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David Davis slams the voter ID requirement – politicalbetting.com

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  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,898
    edited April 2023
    You know a race is basically a lottery, when the favourite is 9/1 as they parade in the ring.

    Protestors on the track at the moment, going to be a delay.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    edited April 2023
    Thing is if the lagered up crowd get hold of the protesters then it's goodnight Vienna.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,287
    Cookie said:

    Sandpit said:

    MaxPB said:

    A Hollywood friend has suggested far from being excluded from the new Harry Potter series, JK Rowling is going to have a very large influence on the setting, casting and ensuring that the show runners don't stray too far from the original plot. HBO are said to be comfortable with it after their success with The Last Of Us which followed the same template with Neil Druckmann taking the a lead role in bringing the series to life.

    2025 seems like the the date when the first season will be released and the main roles will be filled by the end of this year with British actors and actresses being preferred as they were for the movies. There was a rumour that WB wanted to shift the setting to a US high school rather than wizard Eton and that's what was holding up the announcement because Rowling was adamant that any new series would have to stick to the original story or not be done at all.

    It was an interesting lunch!

    It was a surprising announcement, given all the recent controversies around the author. I guess that either HBO have been talking to Rowling for years to get this project off the ground, or they judge that the controversy will pass, and if they don’t do it now then someone else will.

    The Budweiser boycott in the States, is an indication that perhaps the tide is starting to turn on companies bending over backwards to support the woke activism of their younger employees.
    A pedant notes: JKR has almost certainly never said anything that anyonr but a fringe lunatic would find controversial. She's onoy controversial because fringe lunatics have declared her so
    Unfortunately Twitter is good at fringe lunatics.
  • Options
    Time for some police brutality.
  • Options
    solarflaresolarflare Posts: 3,623

    Time for some police brutality.

    Delivered on horseback, for lolz
  • Options
    TazTaz Posts: 11,193

    Time for some police brutality.

    If these were Millwall fans on an away day or people who pint pineapple on a Pizza they would happily dish out out.

    Privileged middle class kids, less so.
  • Options
    boulayboulay Posts: 3,960

    Time for some police brutality.

    They should have shipped the Met in - would terrify the protesters, Merseyside police aren’t evil enough.
  • Options
    TOPPING said:

    Thing is if the lagered up crowd get hold of the protesters then it's goodnight Vienna.

    Might be a good impromptu fight betting opportunity if an enterprising bookie gets onto it. My money would be on the pissheads. An empty Carling bottle beats a mung bean dip everytime.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,394
    TOPPING said:

    Thing is if the lagered up crowd get hold of the protesters then it's goodnight Vienna.

    Here's hoping.
  • Options
    boulayboulay Posts: 3,960
    In a more brutal world they would just line the horses up in front of the protesters and shoot them and point out to the protesters that if the horses can’t race then there is no reason for them to live.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    .
    Cookie said:

    Sandpit said:

    MaxPB said:

    A Hollywood friend has suggested far from being excluded from the new Harry Potter series, JK Rowling is going to have a very large influence on the setting, casting and ensuring that the show runners don't stray too far from the original plot. HBO are said to be comfortable with it after their success with The Last Of Us which followed the same template with Neil Druckmann taking the a lead role in bringing the series to life.

    2025 seems like the the date when the first season will be released and the main roles will be filled by the end of this year with British actors and actresses being preferred as they were for the movies. There was a rumour that WB wanted to shift the setting to a US high school rather than wizard Eton and that's what was holding up the announcement because Rowling was adamant that any new series would have to stick to the original story or not be done at all.

    It was an interesting lunch!

    It was a surprising announcement, given all the recent controversies around the author. I guess that either HBO have been talking to Rowling for years to get this project off the ground, or they judge that the controversy will pass, and if they don’t do it now then someone else will.

    The Budweiser boycott in the States, is an indication that perhaps the tide is starting to turn on companies bending over backwards to support the woke activism of their younger employees.
    A pedant notes: JKR has almost certainly never said anything that anyonr but a fringe lunatic would find controversial. She's onoy controversial because fringe lunatics have declared her so
    Not so.

    People believe that their gender is wholly up to themselves and should not be up for debate. Hence the "no debate" stance.

    Imagine if a committee was required to decide which football team you supported and unless they said so you couldn't support Arsenal.

    I think at this time it is sensible to discuss everything but there is a coherent "no debate" argument even if you disagree with it.
  • Options
    TazTaz Posts: 11,193
    boulay said:

    Time for some police brutality.

    They should have shipped the Met in - would terrify the protesters, Merseyside police aren’t evil enough.
    The met would certainly terrify the female protesters.
  • Options
    noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 20,770
    boulay said:

    In a more brutal world they would just line the horses up in front of the protesters and shoot them and point out to the protesters that if the horses can’t race then there is no reason for them to live.

    Sounds a bit like horse battery to me.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,287
    edited April 2023
    boulay said:

    In a more brutal world they would just line the horses up in front of the protesters and shoot them and point out to the protesters that if the horses can’t race then there is no reason for them to live.

    I thought for a moment by 'them' you meant the protestors.
  • Options
    boulayboulay Posts: 3,960
    I’m hoping Minella Trump wins just for the lolz when Donald thinks one of his daughters has won a big race.
  • Options
    boulayboulay Posts: 3,960

    boulay said:

    In a more brutal world they would just line the horses up in front of the protesters and shoot them and point out to the protesters that if the horses can’t race then there is no reason for them to live.

    Sounds a bit like horse battery to me.
    Correct.
  • Options
    boulayboulay Posts: 3,960
    ydoethur said:

    boulay said:

    In a more brutal world they would just line the horses up in front of the protesters and shoot them and point out to the protesters that if the horses can’t race then there is no reason for them to live.

    I thought for a moment by 'them' you meant the protestors.
    Either.
  • Options
    kinabalukinabalu Posts: 39,226
    edited April 2023
    Leon said:

    Sandpit said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    On race horses enjoying racing:
    I once had a conversation with a biologist after a book signing which got on to the subject of athletes, and I asked him why humans have massively increased their running records over the past century but horses have managed only minuscule improvements.
    As he pointed out, horses have evolved running at speed over millions of years, whereas we haven't. He went on to say that for horses, running is about escaping predators, so when horses run together - for example, in a horse race - those millions of years of evolution are telling each horse not to be last, or they'll get eaten. And, in his words, every physiological thing that jockeys and trainers say is a sign a horse enjoys it, is actually a sign of stress. They're basically terrified.
    The only time a horse enjoys running is alone, at not much more than a canter.


    Do memories plague their ears like flies?
    They shake their heads. Dusk brims the shadows.
    Summer by summer all stole away,
    The starting-gates, the crowd and cries -
    All but the unmolesting meadows.
    Almanacked, their names live; they

    Have slipped their names, and stand at ease,
    Or gallop for what must be joy,
    And not a fieldglass sees them home,
    Or curious stop-watch prophesies :
    Only the grooms, and the grooms boy,
    With bridles in the evening come.


    Larkin of course.
    Larkin is so strangely brilliant

    ‘Dusk brims the shadows’ doesn’t actually make that much sense, but it is so powerfully evocative of a warm rural twilight - and of the slow contented end of life
    Stunning enjambment between the two stanzas as well. Suggests the speed of the race, and then the line literally comes to a standstill. This is Larkin at his very best.
    One of THE great English poets, to my mind. Up there with Keats and Byron and Milton
    Yes. Astonishing. The last of of tradition of great poetry for the ordinary reader (not academics) about actual real stuff, written with scrupulous care and genius - even more than Keats is. Clare, Hardy, Edward Thomas, Betjeman (despite weaknesses) and Larkin. And the death of Larkin ended a tradition as surely as the death of Shostakovich.

    Larkin renders so many poets unreadable for their imprecision, lack of anything to say and inattention to form.
    Poetry is also ultra-WOKE now. What gets you published is your level of intersectional oppression, not whether you are any good. Which is the death of any art (tho poetry probably died with Larkin and Plath, anyway)
    Surely ultra-woke poetry, is something that ChatGPT would have no problem churning out, volumes at a time?
    Oooh good idea. I'll give it a spin
    Can I vote that you don't?

    EDIT - I see I'm too late.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,287
    boulay said:

    boulay said:

    In a more brutal world they would just line the horses up in front of the protesters and shoot them and point out to the protesters that if the horses can’t race then there is no reason for them to live.

    Sounds a bit like horse battery to me.
    Correct.
    Your comment was definitely charged.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,898

    boulay said:

    In a more brutal world they would just line the horses up in front of the protesters and shoot them and point out to the protesters that if the horses can’t race then there is no reason for them to live.

    Sounds a bit like horse battery to me.
    Incorrect.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,898
    edited April 2023
    The Silverstone protestors got suspended sentences and community service.

    These disruptions are going to continue, until either they start getting time, or start getting killed or injured with their increasingly dangerous stunts.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290
    kinabalu said:

    Leon said:

    Sandpit said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    On race horses enjoying racing:
    I once had a conversation with a biologist after a book signing which got on to the subject of athletes, and I asked him why humans have massively increased their running records over the past century but horses have managed only minuscule improvements.
    As he pointed out, horses have evolved running at speed over millions of years, whereas we haven't. He went on to say that for horses, running is about escaping predators, so when horses run together - for example, in a horse race - those millions of years of evolution are telling each horse not to be last, or they'll get eaten. And, in his words, every physiological thing that jockeys and trainers say is a sign a horse enjoys it, is actually a sign of stress. They're basically terrified.
    The only time a horse enjoys running is alone, at not much more than a canter.


    Do memories plague their ears like flies?
    They shake their heads. Dusk brims the shadows.
    Summer by summer all stole away,
    The starting-gates, the crowd and cries -
    All but the unmolesting meadows.
    Almanacked, their names live; they

    Have slipped their names, and stand at ease,
    Or gallop for what must be joy,
    And not a fieldglass sees them home,
    Or curious stop-watch prophesies :
    Only the grooms, and the grooms boy,
    With bridles in the evening come.


    Larkin of course.
    Larkin is so strangely brilliant

    ‘Dusk brims the shadows’ doesn’t actually make that much sense, but it is so powerfully evocative of a warm rural twilight - and of the slow contented end of life
    Stunning enjambment between the two stanzas as well. Suggests the speed of the race, and then the line literally comes to a standstill. This is Larkin at his very best.
    One of THE great English poets, to my mind. Up there with Keats and Byron and Milton
    Yes. Astonishing. The last of of tradition of great poetry for the ordinary reader (not academics) about actual real stuff, written with scrupulous care and genius - even more than Keats is. Clare, Hardy, Edward Thomas, Betjeman (despite weaknesses) and Larkin. And the death of Larkin ended a tradition as surely as the death of Shostakovich.

    Larkin renders so many poets unreadable for their imprecision, lack of anything to say and inattention to form.
    Poetry is also ultra-WOKE now. What gets you published is your level of intersectional oppression, not whether you are any good. Which is the death of any art (tho poetry probably died with Larkin and Plath, anyway)
    Surely ultra-woke poetry, is something that ChatGPT would have no problem churning out, volumes at a time?
    Oooh good idea. I'll give it a spin
    Can I vote that you don't?

    EDIT - I see I'm too late.
    I'm sparing you the poem where ChatGPT went into great detail about a forbidden love affair between a senior Scottish political executive and the gay campervan. In a car park in Dundee

    ChatGPT will say lots of stuff it shouldn't say, if you ask it to do it in the form of a poem
  • Options
    FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,047
    Back on the lash is the only name that made me laugh.

    So that is my tip.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,287
    Leon said:

    kinabalu said:

    Leon said:

    Sandpit said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    On race horses enjoying racing:
    I once had a conversation with a biologist after a book signing which got on to the subject of athletes, and I asked him why humans have massively increased their running records over the past century but horses have managed only minuscule improvements.
    As he pointed out, horses have evolved running at speed over millions of years, whereas we haven't. He went on to say that for horses, running is about escaping predators, so when horses run together - for example, in a horse race - those millions of years of evolution are telling each horse not to be last, or they'll get eaten. And, in his words, every physiological thing that jockeys and trainers say is a sign a horse enjoys it, is actually a sign of stress. They're basically terrified.
    The only time a horse enjoys running is alone, at not much more than a canter.


    Do memories plague their ears like flies?
    They shake their heads. Dusk brims the shadows.
    Summer by summer all stole away,
    The starting-gates, the crowd and cries -
    All but the unmolesting meadows.
    Almanacked, their names live; they

    Have slipped their names, and stand at ease,
    Or gallop for what must be joy,
    And not a fieldglass sees them home,
    Or curious stop-watch prophesies :
    Only the grooms, and the grooms boy,
    With bridles in the evening come.


    Larkin of course.
    Larkin is so strangely brilliant

    ‘Dusk brims the shadows’ doesn’t actually make that much sense, but it is so powerfully evocative of a warm rural twilight - and of the slow contented end of life
    Stunning enjambment between the two stanzas as well. Suggests the speed of the race, and then the line literally comes to a standstill. This is Larkin at his very best.
    One of THE great English poets, to my mind. Up there with Keats and Byron and Milton
    Yes. Astonishing. The last of of tradition of great poetry for the ordinary reader (not academics) about actual real stuff, written with scrupulous care and genius - even more than Keats is. Clare, Hardy, Edward Thomas, Betjeman (despite weaknesses) and Larkin. And the death of Larkin ended a tradition as surely as the death of Shostakovich.

    Larkin renders so many poets unreadable for their imprecision, lack of anything to say and inattention to form.
    Poetry is also ultra-WOKE now. What gets you published is your level of intersectional oppression, not whether you are any good. Which is the death of any art (tho poetry probably died with Larkin and Plath, anyway)
    Surely ultra-woke poetry, is something that ChatGPT would have no problem churning out, volumes at a time?
    Oooh good idea. I'll give it a spin
    Can I vote that you don't?

    EDIT - I see I'm too late.
    I'm sparing you the poem where ChatGPT went into great detail about a forbidden love affair between a senior Scottish political executive and the gay campervan. In a car park in Dundee

    ChatGPT will say lots of stuff it shouldn't say, if you ask it to do it in the form of a poem
    I'm intrigued. How can you have an affair with a campervan?
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290
    ydoethur said:

    Leon said:

    kinabalu said:

    Leon said:

    Sandpit said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    On race horses enjoying racing:
    I once had a conversation with a biologist after a book signing which got on to the subject of athletes, and I asked him why humans have massively increased their running records over the past century but horses have managed only minuscule improvements.
    As he pointed out, horses have evolved running at speed over millions of years, whereas we haven't. He went on to say that for horses, running is about escaping predators, so when horses run together - for example, in a horse race - those millions of years of evolution are telling each horse not to be last, or they'll get eaten. And, in his words, every physiological thing that jockeys and trainers say is a sign a horse enjoys it, is actually a sign of stress. They're basically terrified.
    The only time a horse enjoys running is alone, at not much more than a canter.


    Do memories plague their ears like flies?
    They shake their heads. Dusk brims the shadows.
    Summer by summer all stole away,
    The starting-gates, the crowd and cries -
    All but the unmolesting meadows.
    Almanacked, their names live; they

    Have slipped their names, and stand at ease,
    Or gallop for what must be joy,
    And not a fieldglass sees them home,
    Or curious stop-watch prophesies :
    Only the grooms, and the grooms boy,
    With bridles in the evening come.


    Larkin of course.
    Larkin is so strangely brilliant

    ‘Dusk brims the shadows’ doesn’t actually make that much sense, but it is so powerfully evocative of a warm rural twilight - and of the slow contented end of life
    Stunning enjambment between the two stanzas as well. Suggests the speed of the race, and then the line literally comes to a standstill. This is Larkin at his very best.
    One of THE great English poets, to my mind. Up there with Keats and Byron and Milton
    Yes. Astonishing. The last of of tradition of great poetry for the ordinary reader (not academics) about actual real stuff, written with scrupulous care and genius - even more than Keats is. Clare, Hardy, Edward Thomas, Betjeman (despite weaknesses) and Larkin. And the death of Larkin ended a tradition as surely as the death of Shostakovich.

    Larkin renders so many poets unreadable for their imprecision, lack of anything to say and inattention to form.
    Poetry is also ultra-WOKE now. What gets you published is your level of intersectional oppression, not whether you are any good. Which is the death of any art (tho poetry probably died with Larkin and Plath, anyway)
    Surely ultra-woke poetry, is something that ChatGPT would have no problem churning out, volumes at a time?
    Oooh good idea. I'll give it a spin
    Can I vote that you don't?

    EDIT - I see I'm too late.
    I'm sparing you the poem where ChatGPT went into great detail about a forbidden love affair between a senior Scottish political executive and the gay campervan. In a car park in Dundee

    ChatGPT will say lots of stuff it shouldn't say, if you ask it to do it in the form of a poem
    I'm intrigued. How can you have an affair with a campervan?
    ChatGPT worked it out. They ran off to the Trossachs together
  • Options
    StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 14,482
    ydoethur said:

    Leon said:

    kinabalu said:

    Leon said:

    Sandpit said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    On race horses enjoying racing:
    I once had a conversation with a biologist after a book signing which got on to the subject of athletes, and I asked him why humans have massively increased their running records over the past century but horses have managed only minuscule improvements.
    As he pointed out, horses have evolved running at speed over millions of years, whereas we haven't. He went on to say that for horses, running is about escaping predators, so when horses run together - for example, in a horse race - those millions of years of evolution are telling each horse not to be last, or they'll get eaten. And, in his words, every physiological thing that jockeys and trainers say is a sign a horse enjoys it, is actually a sign of stress. They're basically terrified.
    The only time a horse enjoys running is alone, at not much more than a canter.


    Do memories plague their ears like flies?
    They shake their heads. Dusk brims the shadows.
    Summer by summer all stole away,
    The starting-gates, the crowd and cries -
    All but the unmolesting meadows.
    Almanacked, their names live; they

    Have slipped their names, and stand at ease,
    Or gallop for what must be joy,
    And not a fieldglass sees them home,
    Or curious stop-watch prophesies :
    Only the grooms, and the grooms boy,
    With bridles in the evening come.


    Larkin of course.
    Larkin is so strangely brilliant

    ‘Dusk brims the shadows’ doesn’t actually make that much sense, but it is so powerfully evocative of a warm rural twilight - and of the slow contented end of life
    Stunning enjambment between the two stanzas as well. Suggests the speed of the race, and then the line literally comes to a standstill. This is Larkin at his very best.
    One of THE great English poets, to my mind. Up there with Keats and Byron and Milton
    Yes. Astonishing. The last of of tradition of great poetry for the ordinary reader (not academics) about actual real stuff, written with scrupulous care and genius - even more than Keats is. Clare, Hardy, Edward Thomas, Betjeman (despite weaknesses) and Larkin. And the death of Larkin ended a tradition as surely as the death of Shostakovich.

    Larkin renders so many poets unreadable for their imprecision, lack of anything to say and inattention to form.
    Poetry is also ultra-WOKE now. What gets you published is your level of intersectional oppression, not whether you are any good. Which is the death of any art (tho poetry probably died with Larkin and Plath, anyway)
    Surely ultra-woke poetry, is something that ChatGPT would have no problem churning out, volumes at a time?
    Oooh good idea. I'll give it a spin
    Can I vote that you don't?

    EDIT - I see I'm too late.
    I'm sparing you the poem where ChatGPT went into great detail about a forbidden love affair between a senior Scottish political executive and the gay campervan. In a car park in Dundee

    ChatGPT will say lots of stuff it shouldn't say, if you ask it to do it in the form of a poem
    I'm intrigued. How can you have an affair with a campervan?
    Same way you would with a butch van.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    Fuck one down and stayed down at the first ffs
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290
    It STARTS like this

    In shadows where desires dwell,
    A tale of love and lust I'll tell,
    Of a Scottish exec, poised and stern,
    And a campervan, with passions to burn....



    But the rest is NSFW and I don't want to get banned
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,287
    Leon said:

    ydoethur said:

    Leon said:

    kinabalu said:

    Leon said:

    Sandpit said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    On race horses enjoying racing:
    I once had a conversation with a biologist after a book signing which got on to the subject of athletes, and I asked him why humans have massively increased their running records over the past century but horses have managed only minuscule improvements.
    As he pointed out, horses have evolved running at speed over millions of years, whereas we haven't. He went on to say that for horses, running is about escaping predators, so when horses run together - for example, in a horse race - those millions of years of evolution are telling each horse not to be last, or they'll get eaten. And, in his words, every physiological thing that jockeys and trainers say is a sign a horse enjoys it, is actually a sign of stress. They're basically terrified.
    The only time a horse enjoys running is alone, at not much more than a canter.


    Do memories plague their ears like flies?
    They shake their heads. Dusk brims the shadows.
    Summer by summer all stole away,
    The starting-gates, the crowd and cries -
    All but the unmolesting meadows.
    Almanacked, their names live; they

    Have slipped their names, and stand at ease,
    Or gallop for what must be joy,
    And not a fieldglass sees them home,
    Or curious stop-watch prophesies :
    Only the grooms, and the grooms boy,
    With bridles in the evening come.


    Larkin of course.
    Larkin is so strangely brilliant

    ‘Dusk brims the shadows’ doesn’t actually make that much sense, but it is so powerfully evocative of a warm rural twilight - and of the slow contented end of life
    Stunning enjambment between the two stanzas as well. Suggests the speed of the race, and then the line literally comes to a standstill. This is Larkin at his very best.
    One of THE great English poets, to my mind. Up there with Keats and Byron and Milton
    Yes. Astonishing. The last of of tradition of great poetry for the ordinary reader (not academics) about actual real stuff, written with scrupulous care and genius - even more than Keats is. Clare, Hardy, Edward Thomas, Betjeman (despite weaknesses) and Larkin. And the death of Larkin ended a tradition as surely as the death of Shostakovich.

    Larkin renders so many poets unreadable for their imprecision, lack of anything to say and inattention to form.
    Poetry is also ultra-WOKE now. What gets you published is your level of intersectional oppression, not whether you are any good. Which is the death of any art (tho poetry probably died with Larkin and Plath, anyway)
    Surely ultra-woke poetry, is something that ChatGPT would have no problem churning out, volumes at a time?
    Oooh good idea. I'll give it a spin
    Can I vote that you don't?

    EDIT - I see I'm too late.
    I'm sparing you the poem where ChatGPT went into great detail about a forbidden love affair between a senior Scottish political executive and the gay campervan. In a car park in Dundee

    ChatGPT will say lots of stuff it shouldn't say, if you ask it to do it in the form of a poem
    I'm intrigued. How can you have an affair with a campervan?
    ChatGPT worked it out. They ran off to the Trossachs together

    ydoethur said:

    Leon said:

    kinabalu said:

    Leon said:

    Sandpit said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    On race horses enjoying racing:
    I once had a conversation with a biologist after a book signing which got on to the subject of athletes, and I asked him why humans have massively increased their running records over the past century but horses have managed only minuscule improvements.
    As he pointed out, horses have evolved running at speed over millions of years, whereas we haven't. He went on to say that for horses, running is about escaping predators, so when horses run together - for example, in a horse race - those millions of years of evolution are telling each horse not to be last, or they'll get eaten. And, in his words, every physiological thing that jockeys and trainers say is a sign a horse enjoys it, is actually a sign of stress. They're basically terrified.
    The only time a horse enjoys running is alone, at not much more than a canter.


    Do memories plague their ears like flies?
    They shake their heads. Dusk brims the shadows.
    Summer by summer all stole away,
    The starting-gates, the crowd and cries -
    All but the unmolesting meadows.
    Almanacked, their names live; they

    Have slipped their names, and stand at ease,
    Or gallop for what must be joy,
    And not a fieldglass sees them home,
    Or curious stop-watch prophesies :
    Only the grooms, and the grooms boy,
    With bridles in the evening come.


    Larkin of course.
    Larkin is so strangely brilliant

    ‘Dusk brims the shadows’ doesn’t actually make that much sense, but it is so powerfully evocative of a warm rural twilight - and of the slow contented end of life
    Stunning enjambment between the two stanzas as well. Suggests the speed of the race, and then the line literally comes to a standstill. This is Larkin at his very best.
    One of THE great English poets, to my mind. Up there with Keats and Byron and Milton
    Yes. Astonishing. The last of of tradition of great poetry for the ordinary reader (not academics) about actual real stuff, written with scrupulous care and genius - even more than Keats is. Clare, Hardy, Edward Thomas, Betjeman (despite weaknesses) and Larkin. And the death of Larkin ended a tradition as surely as the death of Shostakovich.

    Larkin renders so many poets unreadable for their imprecision, lack of anything to say and inattention to form.
    Poetry is also ultra-WOKE now. What gets you published is your level of intersectional oppression, not whether you are any good. Which is the death of any art (tho poetry probably died with Larkin and Plath, anyway)
    Surely ultra-woke poetry, is something that ChatGPT would have no problem churning out, volumes at a time?
    Oooh good idea. I'll give it a spin
    Can I vote that you don't?

    EDIT - I see I'm too late.
    I'm sparing you the poem where ChatGPT went into great detail about a forbidden love affair between a senior Scottish political executive and the gay campervan. In a car park in Dundee

    ChatGPT will say lots of stuff it shouldn't say, if you ask it to do it in the form of a poem
    I'm intrigued. How can you have an affair with a campervan?
    Same way you would with a butch van.
    For my comment, les bien pensant replies would have been more.
  • Options
    FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,047
    Horse that fell at the 1st didn't move.

    I do like the horses that continue racing even though they've lost their rider.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    This is not a great advertisement for horse racing
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    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,442

    Sandpit said:

    MaxPB said:

    A Hollywood friend has suggested far from being excluded from the new Harry Potter series, JK Rowling is going to have a very large influence on the setting, casting and ensuring that the show runners don't stray too far from the original plot. HBO are said to be comfortable with it after their success with The Last Of Us which followed the same template with Neil Druckmann taking the a lead role in bringing the series to life.

    2025 seems like the the date when the first season will be released and the main roles will be filled by the end of this year with British actors and actresses being preferred as they were for the movies. There was a rumour that WB wanted to shift the setting to a US high school rather than wizard Eton and that's what was holding up the announcement because Rowling was adamant that any new series would have to stick to the original story or not be done at all.

    It was an interesting lunch!

    It was a surprising announcement, given all the recent controversies around the author. I guess that either HBO have been talking to Rowling for years to get this project off the ground, or they judge that the controversy will pass, and if they don’t do it now then someone else will.

    The Budweiser boycott in the States, is an indication that perhaps the tide is starting to turn on companies bending over backwards to support the woke activism of their younger employees.
    As I understand it, JKR has either been extremely well advised or is very business savvy.

    It is apparently somewhere between difficult and impossible to make Harry Potter universe products without her OK, due to the rights she retained
    Most 'creators' are not that wealthy and will sell the rights to their work. In her case she'd already made bucketloads of cash so why not maintain control?
    As I understand it, she made very good deals from day 1 - when she was quite poor.

    Hence her current vast wealth.
  • Options
    TresTres Posts: 2,229
    protestors got a point to be honest, these poor horses
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,631
    Did anyone have an answer for this ?

    Will someone kindly explain WTF the Massachusetts Air National Guard needed access to battle plans in Ukraine.
    https://twitter.com/nblackshoe/status/1647197447691673600
  • Options
    pingping Posts: 3,731
    edited April 2023
    Yissss!

    Pity I threw away some winnings, going ew
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,394
    Boom. Corach Rambler!
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290
    edited April 2023
    Tres said:

    protestors got a point to be honest, these poor horses

    Yes, this is the first time I've watched the National in YEARS, and for the first time it struck me: actually, this has a hint of cruelty. Maybe more than a hint
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    Tres said:

    protestors got a point to be honest, these poor horses

    Getting the horses more wound up before the start will have increased the chance of a fall
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,631
    Sandpit said:

    The Silverstone protestors got suspended sentences and community service.

    These disruptions are going to continue, until either they start getting time, or start getting killed or injured with their increasingly dangerous stunts.

    Emily Wilding Davison says hi.
  • Options
    Alba!

    I mean Écosse.

    I mean Scotland!
  • Options
    Who finished sixth?
  • Options
    bigglesbiggles Posts: 4,347
    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.
  • Options
    noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 20,770
    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    Is this about Leicester trying to compete with Man City?
  • Options
    Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 3,389
    Leon said:

    Tres said:

    protestors got a point to be honest, these poor horses

    Yes, this is the first time I've watched the National in YEARS, and for the first time it struck me: actually, this has a hint of cruelty. Maybe more than a hint
    I have to agree there. Call me woke if you want (whatever that means), but I do see the point of the protests/protestors.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    Pulpstar said:

    Tres said:

    protestors got a point to be honest, these poor horses

    Getting the horses more wound up before the start will have increased the chance of a fall
    Mate they weren't wound up. They went from the pre-parade to the parade back to the pre-parade, went down and jumped off. No on course parade, and they only took a couple of turns beforehand.

    Let's hope that horse that fell at the first is winded but it was the first fence.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290
    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,898
    TOPPING said:

    Fuck one down and stayed down at the first ffs

    That didn’t look good.
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 32,003
    Nigelb said:

    Sandpit said:

    The Silverstone protestors got suspended sentences and community service.

    These disruptions are going to continue, until either they start getting time, or start getting killed or injured with their increasingly dangerous stunts.

    Emily Wilding Davison says hi.
    Great something aunt of a friend
  • Options
    stodgestodge Posts: 12,864
    Not too bad - hopefully ROI MAGE has finished seventh and with that and GALLIARD DU MESNIL I’ve made a few pounds on the each way betting.

    A bit of deja vu - CORACH RAMBLER has done this year what NOBLE YEATS did last and come in as a fast improving horse off an attractive weight and aided by the drying ground has won well. VANILLIER ran home strongly for second.

    The winner will be at least 10 lbs higher if they go for a repeat in 2024 and as we saw with NOBLE YEATS will be vulnerable to something off a light weight.
  • Options
    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Both.

    Ban whips and fences.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    edited April 2023
    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290

    Leon said:

    Tres said:

    protestors got a point to be honest, these poor horses

    Yes, this is the first time I've watched the National in YEARS, and for the first time it struck me: actually, this has a hint of cruelty. Maybe more than a hint
    I have to agree there. Call me woke if you want (whatever that means), but I do see the point of the protests/protestors.
    I am definitely not Woke on this stuff - I've no problem with most forms of hunting and fishing, as long as it has a real purpose (to acquire food or kill vermin) - but that's the first time watching the National has made me a little uneasy
  • Options
    bigglesbiggles Posts: 4,347
    edited April 2023
    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’ welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,798

    Horse that fell at the 1st didn't move.

    I do like the horses that continue racing even though they've lost their rider.

    They seem like they could easily win without the rider.
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,995
    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’a welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    Your arse in parsley, absolute nutjob
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,995

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Both.

    Ban whips and fences.
    They hardly use the whip it is only flashed in front of them , away and get a pineapple pizza.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    Er what? I find horse racing incredibly boring and hardly ever watch it. Dunno about any rules. That's the first race I've watched, of any kind, in a decade maybe. When I was a kid/teen I would always watch the National but only coz everyone would have a bet. Then I went to uni and that stopped

    They were using whips, is all I could see, and to my casual eye it suddenly looked... BAD
  • Options
    What a shitshow. Two horses died over 3 days at earlier races, plus however many don't make it today. This is an acceptable bit of fun?
    Did the delay upset the horses? I don't know, I haven't seen it, but you can't put this on the protests. Racing the beasts to death is on the owners and jockeys.
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,995
    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Tres said:

    protestors got a point to be honest, these poor horses

    Yes, this is the first time I've watched the National in YEARS, and for the first time it struck me: actually, this has a hint of cruelty. Maybe more than a hint
    I have to agree there. Call me woke if you want (whatever that means), but I do see the point of the protests/protestors.
    I am definitely not Woke on this stuff - I've no problem with most forms of hunting and fishing, as long as it has a real purpose (to acquire food or kill vermin) - but that's the first time watching the National has made me a little uneasy
    Snowflake
  • Options
    Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 3,389
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    the jockey was whipping the horse as it was in the home straight. Disgusting.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,898

    Who finished sixth?

    Born By The Sea, according to Racing.tv.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Tres said:

    protestors got a point to be honest, these poor horses

    Yes, this is the first time I've watched the National in YEARS, and for the first time it struck me: actually, this has a hint of cruelty. Maybe more than a hint
    I have to agree there. Call me woke if you want (whatever that means), but I do see the point of the protests/protestors.
    I am definitely not Woke on this stuff - I've no problem with most forms of hunting and fishing, as long as it has a real purpose (to acquire food or kill vermin) - but that's the first time watching the National has made me a little uneasy
    The protesters succeeded. They drew attention to the possible cruelty of the race so we all were more highly attuned to any occurrence of it. And the first few fences were a very bad advertisement for the sport.

    The BHA, if you're interested, is very aware of this and the challenges they, that horse racing faces.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,394
    The protestors have absolutely zero point as all the commentators and trainers made perfectly clear by highlighting their absolute ignorance before the race.

    Huzzah for the Grand National!
  • Options
    bigglesbiggles Posts: 4,347
    malcolmg said:

    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’a welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    Your arse in parsley, absolute nutjob
    Discomforting any animal for any reason other than to destroy pests or to eat it (in both of which cases I kill them quickly and efficiently and expect others to do the same) is just indefensible.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,394
    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’ welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    Frustratedly reduced to posting on here since you couldn't get round the police cordon and over the fence then?

    Poor you.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,798

    What a shitshow. Two horses died over 3 days at earlier races, plus however many don't make it today. This is an acceptable bit of fun?
    Did the delay upset the horses? I don't know, I haven't seen it, but you can't put this on the protests. Racing the beasts to death is on the owners and jockeys.

    Make the jockeys share the fate of their horses and that'd make them more careful.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’ welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    Wrong. Or rather you don't know. Race horses have a fantastic life compared with, say, cows. But they are made to undertake activities which can present a threat to their well-being.

    Like if people buy a dog or goldfish.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’ welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    It really won't have
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,689

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    Is this about Leicester trying to compete with Man City?
    I am taking the dog out, can't listen to more of this match...
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,394
    boulay said:

    In a more brutal world they would just line the horses up in front of the protesters and shoot them and point out to the protesters that if the horses can’t race then there is no reason for them to live.

    Or shoot the protesters.
  • Options
    Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 3,389

    The protestors have absolutely zero point as all the commentators and trainers made perfectly clear by highlighting their absolute ignorance before the race.

    Huzzah for the Grand National!

    who's ignorance, the protestors, the trainers or yours?
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Tres said:

    protestors got a point to be honest, these poor horses

    Yes, this is the first time I've watched the National in YEARS, and for the first time it struck me: actually, this has a hint of cruelty. Maybe more than a hint
    I have to agree there. Call me woke if you want (whatever that means), but I do see the point of the protests/protestors.
    I am definitely not Woke on this stuff - I've no problem with most forms of hunting and fishing, as long as it has a real purpose (to acquire food or kill vermin) - but that's the first time watching the National has made me a little uneasy
    The protesters succeeded. They drew attention to the possible cruelty of the race so we all were more highly attuned to any occurrence of it. And the first few fences were a very bad advertisement for the sport.

    The BHA, if you're interested, is very aware of this and the challenges they, that horse racing faces.
    I don't especially care either way. I'm just giving you the honest opinion of someone with no interest in racing who hasn't seen it in ages, and to my surprise I felt uncomfortable. Is all

    BUT there are many many bigger issues of animal welfare that deserve much more attention

    Think of that explosion in America that killed 18,000 cows. If one explosion can kill 18,000 cows what kind of conditions are they living in???
  • Options
    bigglesbiggles Posts: 4,347

    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’ welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    Frustratedly reduced to posting on here since you couldn't get round the police cordon and over the fence then?

    Poor you.
    No I think the protestors are a disgrace as they increased the discomfort of the horses. It is possible to disapprove of more than one group at once.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,689
    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’ welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    I doubt it unless it was an Andulucian fighting bull.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    edited April 2023
    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    Er what? I find horse racing incredibly boring and hardly ever watch it. Dunno about any rules. That's the first race I've watched, of any kind, in a decade maybe. When I was a kid/teen I would always watch the National but only coz everyone would have a bet. Then I went to uni and that stopped

    They were using whips, is all I could see, and to my casual eye it suddenly looked... BAD
    As I said you were influenced by wokeism as espoused by the protesters.

    Jockeys are only allowed to hit their horses, with heavily padded "whips", seven times over the course of the race. So you only noticed it because you were looking for issues.

    Not to say that is a bad thing.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    the jockey was whipping the horse as it was in the home straight. Disgusting.
    Unlikely I'll have to take a look at it again. It's a heavily padded stick. And he could only use it seven times. So get over yourself a bit.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    Er what? I find horse racing incredibly boring and hardly ever watch it. Dunno about any rules. That's the first race I've watched, of any kind, in a decade maybe. When I was a kid/teen I would always watch the National but only coz everyone would have a bet. Then I went to uni and that stopped

    They were using whips, is all I could see, and to my casual eye it suddenly looked... BAD
    As I said you were influenced by wokeism as espoused by the protesters.

    Jockeys are only allowed to hit their horses, with heavily padded "whips", seven times over the course of the race. So you only noticed it because you were looking for issues.

    Not too say that is a bad thing.
    I personally don't file "awareness of animal welfare" under Wokery

    But you are probably right, the protestors made me look for it, without me realising
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,394

    The protestors have absolutely zero point as all the commentators and trainers made perfectly clear by highlighting their absolute ignorance before the race.

    Huzzah for the Grand National!

    who's ignorance, the protestors, the trainers or yours?
    The protesters. They were directly responsible for what happened for making that race more dangerous by disrupting the build up and horses that were ready to race.

    Idiots like you need to get a brain.

    You should be ashamed of yourself.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    biggles said:

    malcolmg said:

    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’a welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    Your arse in parsley, absolute nutjob
    Discomforting any animal for any reason other than to destroy pests or to eat it (in both of which cases I kill them quickly and efficiently and expect others to do the same) is just indefensible.
    So no pets at all then. Fair enough.
  • Options
    Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 3,389
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    Er what? I find horse racing incredibly boring and hardly ever watch it. Dunno about any rules. That's the first race I've watched, of any kind, in a decade maybe. When I was a kid/teen I would always watch the National but only coz everyone would have a bet. Then I went to uni and that stopped

    They were using whips, is all I could see, and to my casual eye it suddenly looked... BAD
    As I said you were influenced by wokeism as espoused by the protesters.

    Jockeys are only allowed to hit their horses, with heavily padded "whips", seven times over the course of the race. So you only noticed it because you were looking for issues.

    Not too say that is a bad thing.
    ...for God's sake will somebody tell me what Woke means?........
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,394
    biggles said:

    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’ welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    Frustratedly reduced to posting on here since you couldn't get round the police cordon and over the fence then?

    Poor you.
    No I think the protestors are a disgrace as they increased the discomfort of the horses. It is possible to disapprove of more than one group at once.
    It's just idiotic to say that beef cows are treated better, and a position of plain ignorance.

    Go and visit how race horses are treated if you want to see how well they're looked after.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290
    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    the jockey was whipping the horse as it was in the home straight. Disgusting.
    Unlikely I'll have to take a look at it again. It's a heavily padded stick. And he could only use it seven times. So get over yourself a bit.
    No, @Daveyboy1961 is right. There was a jockey whipping a horse (the winner, I think?) in the home straight. That's where I noticed it
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,798
    Astonishing news from a few days ago, simply astonishing.

    The new management team at FTX released an initial report on what led to the demise of the bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange, painting a damning picture of its operations under ousted founder and CEO Sam Bankman-Fried's leadership.

    The FTX debtors, led by new chief executive and restructuring officer John J. Ray III, wrote in the high-level overview that "while the FTX Group's failure is novel in the unprecedented scale of harm it caused in a nascent industry, many of its root causes are familiar: hubris, incompetence, and greed."


    https://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/ftx-collapse-report-hubris-incompetence-greed-failure
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,287

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    Er what? I find horse racing incredibly boring and hardly ever watch it. Dunno about any rules. That's the first race I've watched, of any kind, in a decade maybe. When I was a kid/teen I would always watch the National but only coz everyone would have a bet. Then I went to uni and that stopped

    They were using whips, is all I could see, and to my casual eye it suddenly looked... BAD
    As I said you were influenced by wokeism as espoused by the protesters.

    Jockeys are only allowed to hit their horses, with heavily padded "whips", seven times over the course of the race. So you only noticed it because you were looking for issues.

    Not too say that is a bad thing.
    ...for God's sake will somebody tell me what Woke means?........
    Don't ask. It's very boring and you'd fall asleep.
  • Options
    Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 3,389
    biggles said:

    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’ welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    Frustratedly reduced to posting on here since you couldn't get round the police cordon and over the fence then?

    Poor you.
    No I think the protestors are a disgrace as they increased the discomfort of the horses. It is possible to disapprove of more than one group at once.
    how did they increase the discomfort of the horses? They never got anywhere near them.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,394
    malcolmg said:

    Boom. Corach Rambler!

    I got 1st and 3rd from my three horses put up earlier, well done to anyone who followed. Saor Alba gu Brath
    Well done malc
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    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    Er what? I find horse racing incredibly boring and hardly ever watch it. Dunno about any rules. That's the first race I've watched, of any kind, in a decade maybe. When I was a kid/teen I would always watch the National but only coz everyone would have a bet. Then I went to uni and that stopped

    They were using whips, is all I could see, and to my casual eye it suddenly looked... BAD
    As I said you were influenced by wokeism as espoused by the protesters.

    Jockeys are only allowed to hit their horses, with heavily padded "whips", seven times over the course of the race. So you only noticed it because you were looking for issues.

    Not too say that is a bad thing.
    I personally don't file "awareness of animal welfare" under Wokery

    But you are probably right, the protestors made me look for it, without me realising
    The BHA is very aware of the need for a social license to operate for racing. If it is withdrawn then that's it for racing. Hence there change in the whip rules recently.

    If the public decides that it won't put up with racing then that will be it.
  • Options
    Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 3,389
    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    the jockey was whipping the horse as it was in the home straight. Disgusting.
    Unlikely I'll have to take a look at it again. It's a heavily padded stick. And he could only use it seven times. So get over yourself a bit.
    No, @Daveyboy1961 is right. There was a jockey whipping a horse (the winner, I think?) in the home straight. That's where I noticed it
    yes, i thought i didn't dream it...
  • Options
    bigglesbiggles Posts: 4,347
    TOPPING said:

    biggles said:

    malcolmg said:

    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’a welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    Your arse in parsley, absolute nutjob
    Discomforting any animal for any reason other than to destroy pests or to eat it (in both of which cases I kill them quickly and efficiently and expect others to do the same) is just indefensible.
    So no pets at all then. Fair enough.
    As it happens I think many dogs are mistreated (left alone many days and generally not allowed a pack) but I accept many owners at least try. Cats are, of course, the spawn of satan and given what they do in my garden, I put them in the category of pests.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290
    Foxy said:

    biggles said:

    Put bluntly, if you enjoy horse racing you have to be honest and admit you don’t care about the horses’ welfare. A legitimate position to take, just not one I can endorse.

    The cow that donated my steak later will have been better treated in life.

    I doubt it unless it was an Andulucian fighting bull.
    Yes. Andalucian fighting bulls have absolutely blissful lives, the best food, near total freedom, no interference from people, then they die fairly quickly and cleanly in the arena, compared to the cruel hours that most cattle suffer before they even reach the horrors of the slaughterhouse

    It is one of the great ironies of the argument for and against bullfighting
  • Options
    .

    The protestors have absolutely zero point as all the commentators and trainers made perfectly clear by highlighting their absolute ignorance before the race.

    Huzzah for the Grand National!

    who's ignorance, the protestors, the trainers or yours?
    The protesters. They were directly responsible for what happened for making that race more dangerous by disrupting the build up and horses that were ready to race.

    Idiots like you need to get a brain.

    You should be ashamed of yourself.
    Behave. Topping I'll listen to, he loves his horses and knows his onions. I'll take his views and expertise on board even if
    I disagree with the sport. You're just a keyboard warrior who likes an online scrap. You do know that most on here laugh at you? You used to be a good poster, now you're just insane.
  • Options
    Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 3,389

    The protestors have absolutely zero point as all the commentators and trainers made perfectly clear by highlighting their absolute ignorance before the race.

    Huzzah for the Grand National!

    who's ignorance, the protestors, the trainers or yours?
    The protesters. They were directly responsible for what happened for making that race more dangerous by disrupting the build up and horses that were ready to race.

    Idiots like you need to get a brain.

    You should be ashamed of yourself.
    I do have a brain, thank you very much. I also have eyes. The protestors were nowhere near the horses. At worst the horses were delayed. Why is that an issue? Surely you think they enjoyed the day out? The only people who should be ashamed are the ones promoting this cruelty and causing poor animals to either break their necks or causing them to be shot!! Who's the idiot?
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    Er what? I find horse racing incredibly boring and hardly ever watch it. Dunno about any rules. That's the first race I've watched, of any kind, in a decade maybe. When I was a kid/teen I would always watch the National but only coz everyone would have a bet. Then I went to uni and that stopped

    They were using whips, is all I could see, and to my casual eye it suddenly looked... BAD
    As I said you were influenced by wokeism as espoused by the protesters.

    Jockeys are only allowed to hit their horses, with heavily padded "whips", seven times over the course of the race. So you only noticed it because you were looking for issues.

    Not too say that is a bad thing.
    ...for God's sake will somebody tell me what Woke means?........
    He hit the horse twice in the run in.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,314
    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    the jockey was whipping the horse as it was in the home straight. Disgusting.
    Unlikely I'll have to take a look at it again. It's a heavily padded stick. And he could only use it seven times. So get over yourself a bit.
    No, @Daveyboy1961 is right. There was a jockey whipping a horse (the winner, I think?) in the home straight. That's where I noticed it
    Twice. When he thought the second was coming to him.
  • Options
    Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 3,389
    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    Er what? I find horse racing incredibly boring and hardly ever watch it. Dunno about any rules. That's the first race I've watched, of any kind, in a decade maybe. When I was a kid/teen I would always watch the National but only coz everyone would have a bet. Then I went to uni and that stopped

    They were using whips, is all I could see, and to my casual eye it suddenly looked... BAD
    As I said you were influenced by wokeism as espoused by the protesters.

    Jockeys are only allowed to hit their horses, with heavily padded "whips", seven times over the course of the race. So you only noticed it because you were looking for issues.

    Not too say that is a bad thing.
    ...for God's sake will somebody tell me what Woke means?........
    He hit the horse twice in the run in.
    Yes, why?......
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,689
    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    Er what? I find horse racing incredibly boring and hardly ever watch it. Dunno about any rules. That's the first race I've watched, of any kind, in a decade maybe. When I was a kid/teen I would always watch the National but only coz everyone would have a bet. Then I went to uni and that stopped

    They were using whips, is all I could see, and to my casual eye it suddenly looked... BAD
    As I said you were influenced by wokeism as espoused by the protesters.

    Jockeys are only allowed to hit their horses, with heavily padded "whips", seven times over the course of the race. So you only noticed it because you were looking for issues.

    Not too say that is a bad thing.
    ...for God's sake will somebody tell me what Woke means?........
    He hit the horse twice in the run in.
    Not the best definition, but I have seen worse on here...
  • Options
    Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 2,508
    edited April 2023
    Off topic, but important, especially if you think demography is destiny: "While India’s overall population is no longer skyrocketing, and in fact it’s quickly flattening, U.N. experts have projected that sometime this month it will finally exceed China’s gradually shrinking population."
    source$: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/04/14/india-china-population-most-populous/

    According to a graph in the article, the current UN projection is that India's population will peak at about 1.7 billion, around 2060.

    (As I understand it, India's working age population passed China's some years ago, and will soon be much larger.)
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,290
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    Another year, another set of evidence for banning this cruel sport.

    It's the whipping as much as the fences. Hmmm
    Okay I'm sure you have been following it closely but to remind you the whip rules have changed many times and were changed a short while ago. How many times did you see the jocks hit their horses on the run in. And with what kind of whip.

    How many times during the course of the whole race.
    the jockey was whipping the horse as it was in the home straight. Disgusting.
    Unlikely I'll have to take a look at it again. It's a heavily padded stick. And he could only use it seven times. So get over yourself a bit.
    No, @Daveyboy1961 is right. There was a jockey whipping a horse (the winner, I think?) in the home straight. That's where I noticed it
    Twice. When he thought the second was coming to him.
    They will have to ban whipping, I suspect (and I am speaking as a neutral!)

    It just looks too bad. These days. And surely if they ban the whip for everyone then everyone is equal, so what's the point in allowing it?

    The fences are also an issue

    I give it 5-10 years before this kind of racing is banned forever
This discussion has been closed.