    The site isn't poorer for losing its bullies and trolls but insightful, intelligent and interesting below the line posters like @Richard_Nabavi @AlastairMeeks @Cyclefree @david_herdson and even @SouthamObserver . We still have many great regulars, of course, but not as many as we'd like to.

    It has been achingly dull the last week or so, and that's because of the World Cup and the fact there's no live politics betting going on.

    Although, in the unlikely event that England should win the World Cup, the impact on the domestic political scene of such a black swan could be significant. Both parties back in the 30s?
  • Options
    Young people are influenced by social media, but schools play an important part in reinforcing woke beliefs. A clear majority of British schoolchildren are being indoctrinated with cultural socialist ideas. Among the 18-year-olds I sampled, 63 per cent were taught or heard from an adult at school about at least one of “white privilege”, “unconscious bias” or “systemic racism” – three concepts derived from critical race theory. If we include radical feminist ideas such as “patriarchy” or the idea of many genders, this rises to 78 per cent. Those who have been taught more of these critical social justice (CSJ) ideas are more likely to favour political correctness as a way of protecting disadvantaged groups, rather than viewing PC as stifling free expression.

    Those young people who dissent from orthodoxy do so at their own risk, and the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) agenda forces them to self-censor. A majority of Right-leaning young people who said they were taught at least three of five CSJ concepts worried about being expelled or punished for voicing their opinions. Nearly half of Right-leaning employees under 35 who have taken diversity training worry about being fired or losing their reputation.

    My work shows that the public opposes wokeness by more than two to one across 25 issues, and these questions split the Left while uniting the Right. Yet the Tories seem incapable of tacking the spread of cultural socialism in schools, the NHS, the police and civil service. Conservative MPs lack both the conviction and courage to act, unlike their US Republican counterparts like Ron DeSantis. Too many are business liberals who pray at the altar of economic dynamism and care little about the country’s culture and traditions. This is reflected in the unprecedented net migration figure of over half a million and the years-long inattention to the flow of asylum seekers crossing the Channel.

    If most Britons no longer believe in freedom of speech or scientific reason and view our past as a racist nightmare, this is not some “culture war” sideshow. It undermines the very essence of British civilisation.


    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/11/26/school-indoctrination-turning-british-youth-woke-tories-remain/
  • Options

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    There's nothing wrong the site.

    The site isn't poorer for losing its bullies and trolls but insightful, intelligent and interesting below the line posters like @Richard_Nabavi @AlastairMeeks @Cyclefree @david_herdson and even @SouthamObserver . We still have many great regulars, of course, but not as many as we'd like to.

    It has been achingly dull the last week or so, and that's because of the World Cup and the fact there's no live politics betting going on.

    Although, in the unlikely event that England should win the World Cup, the impact on the domestic political scene of such a black swan could be significant. Both parties back in the 30s?
    Personally, I doubt it. I think the 1970 thing is a bit of a myth.
  • Options
    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    edited November 2022
    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    Nah. The last resort, the only place left to go for broken right wingers is to claim ‘they’re all the same”. It’s a little sad. The brutal truth is that the right screwed up, intoxicated by its own bullshit. Truss and Trump were the inevitable result. It will take years for the right to recover itself. No flowers. You and your ilk should apologise.
    Lol

    China? Russia? Lula? Islamist regimes? Venezuela?

    Covid was leaked from a lab inside a communist regime, a lab which was funded by the capitalist USA, co-founded by an EU state, and guided by a not-for-profit NGO, Ecohealth

    It is the perfect symbol of our perfect storm. Omnigeddon is way beyond party politics. If you really think “Thatcher” is to blame for our systemic woes then you are a fitting example of modern PB: depressingly stupid
    Your intellectual exhaustion is increasingly apparent. It must be tiring to find increasingly elaborate ways to defend the right wing shitshow. You resorting to Thatch is a case in point. You are becoming the Kwasi Kwarteng of PB. Intellectually self preening, but a blind fool. The failure of the right is obvious. Truss was no omnigeddon, she was a catastrophe shitted out into the world from the diseased, constipated bowels of tired right wing dogma.

  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    There's nothing wrong the site.

    The site isn't poorer for losing its bullies and trolls but insightful, intelligent and interesting below the line posters like @Richard_Nabavi @AlastairMeeks @Cyclefree @david_herdson and even @SouthamObserver . We still have many great regulars, of course, but not as many as we'd like to.

    It has been achingly dull the last week or so, and that's because of the World Cup and the fact there's no live politics betting going on.

    The site really is much poorer for losing people like @IshmaelZ

    I know he irked you, but people like him are necessary. They provide needle. The annoying grit that nonetheless makes the pearl of debate

    It was an amusing in-joke on PB that we should “stick to betting”. Of course that WAS a joke. If the
    debate is one day reduced to basic betting advice then it will be an intellectual desert inhabited by nerds and geeks. And the odd Scot Nat

    I fear it is already halfway down that road
  • Options
    StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    edited November 2022
    YouGov - The EU transition period ended on Dec 31st 2020. Since then, do you think Brexit has gone well or badly? (GB finding in brackets)

    Scotland:

    Well: 6% (12%)
    Neither well nor badly: 17% (20%)
    Badly: 68% (59%)

    As David Cameron said, leaving the European Union would lead to the 'disintegration' of the United Kingdom.

    The key problem with Keir Starmer’s thousand-times-revived Devomax proposal is that it still reserves foreign relations and international treaties to the colonial government in Westminster. It blocks Scotland rejoining our allies in Europe. That is the main reason why it has only 17% support, according to Professor John Curtice.
    The second problem is that it is a lie. Again.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    Nah. The last resort, the only place left to go for broken right wingers is to claim ‘they’re all the same”. It’s a little sad. The brutal truth is that the right screwed up, intoxicated by its own bullshit. Truss and Trump were the inevitable result. It will take years for the right to recover itself. No flowers. You and your ilk should apologise.
    Lol

    China? Russia? Lula? Islamist regimes? Venezuela?

    Covid was leaked from a lab inside a communist regime, a lab which was funded by the capitalist USA, co-founded by an EU state, and guided by a not-for-profit NGO, Ecohealth

    It is the perfect symbol of our perfect storm. Omnigeddon is way beyond party politics. If you really think “Thatcher” is to blame for our systemic woes then you are a fitting example of modern PB: depressingly stupid
    Your intellectual exhaustion is increasingly apparent. It must be tiring to find increasingly elaborate ways to defend the right wing shitshow. You resorting to Thatch is a case in point. You are becoming the Kwasi Kwarteng of PB. Intellectually self preening, but a blind fool. The failure of the right is obvious. Truss was no omnigeddon, she was a catastrophe shitted out into the world from the diseased, constipated bowels of tired right wing dogma.

    Oh dear
  • Options
    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    Nah. The last resort, the only place left to go for broken right wingers is to claim ‘they’re all the same”. It’s a little sad. The brutal truth is that the right screwed up, intoxicated by its own bullshit. Truss and Trump were the inevitable result. It will take years for the right to recover itself. No flowers. You and your ilk should apologise.
    Lol

    China? Russia? Lula? Islamist regimes? Venezuela?

    Covid was leaked from a lab inside a communist regime, a lab which was funded by the capitalist USA, co-founded by an EU state, and guided by a not-for-profit NGO, Ecohealth

    It is the perfect symbol of our perfect storm. Omnigeddon is way beyond party politics. If you really think “Thatcher” is to blame for our systemic woes then you are a fitting example of modern PB: depressingly stupid
    Your intellectual exhaustion is increasingly apparent. It must be tiring to find increasingly elaborate ways to defend the right wing shitshow. You resorting to Thatch is a case in point. You are becoming the Kwasi Kwarteng of PB. Intellectually self preening, but a blind fool. The failure of the right is obvious. Truss was no omnigeddon, she was a catastrophe shitted out into the world from the diseased, constipated bowels of tired right wing dogma.

    Oh dear
    Well quite. You need to recharge your batteries and reflect on how you got it so wrong.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,121
    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    You keep repeating this banal point. Like you’re the bearer of some unique wisdom

    Yes, Labour are extremely likely to win. I don’t know anyone on here that denies it
    I deny Labour are going to get a outright majority.

    I think that they may end up in a Red-Orange-Purple-Green coalition. Colours that are combined in nature only to warn "This critter is highly toxic. Beware..."
  • Options
    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    You keep repeating this banal point. Like you’re the bearer of some unique wisdom

    Yes, Labour are extremely likely to win. I don’t know anyone on here that denies it
    I deny Labour are going to get a outright majority.

    I think that they may end up in a Red-Orange-Purple-Green coalition. Colours that are combined in nature only to warn "This critter is highly toxic. Beware..."
    You gave the world Truss.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    Nah. The last resort, the only place left to go for broken right wingers is to claim ‘they’re all the same”. It’s a little sad. The brutal truth is that the right screwed up, intoxicated by its own bullshit. Truss and Trump were the inevitable result. It will take years for the right to recover itself. No flowers. You and your ilk should apologise.
    Lol

    China? Russia? Lula? Islamist regimes? Venezuela?

    Covid was leaked from a lab inside a communist regime, a lab which was funded by the capitalist USA, co-founded by an EU state, and guided by a not-for-profit NGO, Ecohealth

    It is the perfect symbol of our perfect storm. Omnigeddon is way beyond party politics. If you really think “Thatcher” is to blame for our systemic woes then you are a fitting example of modern PB: depressingly stupid
    Your intellectual exhaustion is increasingly apparent. It must be tiring to find increasingly elaborate ways to defend the right wing shitshow. You resorting to Thatch is a case in point. You are becoming the Kwasi Kwarteng of PB. Intellectually self preening, but a blind fool. The failure of the right is obvious. Truss was no omnigeddon, she was a catastrophe shitted out into the world from the diseased, constipated bowels of tired right wing dogma.

    Oh dear
    Well quite. You need to recharge your batteries and reflect on how you got it so wrong.
    I’m intrigued by your urgently scatological imagery

    If the “bowels of tired right wing dogma” are “diseased and constipated”, how come Truss was “shitted out”? So, the diseased bowels of right wing dogma AREN’T constipated? How does that work then? Did the colon of conservatism suddenly intake a laxative of left wingery? Via the pessary of politicalbetting?

    Also, is shitted out right? Surely it’s shat?

    Time for a macchiato

  • Options

    Dire warning for 'tainted' Tories as bombshell polling reveals Sir Keir Starmer is ahead of Rishi Sunak on 11 out of 12 key issues - including cost of living, NHS, immigration and Brexit
    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11472779/Bombshell-polling-reveals-Sir-Keir-Starmer-ahead-Rishi-Sunak-11-12-key-issues.html

    Good article, if grim reading for the Tories:

    First, Sunak’s Tories face Theresa May’s 2017 problem, when she struggled to unite austerity-backing David Cameron voters (many of whom voted Remain in the referendum) with 2016 Brexiteers (many of whom disliked austerity).

    In the absence of the twin unifiers of the last Election – the drive to ‘get Brexit done’ under Johnson and horror at the prospect of Jeremy Corbyn in No 10 – the 2019 coalition has collapsed. Anti-austerity Leavers have deserted the party in droves, while more liberal Tory Remainers had already gone.

    Next, Sunak has Gordon Brown’s 2010 problem. Brown argued furiously that Britain’s credit crunch and subsequent recession were the result of a global financial crisis, not his own mismanagement.

    The voters took a different view – or in any case decided that whoever had caused the problem, they wanted someone else to get them out of it.

    Worst of all, it looks increasingly as if Sunak is up against John Major’s 1997 problem – a governing party that looked so exhausted, tainted and ill-disciplined that even a strongly recovering economy could not stave off defeat at the hands of a newly detoxified Labour opposition.


    If the Tory back benchers and “anti-growth coalition” don’t get their house in order they’ll go down to an even heavier defeat than they deserve.
  • Options
    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    Nah. The last resort, the only place left to go for broken right wingers is to claim ‘they’re all the same”. It’s a little sad. The brutal truth is that the right screwed up, intoxicated by its own bullshit. Truss and Trump were the inevitable result. It will take years for the right to recover itself. No flowers. You and your ilk should apologise.
    Lol

    China? Russia? Lula? Islamist regimes? Venezuela?

    Covid was leaked from a lab inside a communist regime, a lab which was funded by the capitalist USA, co-founded by an EU state, and guided by a not-for-profit NGO, Ecohealth

    It is the perfect symbol of our perfect storm. Omnigeddon is way beyond party politics. If you really think “Thatcher” is to blame for our systemic woes then you are a fitting example of modern PB: depressingly stupid
    I didn't see Thatch being blamed by Jonathan. Funnily enough, I do blame Blair.

    Think back to the late 90's, and very early noughties. New Labour was the only game in town for the best part of a decade. Hardly anyone with an interest in politics and ideas went through the blue lane; I wonder if Dave would have done so had he been five or so years younger. That generation is the one in its forties now.

    Result? Look at the Conservative movement now. Far too many freaks, chancers and (to go back on topic) Eurobores, because they're the only ones who were attracted by the Conservatives in the days of Major, Hague and IDS. And grumpy old boomers who really ought to have been metaphorically pensioned off by now but are still making what intellectual weather there is.

    Whilst they will eventually pull out of this, the party pendulum doesn't stick forever, God knows what that will look like.
  • Options
    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    You keep repeating this banal point. Like you’re the bearer of some unique wisdom

    Yes, Labour are extremely likely to win. I don’t know anyone on here that denies it
    I deny Labour are going to get a outright majority.

    I think that they may end up in a Red-Orange-Purple-Green coalition. Colours that are combined in nature only to warn "This critter is highly toxic. Beware..."
    You gave the world Truss.
    Mr and Mrs Truss gave the world Truss, and they’re both left-wing, like you.

    The Tories gave the Tory Party Truss. She was an appropriate leader and apt symbol of their self-destructive cause.
  • Options
    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,280

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    You keep repeating this banal point. Like you’re the bearer of some unique wisdom

    Yes, Labour are extremely likely to win. I don’t know anyone on here that denies it
    I deny Labour are going to get a outright majority.

    I think that they may end up in a Red-Orange-Purple-Green coalition. Colours that are combined in nature only to warn "This critter is highly toxic. Beware..."
    I do hope you're not going to threaten us with 'chaos' again? ;)
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,987

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    You keep repeating this banal point. Like you’re the bearer of some unique wisdom

    Yes, Labour are extremely likely to win. I don’t know anyone on here that denies it
    I deny Labour are going to get a outright majority.

    I think that they may end up in a Red-Orange-Purple-Green coalition. Colours that are combined in nature only to warn "This critter is highly toxic. Beware..."
    I deny that you have a crystal ball that allows you to be absolutely certain about future events.

    Who do you think you are, @HYUFD?
  • Options
    Point of order: I thought we were only meant to copy n paste max a paragraph or two of articles, plus a link, in order not to land the blog owners in trouble. That norm seems to be being consistently broken. Not least by one of the moderators (who claims to work as a ‘lawyer’ despite spending his entire life on an obscure blog) who yesterday copy n pasted an entire Financial Times article on the thread. It was so long he had to do it in two posts.

    Apart from the legal issue of theft, it makes the threads ridiculously unreadable. (And nearly everyone around here is too loquacious anyway.)
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,294
    edited November 2022
    Good morning

    Just read a series of tweets re Brexit from Starmer and he is more anti rejoin than the conservatives

    It adds to the narrative he will say anything he thinks is popular but I would suggest a large number of Labour supporters will be dismayed this morning

    This is a golden opportunity for the lib dems to come out for rejoining

    I expect a Starmer led government but I have no idea how or whether it will be a majority or a coalition
  • Options
    kjhkjh Posts: 10,630
    edited November 2022
    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    Honestly you are getting old before your time. As a youth in the 60s people worried we were going to run out of oil, assuming we hadn't died in WWIII any minute and we were told by our parents that the music was rubbish not like the music from their generation.

    Oh and youngsters were out of control and exams were easier because we weren't as bright.

    Ring any bells?

    I remember thinking I wasn't going to fall into the same stereotype of my parents and I haven't.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    edited November 2022

    Young people are influenced by social media, but schools play an important part in reinforcing woke beliefs. A clear majority of British schoolchildren are being indoctrinated with cultural socialist ideas. Among the 18-year-olds I sampled, 63 per cent were taught or heard from an adult at school about at least one of “white privilege”, “unconscious bias” or “systemic racism” – three concepts derived from critical race theory. If we include radical feminist ideas such as “patriarchy” or the idea of many genders, this rises to 78 per cent. Those who have been taught more of these critical social justice (CSJ) ideas are more likely to favour political correctness as a way of protecting disadvantaged groups, rather than viewing PC as stifling free expression.

    Those young people who dissent from orthodoxy do so at their own risk, and the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) agenda forces them to self-censor. A majority of Right-leaning young people who said they were taught at least three of five CSJ concepts worried about being expelled or punished for voicing their opinions. Nearly half of Right-leaning employees under 35 who have taken diversity training worry about being fired or losing their reputation.

    My work shows that the public opposes wokeness by more than two to one across 25 issues, and these questions split the Left while uniting the Right. Yet the Tories seem incapable of tacking the spread of cultural socialism in schools, the NHS, the police and civil service. Conservative MPs lack both the conviction and courage to act, unlike their US Republican counterparts like Ron DeSantis. Too many are business liberals who pray at the altar of economic dynamism and care little about the country’s culture and traditions. This is reflected in the unprecedented net migration figure of over half a million and the years-long inattention to the flow of asylum seekers crossing the Channel.

    If most Britons no longer believe in freedom of speech or scientific reason and view our past as a racist nightmare, this is not some “culture war” sideshow. It undermines the very essence of British civilisation.


    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/11/26/school-indoctrination-turning-british-youth-woke-tories-remain/

    It’s even worse in America. Check this

    “MIT tells prospective faculty how to write a successful diversity statement.”

    “Woe to those students who have immersed themselves wholly in quantum mechanics or classical literature out of the love of the field and of knowledge. Without a track record in promoting diversity, as well as a philosophy of diversity, those people are doomed.”

    https://twitter.com/nachristakis/status/1596561855463432194?s=46&t=mEWZ4fqc1jhlAs0KW9mmXw

    Remember, this is MIT

    I’m developing a new Theory of Omnigeddon. Right now, every major society on earth is self destructing in its own peculiar way

    In the east it’s masks, plunging birth rates, zero covid. In the west, it’s Woke, insane migration, and plunging birth rates. Etc
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,599
    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    You remind me if my father as he was getting older.
    Convinced he would see the end times.

    I though Brexit was supposed to have reinvigorated you.
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,196
    edited November 2022
    FPT, because while I understand @Cyclefree point I still disagree.
    Cyclefree said:

    DavidL said:

    Cyclefree said:

    "Women have very little idea of how much men hate them."

    Germaine Greer

    “The worst sin towards our fellows is not to hate them. It is to be indifferent to them. For that is the essence of inhumanity.”

    George Bernard Shaw

    Weird ideas. I like women every bit as much as men, much more in one particular case. I don’t really choose friendships on the basis of sex at all.
    And yet the lead story on Channel 4 was not raised by anyone until I did and has been dismissed with either jokes or "I'm one of the good guys" defensiveness. No doubt you and @turbotubbs are decent men but that is just missing the point.

    What Nazir Afzal, a former prosecutor, said - not just about the London Fire Brigade - but about misogyny being like a "pandemic", about "decades of avoidance" of the issues, when he says that "the level of prejudice against women is dangerous", the reaction has been .... well ..... silence. Indifference? Or is it too difficult and uncomfortable a topic?

    Or maybe it's not easy to think that all this prejudice and bad behaviour is not being done by a few evil repellent shitty men but by rather more men than people would like to think, men who are often apparently respectable, professional, well-educated, men with good jobs, men with wives, girlfriends and families. I was raped by a lawyer, a witty fellow, admired by his colleagues at his place of work. Which is why I - stupidly as it turned out - trusted him. He didn't have "repellent predator" imprinted on his forehead. And I don't suppose any of the people doing the awful stuff detailed in this latest report - and all the earlier ones - had "shitty individual" imprinted on their foreheads either.

    In the last year we have had endless reports on such bad behaviour in:-

    The Met
    Other police forces
    The Navy
    The Army
    The London Fire Brigade

    There was a report on Parliament too.

    Maybe - just maybe - it is worth asking why it is that so many men behave so badly to so many women.

    Maybe - just maybe - it is worth asking whether refusing to think about or debate these questions is - just possibly - part of the problem.

    I will leave you to it, if you want. I am done. I have other stuff to be getting on with.

    But before I do may I wish you good luck in your new job and congratulations.

    Goodnight.
    I am sorry you feel that’s what I meant in my post. I believe you should never treat all people of x characteristic in a manner just because of that characteristic, so I intrinsically despair when I read such statements as the one posted. Would a little nuance help. ‘Some men’. Or even ‘many men’.
    It is striking that most, if not all of the professions under discussion have seen huge change in recent decades in gender membership. In WW2 (ok 80 years ago) the British army was entirely male. Women served in affiliated roles, but did not go to the front to fight, nor fly bombers over Berlin. Attitudes change. In the Falklands in 1982 it was the same. And yet in 2022 society has moved on and many more women are to be found excelling in the army, navy, police, parliament etc. Does any of this excuse terrible behaviour and attitudes towards women? Of course not. But it does provide context. Many of those men in those environments entered it in a different era, I do not expect my father to share my attitudes to everything - he’s 83, and lived a different life. I do expect him to be kind and do the right thing, and as a policemen for 30 years and a Guardsman before I hope and believe he did.
    Ultimately too many men are brought up badly, or have traumatic childhoods. My aunt, who was a social worker, opened my eyes to the shit start in life some get.
    I note the recent TV ads about misogyny and think it’s a good start.
    But the battle isn’t going to be one by tarring all men with the same brush.
  • Options

    Good morning

    Just read a series of tweets re Brexit from Starmer and he is more anti rejoin than the conservatives

    It adds to the narrative he will say anything he thinks is popular but I would suggest a large number of Labour supporters will be dismayed this morning

    This is a golden opportunity for the lib dems to come out for rejoining

    I expect a Starmer led government but I have no idea how or whether it will be a majority or a coalition

    This is a golden opportunity for the SNP, who are the only major party to support rejoining.

    Starmer is further to the right than the Tories. That doesn’t go down well in Prestonpans, Lochgelly or Shettleston.

    Labour have entirely tailored their offering to the most reactionary elements of English society. Fair enough. But there are consequences to such a choice.
  • Options
    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    Nah. The last resort, the only place left to go for broken right wingers is to claim ‘they’re all the same”. It’s a little sad. The brutal truth is that the right screwed up, intoxicated by its own bullshit. Truss and Trump were the inevitable result. It will take years for the right to recover itself. No flowers. You and your ilk should apologise.
    Lol

    China? Russia? Lula? Islamist regimes? Venezuela?

    Covid was leaked from a lab inside a communist regime, a lab which was funded by the capitalist USA, co-founded by an EU state, and guided by a not-for-profit NGO, Ecohealth

    It is the perfect symbol of our perfect storm. Omnigeddon is way beyond party politics. If you really think “Thatcher” is to blame for our systemic woes then you are a fitting example of modern PB: depressingly stupid
    Your intellectual exhaustion is increasingly apparent. It must be tiring to find increasingly elaborate ways to defend the right wing shitshow. You resorting to Thatch is a case in point. You are becoming the Kwasi Kwarteng of PB. Intellectually self preening, but a blind fool. The failure of the right is obvious. Truss was no omnigeddon, she was a catastrophe shitted out into the world from the diseased, constipated bowels of tired right wing dogma.

    Oh dear
    Well quite. You need to recharge your batteries and reflect on how you got it so wrong.
    I’m intrigued by your urgently scatological imagery

    If the “bowels of tired right wing dogma” are “diseased and constipated”, how come Truss was “shitted out”? So, the diseased bowels of right wing dogma AREN’T constipated? How does that work then? Did the colon of conservatism suddenly intake a laxative of left wingery? Via the pessary of politicalbetting?

    Also, is shitted out right? Surely it’s shat?

    Time for a macchiato

    Clearly the Conservative Party had been retaining a festering stool in Truss and her ideology. In a year of spasms, it finally discharged her on to the world in September. Having done so and horrified at the mess it created, ashamed it turned to Hunt to clean up. Alas the Tory party is a scatological cliche.

    With regard to discussions about whether it is ‘shitted’ or ‘shat’, you have the perfect metaphor for the current dynamic range of right wing thought. The outcome is the same.

    I remember when the right had challenging thinkers.
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,599
    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    Nah. The last resort, the only place left to go for broken right wingers is to claim ‘they’re all the same”. It’s a little sad. The brutal truth is that the right screwed up, intoxicated by its own bullshit. Truss and Trump were the inevitable result. It will take years for the right to recover itself. No flowers. You and your ilk should apologise.
    Lol

    China? Russia? Lula? Islamist regimes? Venezuela?

    Covid was leaked from a lab inside a communist regime, a lab which was funded by the capitalist USA, co-founded by an EU state, and guided by a not-for-profit NGO, Ecohealth

    It is the perfect symbol of our perfect storm. Omnigeddon is way beyond party politics. If you really think “Thatcher” is to blame for our systemic woes then you are a fitting example of modern PB: depressingly stupid
    Your certainty over ‘facts’ which simply aren’t is the perfect illustration of the way you reason.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    Nigelb said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    You remind me if my father as he was getting older.
    Convinced he would see the end times.

    I though Brexit was supposed to have reinvigorated you.
    Yes yes. Old codger. Summer wine. Blah blah

    Perhaps you should consider the possibility that we are, as a species, quite comprehensively fucked in a way we haven’t been since WW2 at least - and possibly as far back as the Ice Age

    There was probably an old Roman git in about AD 379 who kept saying “Look, these Ostrogoths worry me” and everyone said “oh shut up, the empire is fine, have a fried dormouse”
  • Options
    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 4,973

    Good morning

    Just read a series of tweets re Brexit from Starmer and he is more anti rejoin than the conservatives

    It adds to the narrative he will say anything he thinks is popular but I would suggest a large number of Labour supporters will be dismayed this morning

    This is a golden opportunity for the lib dems to come out for rejoining

    I expect a Starmer led government but I have no idea how or whether it will be a majority or a coalition

    Pincer movement to destroy the Tories: Starmer takes the red wall and the Midlands, while LDs clean up in the South.
  • Options
    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    edited November 2022
    Leon said:

    Nigelb said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    You remind me if my father as he was getting older.
    Convinced he would see the end times.

    I though Brexit was supposed to have reinvigorated you.
    Yes yes. Old codger. Summer wine. Blah blah

    Perhaps you should consider the possibility that we are, as a species, quite comprehensively fucked in a way we haven’t been since WW2 at least - and possibly as far back as the Ice Age

    There was probably an old Roman git in about AD 379 who kept saying “Look, these Ostrogoths worry me” and everyone said “oh shut up, the empire is fine, have a fried dormouse”
    Nah it’s just the right that are done for the time being. Intellectually exhausted from defending their failures. Your world is collapsing.
  • Options
    Sturgeon’s mantra remains no man will abuse the system & an English paediatrician’s evidence review is irrelevant to Scottish children.

    Why she is so wrong to ignore the warnings of the UN Rapporteur about the risks of self-ID for Scottish women & girls


    https://twitter.com/soniasodha/status/1596781351968989186

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/nov/27/nicola-sturgeon-will-endanger-women-if-she-opens-single-sex-spaces-almost-everone
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,196
    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    While I agree with this as a likely outcome, I still think you are too certain. There is the terrible moment in life when faced with the polling booth, and all the times you said to the pollsters ‘yes, I’m voting Labour this time’, you get in there and muscle memory takes over, and bam, the cross is on that smarmy Tory box.
    Or, Labour, having been forced to actually give some policies and facing a large amount of scrutiny, don’t do quite as well as expected, make no headway in Scotland, and scrape over the line.
    I know you believe that it’s nailed on because reasons, but you may be wrong.
  • Options
    Nigelb said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    You remind me if my father as he was getting older.
    Convinced he would see the end times.

    I though Brexit was supposed to have reinvigorated you.
    They thought Brexit was a magic potion, but it turned out to be an unmitigable poison.
  • Options

    Point of order: I thought we were only meant to copy n paste max a paragraph or two of articles, plus a link, in order not to land the blog owners in trouble.

    AIUI the concern applies to paywalled articles, not ones that can be freely read.
  • Options
    kjhkjh Posts: 10,630
    edited November 2022
    Leon said:

    Nigelb said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    You remind me if my father as he was getting older.
    Convinced he would see the end times.

    I though Brexit was supposed to have reinvigorated you.
    Yes yes. Old codger. Summer wine. Blah blah

    Perhaps you should consider the possibility that we are, as a species, quite comprehensively fucked in a way we haven’t been since WW2 at least - and possibly as far back as the Ice Age

    There was probably an old Roman git in about AD 379 who kept saying “Look, these Ostrogoths worry me” and everyone said “oh shut up, the empire is fine, have a fried dormouse”
    You might be right, but really please compare to the 60s where we all thought the world was going to end any minute in mushroom clouds and if not that we we doomed to return to the stone age as oil was going to run out. Neither happened. How is it different?
  • Options
    SelebianSelebian Posts: 7,436

    Young people are influenced by social media, but schools play an important part in reinforcing woke beliefs. A clear majority of British schoolchildren are being indoctrinated with cultural socialist ideas. Among the 18-year-olds I sampled, 63 per cent were taught or heard from an adult at school about at least one of “white privilege”, “unconscious bias” or “systemic racism” – three concepts derived from critical race theory. If we include radical feminist ideas such as “patriarchy” or the idea of many genders, this rises to 78 per cent. Those who have been taught more of these critical social justice (CSJ) ideas are more likely to favour political correctness as a way of protecting disadvantaged groups, rather than viewing PC as stifling free expression.

    Those young people who dissent from orthodoxy do so at their own risk, and the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) agenda forces them to self-censor. A majority of Right-leaning young people who said they were taught at least three of five CSJ concepts worried about being expelled or punished for voicing their opinions. Nearly half of Right-leaning employees under 35 who have taken diversity training worry about being fired or losing their reputation.

    My work shows that the public opposes wokeness by more than two to one across 25 issues, and these questions split the Left while uniting the Right. Yet the Tories seem incapable of tacking the spread of cultural socialism in schools, the NHS, the police and civil service. Conservative MPs lack both the conviction and courage to act, unlike their US Republican counterparts like Ron DeSantis. Too many are business liberals who pray at the altar of economic dynamism and care little about the country’s culture and traditions. This is reflected in the unprecedented net migration figure of over half a million and the years-long inattention to the flow of asylum seekers crossing the Channel.

    If most Britons no longer believe in freedom of speech or scientific reason and view our past as a racist nightmare, this is not some “culture war” sideshow. It undermines the very essence of British civilisation.


    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/11/26/school-indoctrination-turning-british-youth-woke-tories-remain/

    Kaufman, voodoo pollster extraordinaire.

    Why are (some on) the right such snowflakes on this? If they disagree, then argue their side and have faith in their ability to win the argument. It's nothing new having raving left teachers - I was taught by an actual communist and a member of the SWP but it didn't get me voting for Corbyn.
  • Options

    Point of order: I thought we were only meant to copy n paste max a paragraph or two of articles, plus a link, in order not to land the blog owners in trouble.

    AIUI the concern applies to paywalled articles, not ones that can be freely read.
    The FT is behind a paywall.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    Nah. The last resort, the only place left to go for broken right wingers is to claim ‘they’re all the same”. It’s a little sad. The brutal truth is that the right screwed up, intoxicated by its own bullshit. Truss and Trump were the inevitable result. It will take years for the right to recover itself. No flowers. You and your ilk should apologise.
    Lol

    China? Russia? Lula? Islamist regimes? Venezuela?

    Covid was leaked from a lab inside a communist regime, a lab which was funded by the capitalist USA, co-founded by an EU state, and guided by a not-for-profit NGO, Ecohealth

    It is the perfect symbol of our perfect storm. Omnigeddon is way beyond party politics. If you really think “Thatcher” is to blame for our systemic woes then you are a fitting example of modern PB: depressingly stupid
    Your intellectual exhaustion is increasingly apparent. It must be tiring to find increasingly elaborate ways to defend the right wing shitshow. You resorting to Thatch is a case in point. You are becoming the Kwasi Kwarteng of PB. Intellectually self preening, but a blind fool. The failure of the right is obvious. Truss was no omnigeddon, she was a catastrophe shitted out into the world from the diseased, constipated bowels of tired right wing dogma.

    Oh dear
    Well quite. You need to recharge your batteries and reflect on how you got it so wrong.
    I’m intrigued by your urgently scatological imagery

    If the “bowels of tired right wing dogma” are “diseased and constipated”, how come Truss was “shitted out”? So, the diseased bowels of right wing dogma AREN’T constipated? How does that work then? Did the colon of conservatism suddenly intake a laxative of left wingery? Via the pessary of politicalbetting?

    Also, is shitted out right? Surely it’s shat?

    Time for a macchiato

    Clearly the Conservative Party had been retaining a festering stool in Truss and her ideology. In a year of spasms, it finally discharged her on to the world in September. Having done so and horrified at the mess it created, ashamed it turned to Hunt to clean up. Alas the Tory party is a scatological cliche.

    With regard to discussions about whether it is ‘shitted’ or ‘shat’, you have the perfect metaphor for the current dynamic range of right wing thought. The outcome is the same.

    I remember when the right had challenging thinkers.
    Ah. Thankyou. Then it’s actually a pretty good analogy

    I tend to agree. Trussism was the fever of Brexit, finally breaking

    The patient thrashed with a rictus grin, the temperature peaked, we came close to the end, and then Doctor Hunt-Sunak, with his pills, hurried from the room and told us the recovery would be long

    Right now we are hoping for a better prognosis from old Doc Starmer, with his ancient elixirs
  • Options
    Ireland signs deal for electricity cable link with France, bypassing the UK. It will cost €1.6bn to build and be capable of carrying up to 700 MW of energy. "This will be Ireland's first interconnector with mainland Europe."

    https://twitter.com/georgvh/status/1596123168472801281?s=46&t=pyRopc9M1bFTGAIaw0wZJA
  • Options
    Sturgeon remains blinkered: she has ignored female victims of male violence, treated the concerns of the UN special rapporteur dismissively and failed to listen to young people who received appalling care from NHS Scotland and now regret their transition. Her implausible mantra remains that no man will abuse the system, women’s rights are not affected and evidence reviewed by an English paediatrician has no relevance to Scottish children. Scottish Labour could still try to amend the bill to make clear that a GRC does not change someone’s sex for the purposes of the Equality Act.

    But the most likely outcome is that Sturgeon, a self-professed feminist and nationalist, will leave the door wide open for a Conservative government in Westminster to step in to protect Scottish women, by updating the Equality Act to clarify its sex-based protections for women apply only to those who are biologically female.


    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/nov/27/nicola-sturgeon-will-endanger-women-if-she-opens-single-sex-spaces-almost-everone
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    kjh said:

    Leon said:

    Nigelb said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    You remind me if my father as he was getting older.
    Convinced he would see the end times.

    I though Brexit was supposed to have reinvigorated you.
    Yes yes. Old codger. Summer wine. Blah blah

    Perhaps you should consider the possibility that we are, as a species, quite comprehensively fucked in a way we haven’t been since WW2 at least - and possibly as far back as the Ice Age

    There was probably an old Roman git in about AD 379 who kept saying “Look, these Ostrogoths worry me” and everyone said “oh shut up, the empire is fine, have a fried dormouse”
    You might be right, but really please compare to the 60s where we all thought the world was going to end any minute in mushroom clouds and if not that we we doomed to return to the stone age as oil was going to run out. Neither happened. How is it different?
    Exhibit A. In the 1960s we did not face incontrovertible climate crisis, with attendant migration disasters

    And so on

    As it happens, I am not entirely pessimistic. I think we are on the cusp of a technological revolution - esp AI - which might save us (tho it also brings hazards). However it is foolish and juvenile to deny that we face a polycrisis of unprecedented challenges
  • Options
    northern_monkeynorthern_monkey Posts: 1,517
    edited November 2022
    ‘Cranswick, one of Britain’s biggest food producers, is flying in 400 butchers more than 6,000 miles from the Philippines to avert a Christmas shutdown after an exodus of staff following Brexit.

    The meat producer, based in Hull, is spending £4 million to recruit the butchers to alleviate labour shortages.

    Last year, a staffing crisis hampered production, leaving Cranswick with 25 per cent fewer staff at its plants in Hull and Norfolk. Staff shortages have hit many meat processing firms as a combination of employees leaving and an absence of new workers have restricted growth.’

    https://apple.news/AzOuA6TLcQiqnJ3oyjBPsnw

    Friend of mine works in a slaughterhouse, an engineer on the machines. A bloke I know vaguely down the pub works at the same place, killing the livestock. He’s a weird bloke.

    Not a place I’d like to work. Not surprised these places are struggling to recruit. Unsurprisingly, in half the roles you spend most of the time covered in blood.

    Good job we’ve taken back control to fly people half way round the globe at vast cost. It’s not like food prices haven’t risen sharply already.
  • Options
    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 4,973

    ‘Cranswick, one of Britain’s biggest food producers, is flying in 400 butchers more than 6,000 miles from the Philippines to avert a Christmas shutdown after an exodus of staff following Brexit.

    The meat producer, based in Hull, is spending £4 million to recruit the butchers to alleviate labour shortages.

    Last year, a staffing crisis hampered production, leaving Cranswick with 25 per cent fewer staff at its plants in Hull and Norfolk. Staff shortages have hit many meat processing firms as a combination of employees leaving and an absence of new workers have restricted growth.’

    https://apple.news/AzOuA6TLcQiqnJ3oyjBPsnw

    Friend of mine works in a slaughterhouse, an engineer on the machines. A bloke I know vaguely down the pub works at the same place, killing the livestock. He’s a weird bloke.

    Not a place I’d like to work. Not surprised these places are struggling to recruit. Unsurprisingly, in half the roles you spend most of the time covered in blood.

    Good job we’ve taken back control to fly foreigners in at vast cost. It’s not like food prices haven’t risen sharply already.

    Who'd have guessed that the only people to benefit from all those 'Brexit opportunities' that the Tories created would be butchers from the Philippines.
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,196

    Good morning

    Just read a series of tweets re Brexit from Starmer and he is more anti rejoin than the conservatives

    It adds to the narrative he will say anything he thinks is popular but I would suggest a large number of Labour supporters will be dismayed this morning

    This is a golden opportunity for the lib dems to come out for rejoining

    I expect a Starmer led government but I have no idea how or whether it will be a majority or a coalition

    Pincer movement to destroy the Tories: Starmer takes the red wall and the Midlands, while LDs clean up in the South.
    While it may happen, the Lib Dems are not showing any real signs of stirring yet. A lot of work for them to do.
  • Options
    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    There's nothing wrong the site.

    The site isn't poorer for losing its bullies and trolls but insightful, intelligent and interesting below the line posters like @Richard_Nabavi @AlastairMeeks @Cyclefree @david_herdson and even @SouthamObserver . We still have many great regulars, of course, but not as many as we'd like to.

    It has been achingly dull the last week or so, and that's because of the World Cup and the fact there's no live politics betting going on.

    The site really is much poorer for losing people like @IshmaelZ

    I know he irked you, but people like him are necessary. They provide needle. The annoying grit that nonetheless makes the pearl of debate

    It was an amusing in-joke on PB that we should “stick to betting”. Of course that WAS a joke. If the
    debate is one day reduced to basic betting advice then it will be an intellectual desert inhabited by nerds and geeks. And the odd Scot Nat

    I fear it is already halfway down that road
    Completely disagree with you. Nasty unpleasant poster who drove several people off this site with his personal abuse and bullying.

    Move on please.
  • Options
    Good morning, everyone.

    Mr. Monkey, there are valid criticisms of the way things have turned out. A failure to predict persistent double digit inflation caused by Russia invading Ukraine is not on that list.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,987
    Selebian said:

    Young people are influenced by social media, but schools play an important part in reinforcing woke beliefs. A clear majority of British schoolchildren are being indoctrinated with cultural socialist ideas. Among the 18-year-olds I sampled, 63 per cent were taught or heard from an adult at school about at least one of “white privilege”, “unconscious bias” or “systemic racism” – three concepts derived from critical race theory. If we include radical feminist ideas such as “patriarchy” or the idea of many genders, this rises to 78 per cent. Those who have been taught more of these critical social justice (CSJ) ideas are more likely to favour political correctness as a way of protecting disadvantaged groups, rather than viewing PC as stifling free expression.

    Those young people who dissent from orthodoxy do so at their own risk, and the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) agenda forces them to self-censor. A majority of Right-leaning young people who said they were taught at least three of five CSJ concepts worried about being expelled or punished for voicing their opinions. Nearly half of Right-leaning employees under 35 who have taken diversity training worry about being fired or losing their reputation.

    My work shows that the public opposes wokeness by more than two to one across 25 issues, and these questions split the Left while uniting the Right. Yet the Tories seem incapable of tacking the spread of cultural socialism in schools, the NHS, the police and civil service. Conservative MPs lack both the conviction and courage to act, unlike their US Republican counterparts like Ron DeSantis. Too many are business liberals who pray at the altar of economic dynamism and care little about the country’s culture and traditions. This is reflected in the unprecedented net migration figure of over half a million and the years-long inattention to the flow of asylum seekers crossing the Channel.

    If most Britons no longer believe in freedom of speech or scientific reason and view our past as a racist nightmare, this is not some “culture war” sideshow. It undermines the very essence of British civilisation.


    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/11/26/school-indoctrination-turning-british-youth-woke-tories-remain/

    Kaufman, voodoo pollster extraordinaire.

    Why are (some on) the right such snowflakes on this? If they disagree, then argue their side and have faith in their ability to win the argument. It's nothing new having raving left teachers - I was taught by an actual communist and a member of the SWP but it didn't get me voting for Corbyn.
    When I was at Cambridge (92-95), the economics department still had actual communist economists. Heck, just a few years earlier a Cambridge economist had argued that the absorption of the South into the (far more successful) North was "an inevitability, that no amount of US aid can prevent."

    More importantly, the questions in the survey are pretty dreadful. It's not:

    Have you been taught that white people are responsible for all the bad things in the world*

    It's:

    Have you heard at school or from a teacher that some people might think that white people, etc.

    My children are at school. In LA. Aged 14 and 12.

    I have literally not a single moment of concern that they are being taught that white people are responsible for all the bad shit in the world.

    Are they being taught that some institutions are structurally racist? Not that I've noticed, but if they said if of police forces in Alabama, I can't say I'd disagree.

    My kids are getting much the same diet of bullshit I always got. If there's one area where woke is genuinely prevalent (as in, I'm seeing and hear it, rather than I'm learning about it from hysterical voices in the press or on PB), it's probably gender. There is - undoubtedly - far more pronoun focus than I give a shit about.

    Right, I'm off to bed.

    So long suckers.

    * Yes, I know, I'm being ridiculous.
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,599
    Selebian said:

    Young people are influenced by social media, but schools play an important part in reinforcing woke beliefs. A clear majority of British schoolchildren are being indoctrinated with cultural socialist ideas. Among the 18-year-olds I sampled, 63 per cent were taught or heard from an adult at school about at least one of “white privilege”, “unconscious bias” or “systemic racism” – three concepts derived from critical race theory. If we include radical feminist ideas such as “patriarchy” or the idea of many genders, this rises to 78 per cent. Those who have been taught more of these critical social justice (CSJ) ideas are more likely to favour political correctness as a way of protecting disadvantaged groups, rather than viewing PC as stifling free expression.

    Those young people who dissent from orthodoxy do so at their own risk, and the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) agenda forces them to self-censor. A majority of Right-leaning young people who said they were taught at least three of five CSJ concepts worried about being expelled or punished for voicing their opinions. Nearly half of Right-leaning employees under 35 who have taken diversity training worry about being fired or losing their reputation.

    My work shows that the public opposes wokeness by more than two to one across 25 issues, and these questions split the Left while uniting the Right. Yet the Tories seem incapable of tacking the spread of cultural socialism in schools, the NHS, the police and civil service. Conservative MPs lack both the conviction and courage to act, unlike their US Republican counterparts like Ron DeSantis. Too many are business liberals who pray at the altar of economic dynamism and care little about the country’s culture and traditions. This is reflected in the unprecedented net migration figure of over half a million and the years-long inattention to the flow of asylum seekers crossing the Channel.

    If most Britons no longer believe in freedom of speech or scientific reason and view our past as a racist nightmare, this is not some “culture war” sideshow. It undermines the very essence of British civilisation.


    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/11/26/school-indoctrination-turning-british-youth-woke-tories-remain/

    Kaufman, voodoo pollster extraordinaire.

    Why are (some on) the right such snowflakes on this? If they disagree, then argue their side and have faith in their ability to win the argument. It's nothing new having raving left teachers - I was taught by an actual communist and a member of the SWP but it didn't get me voting for Corbyn.
    Curious that they hold up DeSantis as an example of working to solving the perceived problem. Given he’s actively legislating to constrain academic freedom.
  • Options

    ‘Cranswick, one of Britain’s biggest food producers, is flying in 400 butchers more than 6,000 miles from the Philippines to avert a Christmas shutdown after an exodus of staff following Brexit.

    The meat producer, based in Hull, is spending £4 million to recruit the butchers to alleviate labour shortages.

    Last year, a staffing crisis hampered production, leaving Cranswick with 25 per cent fewer staff at its plants in Hull and Norfolk. Staff shortages have hit many meat processing firms as a combination of employees leaving and an absence of new workers have restricted growth.’

    https://apple.news/AzOuA6TLcQiqnJ3oyjBPsnw

    Friend of mine works in a slaughterhouse, an engineer on the machines. A bloke I know vaguely down the pub works at the same place, killing the livestock. He’s a weird bloke.

    Not a place I’d like to work. Not surprised these places are struggling to recruit. Unsurprisingly, in half the roles you spend most of the time covered in blood.

    Good job we’ve taken back control to fly people half way round the globe at vast cost. It’s not like food prices haven’t risen sharply already.

    And the excessive greenhouse gas emissions!?! Madness.
  • Options
    Leon said:

    Young people are influenced by social media, but schools play an important part in reinforcing woke beliefs. A clear majority of British schoolchildren are being indoctrinated with cultural socialist ideas. Among the 18-year-olds I sampled, 63 per cent were taught or heard from an adult at school about at least one of “white privilege”, “unconscious bias” or “systemic racism” – three concepts derived from critical race theory. If we include radical feminist ideas such as “patriarchy” or the idea of many genders, this rises to 78 per cent. Those who have been taught more of these critical social justice (CSJ) ideas are more likely to favour political correctness as a way of protecting disadvantaged groups, rather than viewing PC as stifling free expression.

    Those young people who dissent from orthodoxy do so at their own risk, and the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) agenda forces them to self-censor. A majority of Right-leaning young people who said they were taught at least three of five CSJ concepts worried about being expelled or punished for voicing their opinions. Nearly half of Right-leaning employees under 35 who have taken diversity training worry about being fired or losing their reputation.

    My work shows that the public opposes wokeness by more than two to one across 25 issues, and these questions split the Left while uniting the Right. Yet the Tories seem incapable of tacking the spread of cultural socialism in schools, the NHS, the police and civil service. Conservative MPs lack both the conviction and courage to act, unlike their US Republican counterparts like Ron DeSantis. Too many are business liberals who pray at the altar of economic dynamism and care little about the country’s culture and traditions. This is reflected in the unprecedented net migration figure of over half a million and the years-long inattention to the flow of asylum seekers crossing the Channel.

    If most Britons no longer believe in freedom of speech or scientific reason and view our past as a racist nightmare, this is not some “culture war” sideshow. It undermines the very essence of British civilisation.


    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/11/26/school-indoctrination-turning-british-youth-woke-tories-remain/

    It’s even worse in America. Check this

    “MIT tells prospective faculty how to write a successful diversity statement.”

    “Woe to those students who have immersed themselves wholly in quantum mechanics or classical literature out of the love of the field and of knowledge. Without a track record in promoting diversity, as well as a philosophy of diversity, those people are doomed.”

    https://twitter.com/nachristakis/status/1596561855463432194?s=46&t=mEWZ4fqc1jhlAs0KW9mmXw

    Remember, this is MIT

    I’m developing a new Theory of Omnigeddon. Right now, every major society on earth is self destructing in its own peculiar way

    In the east it’s masks, plunging birth rates, zero covid. In the west, it’s Woke, insane migration, and plunging birth rates. Etc
    I find myself egging on DeSantis but I doubt much can be done at a Presidential level.

    I think this thing has to be fought state by state, through educational and cultural institutions.

    Same applies here, but our politicians are too cowardly and back down at the first sign of opposition from the broadcast media and civil service.
  • Options
    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 4,973

    Good morning

    Just read a series of tweets re Brexit from Starmer and he is more anti rejoin than the conservatives

    It adds to the narrative he will say anything he thinks is popular but I would suggest a large number of Labour supporters will be dismayed this morning

    This is a golden opportunity for the lib dems to come out for rejoining

    I expect a Starmer led government but I have no idea how or whether it will be a majority or a coalition

    Pincer movement to destroy the Tories: Starmer takes the red wall and the Midlands, while LDs clean up in the South.
    While it may happen, the Lib Dems are not showing any real signs of stirring yet. A lot of work for them to do.
    Agreed. While I was not being entirely serious, they do have an opportunity to focus on the ongoing shitshow that is Brexit.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    There's nothing wrong the site.

    The site isn't poorer for losing its bullies and trolls but insightful, intelligent and interesting below the line posters like @Richard_Nabavi @AlastairMeeks @Cyclefree @david_herdson and even @SouthamObserver . We still have many great regulars, of course, but not as many as we'd like to.

    It has been achingly dull the last week or so, and that's because of the World Cup and the fact there's no live politics betting going on.

    The site really is much poorer for losing people like @IshmaelZ

    I know he irked you, but people like him are necessary. They provide needle. The annoying grit that nonetheless makes the pearl of debate

    It was an amusing in-joke on PB that we should “stick to betting”. Of course that WAS a joke. If the
    debate is one day reduced to basic betting advice then it will be an intellectual desert inhabited by nerds and geeks. And the odd Scot Nat

    I fear it is already halfway down that road
    Completely disagree with you. Nasty unpleasant poster who drove several people off this site with his personal abuse and bullying.

    Move on please.
    No I won’t move on. I am a PB elder (as are you). It’s my duty to speak out! The tribe is menaced by snowflakery

    You can only have robust and interesting debate if people are themselves robust. Otherwise we will end up like mastodon (shudder)
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,005
    Starmer’s initial focus is to regain the redwall seats to have any chance of government. Hence he will not even consider any significantly softer Brexit deal until after the next general election and Labour is in government
  • Options
    Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 12,998

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    There's nothing wrong the site.

    The site isn't poorer for losing its bullies and trolls but insightful, intelligent and interesting below the line posters like @Richard_Nabavi @AlastairMeeks @Cyclefree @david_herdson and even @SouthamObserver . We still have many great regulars, of course, but not as many as we'd like to.

    It has been achingly dull the last week or so, and that's because of the World Cup and the fact there's no live politics betting going on.

    The site really is much poorer for losing people like @IshmaelZ

    I know he irked you, but people like him are necessary. They provide needle. The annoying grit that nonetheless makes the pearl of debate

    It was an amusing in-joke on PB that we should “stick to betting”. Of course that WAS a joke. If the
    debate is one day reduced to basic betting advice then it will be an intellectual desert inhabited by nerds and geeks. And the odd Scot Nat

    I fear it is already halfway down that road
    Completely disagree with you. Nasty unpleasant poster who drove several people off this site with his personal abuse and bullying.

    Move on please.
    Free the Canaan One.

    We need him back.
  • Options
    Selebian said:

    Young people are influenced by social media, but schools play an important part in reinforcing woke beliefs. A clear majority of British schoolchildren are being indoctrinated with cultural socialist ideas. Among the 18-year-olds I sampled, 63 per cent were taught or heard from an adult at school about at least one of “white privilege”, “unconscious bias” or “systemic racism” – three concepts derived from critical race theory. If we include radical feminist ideas such as “patriarchy” or the idea of many genders, this rises to 78 per cent. Those who have been taught more of these critical social justice (CSJ) ideas are more likely to favour political correctness as a way of protecting disadvantaged groups, rather than viewing PC as stifling free expression.

    Those young people who dissent from orthodoxy do so at their own risk, and the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) agenda forces them to self-censor. A majority of Right-leaning young people who said they were taught at least three of five CSJ concepts worried about being expelled or punished for voicing their opinions. Nearly half of Right-leaning employees under 35 who have taken diversity training worry about being fired or losing their reputation.

    My work shows that the public opposes wokeness by more than two to one across 25 issues, and these questions split the Left while uniting the Right. Yet the Tories seem incapable of tacking the spread of cultural socialism in schools, the NHS, the police and civil service. Conservative MPs lack both the conviction and courage to act, unlike their US Republican counterparts like Ron DeSantis. Too many are business liberals who pray at the altar of economic dynamism and care little about the country’s culture and traditions. This is reflected in the unprecedented net migration figure of over half a million and the years-long inattention to the flow of asylum seekers crossing the Channel.

    If most Britons no longer believe in freedom of speech or scientific reason and view our past as a racist nightmare, this is not some “culture war” sideshow. It undermines the very essence of British civilisation.


    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/11/26/school-indoctrination-turning-british-youth-woke-tories-remain/

    Kaufman, voodoo pollster extraordinaire.

    Why are (some on) the right such snowflakes on this? If they disagree, then argue their side and have faith in their ability to win the argument. It's nothing new having raving left teachers - I was taught by an actual communist and a member of the SWP but it didn't get me voting for Corbyn.
    Kaufman is a very serious scholar, and an impressive one.

    His books are some of the most considered and thought-provoking I've tried on the subject, and far more reasoned that you'd prefer to characterise him as.

    I bet you haven't read them. You should.
  • Options
    kjhkjh Posts: 10,630
    Leon said:

    kjh said:

    Leon said:

    Nigelb said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    You remind me if my father as he was getting older.
    Convinced he would see the end times.

    I though Brexit was supposed to have reinvigorated you.
    Yes yes. Old codger. Summer wine. Blah blah

    Perhaps you should consider the possibility that we are, as a species, quite comprehensively fucked in a way we haven’t been since WW2 at least - and possibly as far back as the Ice Age

    There was probably an old Roman git in about AD 379 who kept saying “Look, these Ostrogoths worry me” and everyone said “oh shut up, the empire is fine, have a fried dormouse”
    You might be right, but really please compare to the 60s where we all thought the world was going to end any minute in mushroom clouds and if not that we we doomed to return to the stone age as oil was going to run out. Neither happened. How is it different?
    Exhibit A. In the 1960s we did not face incontrovertible climate crisis, with attendant migration disasters

    And so on

    As it happens, I am not entirely pessimistic. I think we are on the cusp of a technological revolution - esp AI - which might save us (tho it also brings hazards). However it is foolish and juvenile to deny that we face a polycrisis of unprecedented challenges
    So an incontrovertible climate crisis is worse than the incontrovertible fact that we were all going to die in a mushroom cloud or incontrovertibly going to run out of oil and be sent back to the stone age? Neither of those things turned out to be incontrovertible. Climate change might be. Hopefully we will stop it being, like we did with those 2 incontrovertible facts from the 60s
  • Options
    FishingFishing Posts: 4,561

    Leon said:

    Young people are influenced by social media, but schools play an important part in reinforcing woke beliefs. A clear majority of British schoolchildren are being indoctrinated with cultural socialist ideas. Among the 18-year-olds I sampled, 63 per cent were taught or heard from an adult at school about at least one of “white privilege”, “unconscious bias” or “systemic racism” – three concepts derived from critical race theory. If we include radical feminist ideas such as “patriarchy” or the idea of many genders, this rises to 78 per cent. Those who have been taught more of these critical social justice (CSJ) ideas are more likely to favour political correctness as a way of protecting disadvantaged groups, rather than viewing PC as stifling free expression.

    Those young people who dissent from orthodoxy do so at their own risk, and the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) agenda forces them to self-censor. A majority of Right-leaning young people who said they were taught at least three of five CSJ concepts worried about being expelled or punished for voicing their opinions. Nearly half of Right-leaning employees under 35 who have taken diversity training worry about being fired or losing their reputation.

    My work shows that the public opposes wokeness by more than two to one across 25 issues, and these questions split the Left while uniting the Right. Yet the Tories seem incapable of tacking the spread of cultural socialism in schools, the NHS, the police and civil service. Conservative MPs lack both the conviction and courage to act, unlike their US Republican counterparts like Ron DeSantis. Too many are business liberals who pray at the altar of economic dynamism and care little about the country’s culture and traditions. This is reflected in the unprecedented net migration figure of over half a million and the years-long inattention to the flow of asylum seekers crossing the Channel.

    If most Britons no longer believe in freedom of speech or scientific reason and view our past as a racist nightmare, this is not some “culture war” sideshow. It undermines the very essence of British civilisation.


    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/11/26/school-indoctrination-turning-british-youth-woke-tories-remain/

    It’s even worse in America. Check this

    “MIT tells prospective faculty how to write a successful diversity statement.”

    “Woe to those students who have immersed themselves wholly in quantum mechanics or classical literature out of the love of the field and of knowledge. Without a track record in promoting diversity, as well as a philosophy of diversity, those people are doomed.”

    https://twitter.com/nachristakis/status/1596561855463432194?s=46&t=mEWZ4fqc1jhlAs0KW9mmXw

    Remember, this is MIT

    I’m developing a new Theory of Omnigeddon. Right now, every major society on earth is self destructing in its own peculiar way

    In the east it’s masks, plunging birth rates, zero covid. In the west, it’s Woke, insane migration, and plunging birth rates. Etc
    I find myself egging on DeSantis but I doubt much can be done at a Presidential level.

    I think this thing has to be fought state by state, through educational and cultural institutions.

    Same applies here, but our politicians are too cowardly and back down at the first sign of opposition from the broadcast media and civil service.
    Don't forget woke Twittermobs and, above all, our parasitic legal profession, which makes a fortune every year out of proposing yet more laws which they make money from enforcing and making as complex as possible.
  • Options

    Good morning, everyone.

    Mr. Monkey, there are valid criticisms of the way things have turned out. A failure to predict persistent double digit inflation caused by Russia invading Ukraine is not on that list.

    That’s the Brexiteer equivalent of ‘A big boy done it and run away’.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    kjh said:

    Leon said:

    kjh said:

    Leon said:

    Nigelb said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    You remind me if my father as he was getting older.
    Convinced he would see the end times.

    I though Brexit was supposed to have reinvigorated you.
    Yes yes. Old codger. Summer wine. Blah blah

    Perhaps you should consider the possibility that we are, as a species, quite comprehensively fucked in a way we haven’t been since WW2 at least - and possibly as far back as the Ice Age

    There was probably an old Roman git in about AD 379 who kept saying “Look, these Ostrogoths worry me” and everyone said “oh shut up, the empire is fine, have a fried dormouse”
    You might be right, but really please compare to the 60s where we all thought the world was going to end any minute in mushroom clouds and if not that we we doomed to return to the stone age as oil was going to run out. Neither happened. How is it different?
    Exhibit A. In the 1960s we did not face incontrovertible climate crisis, with attendant migration disasters

    And so on

    As it happens, I am not entirely pessimistic. I think we are on the cusp of a technological revolution - esp AI - which might save us (tho it also brings hazards). However it is foolish and juvenile to deny that we face a polycrisis of unprecedented challenges
    So an incontrovertible climate crisis is worse than the incontrovertible fact that we were all going to die in a mushroom cloud or incontrovertibly going to run out of oil and be sent back to the stone age? Neither of those things turned out to be incontrovertible. Climate change might be. Hopefully we will stop it being, like we did with those 2 incontrovertible facts from the 60s
    You’re know you’re talking shite and making false comparisons. Stop it
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,599
    Will this make a significant difference to market prices by Nov 2024, given the parlous state of Venezuela’s oil infrastructure ?

    OIL MARKET: Washington eases its oil sanctions on Venezuela, allowing Chevron (for the next 6 months) to pump crude in the Latin American nation and export it into the United States. A major shift in the White House policy
    https://twitter.com/JavierBlas/status/1596562915645165573
  • Options
    Mr. Dickson, you're aware that countries not in the EU, and countries in the EU, also have high food inflation, right?

    Explain how you think my previous comment was invalid, if you would.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,005
    Camilla scraps ladies in waiting but will be helped by Queen's companions instead

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-63768031
  • Options
    HYUFD said:

    Camilla scraps ladies in waiting but will be helped by Queen's companions instead

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-63768031

    Economic misery and political corruption on an industrial scale, so Franco goes squirrel-spotting.
  • Options
    CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 39,734
    edited November 2022
    Dura_Ace said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    There's nothing wrong the site.

    The site isn't poorer for losing its bullies and trolls but insightful, intelligent and interesting below the line posters like @Richard_Nabavi @AlastairMeeks @Cyclefree @david_herdson and even @SouthamObserver . We still have many great regulars, of course, but not as many as we'd like to.

    It has been achingly dull the last week or so, and that's because of the World Cup and the fact there's no live politics betting going on.

    The site really is much poorer for losing people like @IshmaelZ

    I know he irked you, but people like him are necessary. They provide needle. The annoying grit that nonetheless makes the pearl of debate

    It was an amusing in-joke on PB that we should “stick to betting”. Of course that WAS a joke. If the
    debate is one day reduced to basic betting advice then it will be an intellectual desert inhabited by nerds and geeks. And the odd Scot Nat

    I fear it is already halfway down that road
    Completely disagree with you. Nasty unpleasant poster who drove several people off this site with his personal abuse and bullying.

    Move on please.
    Free the Canaan One.

    We need him back.
    What happened? I missed it, whatever it was. I'd miss him. Unusual range of interests, and he was known to change his mind on the evidence (alleged wokery of NT and slavery, for instance).
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,196
    kjh said:

    Leon said:

    kjh said:

    Leon said:

    Nigelb said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    Ridiculous. ALL politics has failed

    Because Humanity is failing. Birth rates plunge. The climate roils. People R gettin stupid

    We are all fucked
    You remind me if my father as he was getting older.
    Convinced he would see the end times.

    I though Brexit was supposed to have reinvigorated you.
    Yes yes. Old codger. Summer wine. Blah blah

    Perhaps you should consider the possibility that we are, as a species, quite comprehensively fucked in a way we haven’t been since WW2 at least - and possibly as far back as the Ice Age

    There was probably an old Roman git in about AD 379 who kept saying “Look, these Ostrogoths worry me” and everyone said “oh shut up, the empire is fine, have a fried dormouse”
    You might be right, but really please compare to the 60s where we all thought the world was going to end any minute in mushroom clouds and if not that we we doomed to return to the stone age as oil was going to run out. Neither happened. How is it different?
    Exhibit A. In the 1960s we did not face incontrovertible climate crisis, with attendant migration disasters

    And so on

    As it happens, I am not entirely pessimistic. I think we are on the cusp of a technological revolution - esp AI - which might save us (tho it also brings hazards). However it is foolish and juvenile to deny that we face a polycrisis of unprecedented challenges
    So an incontrovertible climate crisis is worse than the incontrovertible fact that we were all going to die in a mushroom cloud or incontrovertibly going to run out of oil and be sent back to the stone age? Neither of those things turned out to be incontrovertible. Climate change might be. Hopefully we will stop it being, like we did with those 2 incontrovertible facts from the 60s
    Climate change is a huge challenge, not because the planet will be destroyed, or will burn, as some hyperbole likes to scream about an average 2 deg c temp rise, all while using pictures of bush fires to illustrate this, forgetting that the bush life cycle needs fire for renewal.
    The challenge is how we maintain and improve the living standards of all, and that means balancing the currently shit lives of too many of the global south, or whatever the current term is, against those of people in the rich nations. In a just work, everyone everywhere would have the same life chances. It goes without saying that we are a million miles from that.
    But is 2022 scarier or worse than 1962, or 1939? Or 1348?
    I don’t think so. We know the scale of the challenge. And we have incredible scientific and engineering abilities. FFS we developed a vaccine against a novel deadly virus within weeks, tested same and started vaccinating people in under 10 months.
    In the U.K. we have increased renewable power generation on an incredible scale. Challenges of storage aside, it’s possible now to envisage using no fossil fuel for electricity.
    That’s progress.
    I fear @leon has been doomscroling twitter again. I also note he has not travelled for a couple of weeks, and it’s winter, so the black dog is feeling up on him. Time to book a flight…
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,060
    Could we be about to see something world historic in China?

    @eefjerammeloo
    Chilling. The national anthem. Especially that phrase ‘qi lai!’ (‘stand up!’). Never seen anything like this. Well, except in #HongKong…

    ‘Down with the party! Down with Xi Jinping!’ Free Xinjiang!’


    https://twitter.com/eefjerammeloo/status/1596570777037713409
  • Options
    Latest seat prediction: North East Somerset

    LAB GAIN from CON @Jacob_Rees_Mogg
    MAJ: 7.4%

    pollingreport.uk/seats/E14000846


    https://twitter.com/pollingreportuk/status/1596549368840179713?s=46&t=pyRopc9M1bFTGAIaw0wZJA

    I would never claim to have any expertise in Somerset voting behaviour, but I was under the impression that this part of England was more of a Con/LD battleground?

    Relevant to the comment upthread regarding the absence of the Lib Dems.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,169
    Carnyx said:

    Dura_Ace said:

    Leon said:

    Jonathan said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    felix said:

    Heathener said:

    It's a fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances.

    So I'm not criticising those oldies on here who are finding it hard to accept the reality that Labour will win a comfortable majority.

    But you do need to wake up and smell the coffee, especially if you are betting money.

    Early for pointless stereotypical twattery don't you think?
    Not really, no.

    It's hard for the older folk to take but there really has been a once in a generation sea-change. I know that TSE and Mike are struggling to accept that a Labour majority is likely (go figure Leon) but it behoves those of us who bet serious money to study the facts.

    The biggest block to this thinking, apart from the fact that older people find it harder to adapt to changing circumstances, is that people believe in precedence. An outright Labour win from such a poor starting position is unprecedented.

    But, and this is the killer to that argument, we have just gone through, and still are, the most unprecedented period in British life since the second world war, which also yielded an unprecedented Labour win.

    And unlike 1997, which heralded the last sea-change, the economic circumstances are dire.

    I will bet anyone my house that Labour will win an outright majority if they bet me theirs that they won't.
    But I agree with virtually everything you say here. And am I not meant to be one of your old timers? Unable to accept the passing of the days?

    Labour will win big. It’s certain

    It is possible that @TSE and OGH are staying neutral or being provocative to drum up interest. A dead cert is not an interesting bet. And, as I said last night, the site needs some pepping up
    The site is fine.

    Politics is going through a post Johnson/Truss/Trump recovery. That level of crazy was unsustainable. PB always reflects the world outside.

    Meanwhile crazy lurks just below the surface. Yesterday I was called Hitler before 9.30am by our enraged resident Nat.

    The total failure of right wing politicians and the pitiful demise of the right wing ideology is an interesting topic.
    There's nothing wrong the site.

    The site isn't poorer for losing its bullies and trolls but insightful, intelligent and interesting below the line posters like @Richard_Nabavi @AlastairMeeks @Cyclefree @david_herdson and even @SouthamObserver . We still have many great regulars, of course, but not as many as we'd like to.

    It has been achingly dull the last week or so, and that's because of the World Cup and the fact there's no live politics betting going on.

    The site really is much poorer for losing people like @IshmaelZ

    I know he irked you, but people like him are necessary. They provide needle. The annoying grit that nonetheless makes the pearl of debate

    It was an amusing in-joke on PB that we should “stick to betting”. Of course that WAS a joke. If the
    debate is one day reduced to basic betting advice then it will be an intellectual desert inhabited by nerds and geeks. And the odd Scot Nat

    I fear it is already halfway down that road
    Completely disagree with you. Nasty unpleasant poster who drove several people off this site with his personal abuse and bullying.

    Move on please.
    Free the Canaan One.

    We need him back.
    What happened? I missed it, whatever it was. I'd miss him. Unusual range of interests, and he was known to change his mind on the evidence (alleged wokery of NT and slavery, for instance).
    Too many people were “offended” by him. Also he doubted the veracity of a pollster

    He’s done his time. Release the Ish
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,060
    @EmilyZFeng
    Tsinghua university right now👇🏼 city after city seeing protests small and large against Zero Covid policies and against excesses of Communist Party rule - every hour there seems to be a new one


    https://twitter.com/EmilyZFeng/status/1596769092840873991
  • Options
    Selebian said:

    Young people are influenced by social media, but schools play an important part in reinforcing woke beliefs. A clear majority of British schoolchildren are being indoctrinated with cultural socialist ideas. Among the 18-year-olds I sampled, 63 per cent were taught or heard from an adult at school about at least one of “white privilege”, “unconscious bias” or “systemic racism” – three concepts derived from critical race theory. If we include radical feminist ideas such as “patriarchy” or the idea of many genders, this rises to 78 per cent. Those who have been taught more of these critical social justice (CSJ) ideas are more likely to favour political correctness as a way of protecting disadvantaged groups, rather than viewing PC as stifling free expression.

    Those young people who dissent from orthodoxy do so at their own risk, and the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) agenda forces them to self-censor. A majority of Right-leaning young people who said they were taught at least three of five CSJ concepts worried about being expelled or punished for voicing their opinions. Nearly half of Right-leaning employees under 35 who have taken diversity training worry about being fired or losing their reputation.

    My work shows that the public opposes wokeness by more than two to one across 25 issues, and these questions split the Left while uniting the Right. Yet the Tories seem incapable of tacking the spread of cultural socialism in schools, the NHS, the police and civil service. Conservative MPs lack both the conviction and courage to act, unlike their US Republican counterparts like Ron DeSantis. Too many are business liberals who pray at the altar of economic dynamism and care little about the country’s culture and traditions. This is reflected in the unprecedented net migration figure of over half a million and the years-long inattention to the flow of asylum seekers crossing the Channel.

    If most Britons no longer believe in freedom of speech or scientific reason and view our past as a racist nightmare, this is not some “culture war” sideshow. It undermines the very essence of British civilisation.


    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/11/26/school-indoctrination-turning-british-youth-woke-tories-remain/

    Kaufman, voodoo pollster extraordinaire.

    Why are (some on) the right such snowflakes on this? If they disagree, then argue their side and have faith in their ability to win the argument. It's nothing new having raving left teachers - I was taught by an actual communist and a member of the SWP but it didn't get me voting for Corbyn.
    I am not sure what Kaufman's beef is anyway. Does any white British person, let alone white US person, seriously dispute that their life would be much harder in all sorts of ways if they were black? What is terribly wrong about using "systemic racism" as shorthand for that state of affairs?
This discussion has been closed.