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An Exodus of sitting Tory MPs on the way? – politicalbetting.com

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  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,377
    Surprised the usual suspects haven't posted this.

    First lead for Starmer over Sunak in these seats since we started our Blue Wall tracker in October.

    Which of the following do Blue Wall voters think would be the better PM? (2 July)

    Keir Starmer 36% (+2)
    Rishi Sunak 34% (-5)

    Changes +/- 17-18 June


    https://twitter.com/RedfieldWilton/status/1676262140066295810
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,937
    malcolmg said:

    I think a bit much ,

    The Continental Shelf Act 1964 and the Continental Shelf (Jurisdiction) Order 1968 defines the UK North Sea maritime area to the north of latitude 55 degrees north as being under the jurisdiction of Scots law meaning that 94% of the UK’s oil resources are under Scottish jurisdiction. In addition, section 126 of the Scotland Act 1998 defines Scottish waters as the internal waters and territorial sea of the United Kingdom as are adjacent to Scotland.

    However, if Shetland decided to breakaway, under International law and United Nations convention (UNCLOS) regarding small islands / enclaves they would only be entitled to six miles of territorial waters meaning no oil and not much fish.

    What if, for example, Whalsay and Foula declared independence or elected to stick with Scotland? Unionists should note that the Isle of Man and Channel Islands only have rights up to six miles offshore.

    Even under the hypothetical circumstance that this occurred, Westminster wouldn’t be able to retain control of the oil fields anyway. These matters are regulated by the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, to which the UK is a signatory. International law specifies that a state controls the continental shelf and associated mineral and fishing rights up to 200 nautical miles (230 miles or 370 km) off its shores. When another state possesses an island within the continental shelf of this state, special rules apply.

    This matter was discussed in detail in a legal paper published by the European Journal of International Law: Prospective Anglo-Scottish Maritime Boundary Revisited
    Stop talking Orkney down
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,377
    Well

    Met to investigate two recent Tory Partygate claims - but not those made about Boris Johnson and events at Chequers

    The Metropolitan police have just issued a statement about the three sets of alleged lockdown breaches involving Tories that it has been reviewing. In two cases it is opening or re-opening investigations, but in the third set of allegations – involving Boris Johnson and Chequers – it is not taking action.

    Here are the main points.

    Boris Johnson faces no further action over the claims – that he strongly denied that – information from his diaries reviewed in connection with the Covid inquiry showed that lockdown rules had been broken at Chequers and No 10. The Met said in its statment:

    The Met and Thames Valley Police have assessed material referred by the Cabinet Office regarding potential breaches of the regulations between June 2020 and May 2021 at Downing Street and Chequers. Based on an assessment of that material and an account provided regarding the diary entries, and also having sought some further clarification, the Met and Thames Valley Police have each assessed the events in their jurisdiction and concluded that they do not meet the retrospective criteria for opening an investigation.

    But the Met is reopening its investigation into claims – almost impossible to deny, given the video footage leaked to the Sunday Mirror – that lockdown rules were broken when Tories involved in Shaun Bailey’s campaign for London mayor held a party. The Met said:

    Following assessment of new evidence that was not previously provided to officers, the Met is now re-opening an investigation into potential breaches of the Regulations at an event in Matthew Parker Street on 14 December 2020.

    Sir Mark Rowley, the Met commissioner, said last month that the video meant the original decision not to take action would be reconsidered. “We can all see the colourful nature of the video and how much it tells a story way beyond the original photo,” he said.

    And the Met will investigate an event in the Commons office of Dame Eleanor Laing, the deputy speaker, attended by Sir Bernard Jenkin in December 2020. This came to light shortly before the publication of the privileges committee report into Boris Johnson. Jenkin is a member of the committee, and Johnson claimed the report of his attendance at an alleged drinks party when Covid restrictions were in force showed he was a hypocrite. The Met said:

    Following assessment of material relating to a gathering in Parliament, the Met is opening an investigation into potential breaches of the Regulations at an event on 8 December 2020.

    Jenkin has not commented in detail on the event, but allies have argued that it was a work event and therefore allowed under the rules at the time.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,516

    And Murray's last Wimbledon as well I suspect.
    He'll go deep, I think. But we're on for a seminal final between Novak and Alcaraz - which Alcaraz will win imo.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,242
    Farooq said:

    My point was not about maritime law: I know nothing about that. It's just about proximity. The above is the absolute upper limit. As you point out, it may well be much less than that again.

    It's a load of silly-season fluff, really. Orkney isn't leaving.
    They wanted some more attention, and they've gotten it - from their perspective it's not been silly at all in that regard.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,988
    Eabhal said:

    Stop talking Orkney down
    Not me, it is part of Scotland and most would always want it to stay that way. We never hear mince about IOM wanting to be Norwegian etc again. Made up bollox by pathetic cretins. Personally Scotland would be far better being part of Nordic nations for sure.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,242

    Surprised the usual suspects haven't posted this.

    First lead for Starmer over Sunak in these seats since we started our Blue Wall tracker in October.

    Which of the following do Blue Wall voters think would be the better PM? (2 July)

    Keir Starmer 36% (+2)
    Rishi Sunak 34% (-5)

    Changes +/- 17-18 June


    https://twitter.com/RedfieldWilton/status/1676262140066295810

    That's Blue Wall and not just everyone?

    They're getting hammered at 1997 levels then.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,516
    Farooq said:

    You get the best cup of tea running the tea bag under the cold tap for about 10 seconds before using it in the boiling water.

    This removes the taste that comes from the fine dust-size particles within the bag which carry a much more bitter flavour. The fine powder is rich in anthocyanins and phenolic acid. Phenolic acid is what faintly reminds some people of urine and which can give the tea an unpleasant aroma for some people with acute senses of smell.
    Ok, so you're Frank Muir on Call My Bluff and I'm calling BLUFF.

    You smile enigmatically, turn the card and ???
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,988
    Farooq said:

    My point was not about maritime law: I know nothing about that. It's just about proximity. The above is the absolute upper limit. As you point out, it may well be much less than that again.

    It's a load of silly-season fluff, really. Orkney isn't leaving.
    For sure an old chestnut that some numpties bring up every so often.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,236
    malcolmg said:

    I think a bit much ,

    The Continental Shelf Act 1964 and the Continental Shelf (Jurisdiction) Order 1968 defines the UK North Sea maritime area to the north of latitude 55 degrees north as being under the jurisdiction of Scots law meaning that 94% of the UK’s oil resources are under Scottish jurisdiction. In addition, section 126 of the Scotland Act 1998 defines Scottish waters as the internal waters and territorial sea of the United Kingdom as are adjacent to Scotland.

    However, if Shetland decided to breakaway, under International law and United Nations convention (UNCLOS) regarding small islands / enclaves they would only be entitled to six miles of territorial waters meaning no oil and not much fish.

    What if, for example, Whalsay and Foula declared independence or elected to stick with Scotland? Unionists should note that the Isle of Man and Channel Islands only have rights up to six miles offshore.

    Even under the hypothetical circumstance that this occurred, Westminster wouldn’t be able to retain control of the oil fields anyway. These matters are regulated by the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, to which the UK is a signatory. International law specifies that a state controls the continental shelf and associated mineral and fishing rights up to 200 nautical miles (230 miles or 370 km) off its shores. When another state possesses an island within the continental shelf of this state, special rules apply.

    This matter was discussed in detail in a legal paper published by the European Journal of International Law: Prospective Anglo-Scottish Maritime Boundary Revisited
    Isle of Man and Channel Islands are not independent countries. They are Crown Dependencies. That is a straw man argument.

    If Orkney and Shetland did become fully independent then they would have the right to control over their own oil and gas resources up to the median line. This has already happened in recent times when East Timor became independent. There is a well established procedure and it would apply equally to Orkney and Shetland.
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,217
    Those interested in Lincoln's thinking on slavery while he was beginning his first campaign for the presidency should read his famous Cooper Union speech: https://quod.lib.umich.edu/l/lincoln/lincoln3/1:199?rgn=div1;view=fulltext

    By the time Lincoln gave that speech (1860), a large majority of the American population lived in states that had banned slavery -- and the free states were growing much more rapidly than the remaining slave states.

    (This Wikipedia article on the speech may help with the context: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooper_Union_speech )

    For example, Lincoln shows that the Northwest Ordinance, which banned slavery in the territory that became the states of Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and part of Minnesota, was supported by most of the "founding fathers". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northwest_Ordinance
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,001
    Barnesian said:

    Suppose there is a 50% tactical switch of a 40% Lab and Green vote in Tory/LD marginals. At most there are about 50 such marginals so this translates to 50%x40%x50/625 = 1.6%

    There has been a recent increase of about 2% in the Lib Dem national share so maybe that is it.
    Noooooooooo. That Labour and Green vote must surely be very soft where Lib Dem’s need it, it will need great armfuls to reduce Tories closer to 100 than 150 MPs. Surely the voters know what they need to do on their home patch by now?
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,236

    Which if true would mean that Lincoln died for his progressive views.

    Much as I admire Lincoln though, I'd suggest FDR is by quite some margin the greatest political leader in the history of the English speaking world.

    He saved the free world, he transformed America from the despair of Great Depression into the world's leading economic, cultural and military power, he won twice as many Presidential elections as anyone else. And all as a disabled man at a time when the taboos and prejudices surrounding disability meant he could never be photographed or filmed in a wheelchair.

    As I say, the greatest by some margin.
    My personal preference is for Truman. Both his domestic and international policies were truly world changing. Even more so than FDR in my view
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,377
    kle4 said:

    That's Blue Wall and not just everyone?

    They're getting hammered at 1997 levels then.
    Yup, these are the seats in which Labour finished third in back in 2019.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,988
    Leon said:

    I recently stood in front of this building. The fact it is still there is disturbing in itself, weirdly



    No more disturbing than Auschwitz etc being preserved, it shows what reality was.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,242

    I remain unconvinced that my local MP will be getting much of an incumbency bonus. . .

    All the local tories hate her.

    Relations between many MPs and local parties appear pretty bad. The rest are the other extreme, entirely controlled by the dozen or so worthies of their local party.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,408

    If you were to plot the spectrum of views that white people in America held towards black people and the issue of slavery at the time then Lincoln's views were at the extreme liberal/progressive end without a doubt, especially as they evolved during the course of the war.
    I spent a year studying the US Civil War in CSYS history at school, and came away quite in awe of Lincoln.
    This doesn't sound like a particularly extreme liberal/progressive position:

    "My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that."

    https://www.loc.gov/resource/mal.4233400/?st=text
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,242
    Andy_JS said:

    "Captain Tom's daughter 'used hero veteran's name to build spa and pool complex at home'

    Captain Tom's daughter, Hannah Ingram-Moore, and her husband Colin reportedly put forward the planning application in their own names, but then used the charity's name in their design and access statement"

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/captain-toms-daughter-used-hero-30383681

    Innovative!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,516
    edited July 2023

    Yep, as I say I don't know and my knowledge expanded considerably today because I bothered to go and look. So I am certainly not in a position to argue one way or the other on the detail.
    This fine sentiment if widely shared would spell big trouble for PB.com.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,155

    Well

    Met to investigate two recent Tory Partygate claims - but not those made about Boris Johnson and events at Chequers

    The Metropolitan police have just issued a statement about the three sets of alleged lockdown breaches involving Tories that it has been reviewing. In two cases it is opening or re-opening investigations, but in the third set of allegations – involving Boris Johnson and Chequers – it is not taking action.

    Here are the main points.

    Boris Johnson faces no further action over the claims – that he strongly denied that – information from his diaries reviewed in connection with the Covid inquiry showed that lockdown rules had been broken at Chequers and No 10. The Met said in its statment:

    The Met and Thames Valley Police have assessed material referred by the Cabinet Office regarding potential breaches of the regulations between June 2020 and May 2021 at Downing Street and Chequers. Based on an assessment of that material and an account provided regarding the diary entries, and also having sought some further clarification, the Met and Thames Valley Police have each assessed the events in their jurisdiction and concluded that they do not meet the retrospective criteria for opening an investigation.

    But the Met is reopening its investigation into claims – almost impossible to deny, given the video footage leaked to the Sunday Mirror – that lockdown rules were broken when Tories involved in Shaun Bailey’s campaign for London mayor held a party. The Met said:

    Following assessment of new evidence that was not previously provided to officers, the Met is now re-opening an investigation into potential breaches of the Regulations at an event in Matthew Parker Street on 14 December 2020.

    Sir Mark Rowley, the Met commissioner, said last month that the video meant the original decision not to take action would be reconsidered. “We can all see the colourful nature of the video and how much it tells a story way beyond the original photo,” he said.

    And the Met will investigate an event in the Commons office of Dame Eleanor Laing, the deputy speaker, attended by Sir Bernard Jenkin in December 2020. This came to light shortly before the publication of the privileges committee report into Boris Johnson. Jenkin is a member of the committee, and Johnson claimed the report of his attendance at an alleged drinks party when Covid restrictions were in force showed he was a hypocrite. The Met said:

    Following assessment of material relating to a gathering in Parliament, the Met is opening an investigation into potential breaches of the Regulations at an event on 8 December 2020.

    Jenkin has not commented in detail on the event, but allies have argued that it was a work event and therefore allowed under the rules at the time.

    Link? (A possibly dodgy one with all those typos?)
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,236
    Cookie said:

    All seems rather fucking academic given everyone seems to want to stop extracting oil from there.
    We live in hope that they will see sense and ditch such stupid ideas.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,797
    Andy_JS said:

    "Captain Tom's daughter 'used hero veteran's name to build spa and pool complex at home'

    Captain Tom's daughter, Hannah Ingram-Moore, and her husband Colin reportedly put forward the planning application in their own names, but then used the charity's name in their design and access statement"

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/captain-toms-daughter-used-hero-30383681

    Provided they were not using charitable donations to pay for it, why should we care? Getting planning permission in the wrong name seems a technical foul at most.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,242
    Farooq said:

    If you like.

    Also, I have nothing against the concept. If that's what Orcadians want, then they should have it. Not up to the rest of us. I just don't think they really do want a change to the status quo.
    Nor do I. They want more money.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,780
    edited July 2023

    This doesn't sound like a particularly extreme liberal/progressive position:

    "My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that."

    https://www.loc.gov/resource/mal.4233400/?st=text
    That was spoken in the context of trying to get the Border States not to secede - which would have lost the war for the Union in short order.

    If Lincoln is to be believed - in his own letters - he was far more of an abolitionist in private than in public, for most of his life.

    A central feature of his private beliefs was that slavery was dying, and that Succession would revive the corpse for a while. This was a common view among some Northerners.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,377

    Link? (A possibly dodgy one with all those typos?)
    My apologies, I thought I included the link.

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/live/2023/jul/04/rishi-sunak-liaison-committee-migration-bill-supreme-court-uk-politics-news

    As for typos, well it is The Grauniad.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,001
    HYUFD said:

    24 SNP seats would go Labour on that swing since 2019, giving Labour most seats in Scotland again, albeit only by 1 MP.

    However it could be more if Conservatives and LDs tactically vote Labour to beat the SNP. Zero swing between SNP and Tories so the Tories would hold all their Scottish seats
    Surely Labour would get many more than that, as Conservatives vote tactically to keep the SNP out?
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,034
    malcolmg said:

    I think a bit much ,

    The Continental Shelf Act 1964 and the Continental Shelf (Jurisdiction) Order 1968 defines the UK North Sea maritime area to the north of latitude 55 degrees north as being under the jurisdiction of Scots law meaning that 94% of the UK’s oil resources are under Scottish jurisdiction. In addition, section 126 of the Scotland Act 1998 defines Scottish waters as the internal waters and territorial sea of the United Kingdom as are adjacent to Scotland.

    However, if Shetland decided to breakaway, under International law and United Nations convention (UNCLOS) regarding small islands / enclaves they would only be entitled to six miles of territorial waters meaning no oil and not much fish.

    What if, for example, Whalsay and Foula declared independence or elected to stick with Scotland? Unionists should note that the Isle of Man and Channel Islands only have rights up to six miles offshore.

    Even under the hypothetical circumstance that this occurred, Westminster wouldn’t be able to retain control of the oil fields anyway. These matters are regulated by the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, to which the UK is a signatory. International law specifies that a state controls the continental shelf and associated mineral and fishing rights up to 200 nautical miles (230 miles or 370 km) off its shores. When another state possesses an island within the continental shelf of this state, special rules apply.

    This matter was discussed in detail in a legal paper published by the European Journal of International Law: Prospective Anglo-Scottish Maritime Boundary Revisited
    Jersey is 12 miles territorial unless that crosses into French or Guernsey waters where it’s calculated at a mid point.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,257
    malcolmg said:

    No more disturbing than Auschwitz etc being preserved, it shows what reality was.
    It's different, rather than "more or less disturbing"

    Auschwitz is infinitely more evil even than the horror of slavery, as it was a unique attempt to destroy a nation of many millions with industrialised homicide, for no other reason than to get rid of them all. Even slavery doesn't match that

    However I find that photo quite uniquely chilling because in so many senses it is familiar. It is a brick building of late Georgian/early Victorian type, of which there are millions in the UK. Right down to the sash windows. The font in the sign is Victorian British

    It could be an old photo of a shopfront in Camden High Street, 80 yards from me, and it would say "Dealers in Linens and Cloths". And yet it says "Dealers in Slaves"

    Deeply disquieting
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,462

    This doesn't sound like a particularly extreme liberal/progressive position:

    "My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that."

    https://www.loc.gov/resource/mal.4233400/?st=text
    Of course when Lincoln was President the Republicans won all the North East, the West coast and most of the Mid West.

    The Democrats however won virtually all the South and Missouri, almost the reverse of now. Indeed Biden's Democrats are arguably closer to the party of Lincoln now and Trump's Republicans closer to the Confederacy

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1860_United_States_presidential_election



  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,917
    Leon said:

    I recently stood in front of this building. The fact it is still there is disturbing in itself, weirdly



    A cook called Richard Roose was tried for the crime of poisoning and was executed by boiling in 1532, taking two hours to die and excruciating death. The case remained valid in case law and discussed soberly by lawyers for hundreds of years thereafter.

    Hang around long enough and any act, no matter how horrific, will be recategorised as history and story stuff. In 1190 local Jewish people, entrapped in Clifford's Tower in York, committed suicide rather than submit, setting it alight in the process. The good citizens of York were still holding firework displays there until the 1990s.

    As these cases and your example shows, there is no activity so gross that people will not eventually convert it to "long ago", slap a blue plaque on it, and it just becomes part of the landscape... :(
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,797
    viewcode said:

    All together now. "If it's legal you should be able to advocate for it". If cannibalism was legal, people'd be boasting about eating the poor and how teens should be overfed and beaten to marbleize the flesh. Normal is highly situational (duh) and PB finds it very difficult to understand on a gut level that the past was different.
    The past was different but is it shocking that something called the slave trade involved trade in slaves? Surely the clue is in the name.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,242
    kinabalu said:

    This fine sentiment if widely shared would spell big trouble for PB.com.
    I deliberately post with as little, er, deliberation as possible. Keeps me surprised by events.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    viewcode said:

    A cook called Richard Roose was tried for the crime of poisoning and was executed by boiling in 1532, taking two hours to die and excruciating death. The case remained valid in case law and discussed soberly by lawyers for hundreds of years thereafter.

    Hang around long enough and any act, no matter how horrific, will be recategorised as history and story stuff. In 1190 local Jewish people, entrapped in Clifford's Tower in York, committed suicide rather than submit, setting it alight in the process. The good citizens of York were still holding firework displays there until the 1990s.

    As these cases and your example shows, there is no activity so gross that people will not eventually convert it to "long ago", slap a blue plaque on it, and it just becomes part of the landscape... :(
    I'm alightly hazy - does the building still have the "slaves for sale" sign today?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,462

    Surely Labour would get many more than that, as Conservatives vote tactically to keep the SNP out?
    Starmer needs LD tactical votes in England to beat the Tories and Tory tactical votes in Scotland to help beat the SNP
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,257
    edited July 2023

    This doesn't sound like a particularly extreme liberal/progressive position:

    "My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that."

    https://www.loc.gov/resource/mal.4233400/?st=text
    Before the war and in its early stages, Lincoln was more exercised by Secession than by slavery, or so he said. His focus, as that quote shows, was on preserving the USA

    Later I believe he did become more morally involved in the question of slavery and the pressing need to abolish it. Tho this was also politically convenient as it means he got more support from powerful anti-slavers in Britain and France - he was terrified the British Empire might side with the South - which could easily have tilted the war towards a Confederate victory

    He remained a racist, as we would know it, to the end. But he was a man of the mid 19th century
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    HYUFD said:

    Of course when Lincoln was President the Republicans won all the North East, the West coast and most of the Mid West.

    The Democrats however won virtually all the South and Missouri, almost the reverse of now. Indeed Biden's Democrats are arguably closer to the party of Lincoln now and Trump's Republicans closer to the Confederacy

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1860_United_States_presidential_election



    The Republicans have always been the party of businessmen. The Democrats have generally been the party of labour. Almost everything else has been volatile.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    viewcode said:

    A cook called Richard Roose was tried for the crime of poisoning and was executed by boiling in 1532, taking two hours to die and excruciating death. The case remained valid in case law and discussed soberly by lawyers for hundreds of years thereafter.

    Hang around long enough and any act, no matter how horrific, will be recategorised as history and story stuff. In 1190 local Jewish people, entrapped in Clifford's Tower in York, committed suicide rather than submit, setting it alight in the process. The good citizens of York were still holding firework displays there until the 1990s.

    As these cases and your example shows, there is no activity so gross that people will not eventually convert it to "long ago", slap a blue plaque on it, and it just becomes part of the landscape... :(
    Er, weren't the York fireworks on 5 November and therefore Gunpowder Plot?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,155

    My apologies, I thought I included the link.

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/live/2023/jul/04/rishi-sunak-liaison-committee-migration-bill-supreme-court-uk-politics-news

    As for typos, well it is The Grauniad.
    Ha, I should have guessed!
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,917

    The past was different but is it shocking that something called the slave trade involved trade in slaves? Surely the clue is in the name.
    We understand it intellectually, not at gut level. People do horrific things and we eventually sanitize it. We don't hold the memory of pain in long-term memory and (as @SeanT wrote about in the Spectator) we remember wars but forget pandemics.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,516
    Cookie said:

    Yes, but if you wanted a bigger income in a low interest/low inflation scenario and weren't bothered about your capital shrinking, you could just chisel some of your capital and call it income. And be less poorer than in the high interest high inflation scenario.
    You could indeed. There'd be negative compounding then but maybe you'd still be ahead of the game. I sense you usually would but I'd have to run the numbers and I'm not capable of that these days. I'm 62.

    But look, what I'll grant you is - if you're in the habit of viewing your personal balance sheet on a constantly PV adjusted basis you will probably calculate a net asset reduction there that's greater than the juicy income boost you're getting.

    However, many don't do this (and it isn't wrong not to), and at the very least it's accurate say that cash rich, no salary, debt free people (of which there are many) are relative winners in this new hiked interest rate environment.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,257
    Farooq said:

    I wonder if you're getting a little glimpse into the emotional state of some people when they see statues of slavers and suchlike. Makes it a little easier to understand them wanting to remove such functionless and offensive symbols when even an extant building's former purpose can give you the heebie jeebies.
    Believe it or not, yes I am

    My recent roadtrip around America, and the reading I did, has made me a little more sympathetic to the Wokerati and the statue-topplers, in America (and this on top of previous recent trips to the Deep South, Louisiana etc)

    The visits to Monticello, Antietam, Lexington and Staunton were particularly powerful

    I still think Wokeness is a mortal danger to the Enlightenment, and has gone way too far, and needs to be stopped. But I can more easily see why so many Americans are uncomfortable with anything that remotely reminds them of the slaving past

    See: travel broadens the mind. It really really does. You have to get out there and see and feel and read, and see again
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,046
    EPG said:

    The Republicans have always been the party of businessmen. The Democrats have generally been the party of labour. Almost everything else has been volatile.
    'Always' is pitching it very strong there. Since 1932, arguably, but before World War 1 you could make a very good case it was the other way around.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,917
    Carnyx said:

    Er, weren't the York fireworks on 5 November and therefore Gunpowder Plot?
    Yes. That was my point. Despite knowing about the 1190 massacre, they held the fireworks to celebrate the 1605 Gunpowder Plan there.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,516
    Leon said:

    What a ghastly couple
    Not much to like about that, is there?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,516
    Leon said:

    Believe it or not, yes I am

    My recent roadtrip around America, and the reading I did, has made me a little more sympathetic to the Wokerati and the statue-topplers, in America (and this on top of previous recent trips to the Deep South, Louisiana etc)

    The visits to Monticello, Antietam, Lexington and Staunton were particularly powerful

    I still think Wokeness is a mortal danger to the Enlightenment, and has gone way too far, and needs to be stopped. But I can more easily see why so many Americans are uncomfortable with anything that remotely reminds them of the slaving past

    See: travel broadens the mind. It really really does. You have to get out there and see and feel and read, and see again
    I'm just back from Buxton.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,730
    edited July 2023

    That was spoken in the context of trying to get the Border States not to secede - which would have lost the war for the Union in short order.

    If Lincoln is to be believed - in his own letters - he was far more of an abolitionist in private than in public, for most of his life.

    A central feature of his private beliefs was that slavery was dying, and that Succession would revive the corpse for a while. This was a common view among some Northerners.
    A curiosity of the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 is that it only applied to Confederate held territory. The slave states that remained in the Union (Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri) did not have slavery abolished by it, nor did it apply to Union occupied areas of the South such as New Orleans. These areas had to wait until 1865 and the 13th ammendment (and that doesn't include convicted prisoners, who can still legally be slaves)
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,155
    edited July 2023
    HYUFD said:

    Starmer needs LD tactical votes in England to beat the Tories and Tory tactical votes in Scotland to help beat the SNP
    Sunak on the other hand needs a feckin' miracle of biblical proportions.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,046

    Sunak on the other hand need a feckin' miracle of biblical proportions.
    We all Noah that.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    Lincoln didn't move much on colonisation except for the rather important caveat that it should be voluntary, which rendered it a notion and a dead letter. You could pay people to move to Australia. Not Belize.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,257
    Foxy said:

    A curiosity of the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 is that it only applied to Confederate held territory. The slave states that remained in the Union (Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri) did not have slavery abolished by it, nor did it apply to Union occupied areas of the South such as New Orleans. These areas had to wait until 1865 and the 13th ammendment (and that doesn't include convicted prisoners, who can still legally be slaves)
    And of course, after "Emancipation" came Jim Crow and share-cropping

    It is a long and profoundly melancholy history
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,730
    ydoethur said:

    We all Noah that.
    He certainly needs faith in the Job.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,046
    Foxy said:

    A curiosity of the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 is that it only applied to Confederate held territory. The slave states that remained in the Union (Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri) did not have slavery abolished by it, nor did it apply to Union occupied areas of the South such as New Orleans. These areas had to wait until 1865 and the 13th ammendment (and that doesn't include convicted prisoners, who can still legally be slaves)
    Delaware too.

    In fact Kentucky and Delaware were the only states whose slaves were emancipated by the 13th Amendment. Maryland abolished it in 1864 and Missouri in January 1865.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,974

    Yes. For some reason, the following picture shocks people, in a different way.

    image
    Didn't they even have colour photos in those days?
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,000
    kinabalu said:

    I'm just back from Buxton.
    Hope you have come back with a spring in your step.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    ydoethur said:

    'Always' is pitching it very strong there. Since 1932, arguably, but before World War 1 you could make a very good case it was the other way around.
    I don't think that would be a reasonable description of the time of - say - McKinley or Taft or the admittedly much less competitive postbellum period of Republican paramountcy.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,516
    viewcode said:

    We understand it intellectually, not at gut level. People do horrific things and we eventually sanitize it. We don't hold the memory of pain in long-term memory and (as @SeanT wrote about in the Spectator) we remember wars but forget pandemics.
    Eg people considered farm animals because of their skin colour. You shouldn't be able to 'debate' that really. I certainly can't. What's to discuss?
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    from the "Who'd'a thunk it?" Dept.

    Washington Post (via Seattle Times) - A viral left-wing Twitter account may have been fake all along

    In eight months, Erica Marsh has become one of the most consistently viral left-wing voices on Twitter, gaining more than 130,000 followers for her hyper-liberal, often melodramatic opinions on the biggest flash points in American news.

    She’s been especially popular with conservatives, who promoted her as a perfect symbol of how overly theatrical and inane progressives can be — like when she attacked the Supreme Court’s affirmative-action decision last week by saying “no Black person will be able to succeed in a merit-based system.” The tweet was viewed more than 27 million times.

    There’s just one problem: She’s probably a fake.

    The “proud Democrat” in Washington, as she described herself on Twitter, doesn’t show up in any local phone or voting records. . . .

    After The Washington Post raised questions about the account with employees of Twitter’s trust and safety department, the account was suspended on Sunday for unknown reasons. . . .

    Marsh’s account tended to post messages so polarizing and incendiary that readers couldn’t help but respond, boosting her public profile in the process — a tactic known as “rage baiting.”

    The strategy was most infamously deployed by trolls linked to the Russian government . . . during the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign. . . .

    For months, Marsh’s account had raised suspicions among online misinformation experts due to her lack of a real-world footprint and her devotion to attention-grabbing viewpoints one called “cartoonishly liberal.” . . .

    When it came to political commentary, she seemed to regard every polarizing news story as an opportunity to offer her opinion and to solicit her fans to promote her to their own networks. [SSI - sound familiar, PBers?] . . . .

    Some of her tweets . . . read like liberal caricatures; last month, she said she still wears “2 masks whenever I go out and support Ukraine.” . . .

    Her most extreme and mean-spirited tweets, including her glee over the death of a Jan. 6 rioter, were often used by conservatives to criticize the Biden administration based on her assertion she’d been involved with his campaign.

    Her tweet about the affirmative-action decision, in which she said Black people would not succeed in a merit-based system, sparked a viral outcry of its own . . . .

    A former Twitter trust and safety employee . . . said the company had seen a rush of accounts out of North Macedonia around October 2022 posing as pro-Trump influencers and offering up the same style of “over-the-top, clickbait tweets.” . . .

    For some months, the Erica Marsh account profile included a link to a Venmo account, which would’ve allowed readers to send her money. Venmo didn’t respond immediately to a request for comment. . . .
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    viewcode said:

    Yes. That was my point. Despite knowing about the 1190 massacre, they held the fireworks to celebrate the 1605 Gunpowder Plan there.
    Thanks, I did wonder. Interesting thought. I wonder if the tourist industry - or at least elements of it - incorporates the massacre into their ghost tours? The Edinburgh equivalents, I suspect, aren't too fussy about execution sites.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,000

    from the "Who'd'a thunk it?" Dept.

    Washington Post (via Seattle Times) - A viral left-wing Twitter account may have been fake all along

    In eight months, Erica Marsh has become one of the most consistently viral left-wing voices on Twitter, gaining more than 130,000 followers for her hyper-liberal, often melodramatic opinions on the biggest flash points in American news.

    She’s been especially popular with conservatives, who promoted her as a perfect symbol of how overly theatrical and inane progressives can be — like when she attacked the Supreme Court’s affirmative-action decision last week by saying “no Black person will be able to succeed in a merit-based system.” The tweet was viewed more than 27 million times.

    There’s just one problem: She’s probably a fake.

    The “proud Democrat” in Washington, as she described herself on Twitter, doesn’t show up in any local phone or voting records. . . .

    After The Washington Post raised questions about the account with employees of Twitter’s trust and safety department, the account was suspended on Sunday for unknown reasons. . . .

    Marsh’s account tended to post messages so polarizing and incendiary that readers couldn’t help but respond, boosting her public profile in the process — a tactic known as “rage baiting.”

    The strategy was most infamously deployed by trolls linked to the Russian government . . . during the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign. . . .

    For months, Marsh’s account had raised suspicions among online misinformation experts due to her lack of a real-world footprint and her devotion to attention-grabbing viewpoints one called “cartoonishly liberal.” . . .

    When it came to political commentary, she seemed to regard every polarizing news story as an opportunity to offer her opinion and to solicit her fans to promote her to their own networks. [SSI - sound familiar, PBers?] . . . .

    Some of her tweets . . . read like liberal caricatures; last month, she said she still wears “2 masks whenever I go out and support Ukraine.” . . .

    Her most extreme and mean-spirited tweets, including her glee over the death of a Jan. 6 rioter, were often used by conservatives to criticize the Biden administration based on her assertion she’d been involved with his campaign.

    Her tweet about the affirmative-action decision, in which she said Black people would not succeed in a merit-based system, sparked a viral outcry of its own . . . .

    A former Twitter trust and safety employee . . . said the company had seen a rush of accounts out of North Macedonia around October 2022 posing as pro-Trump influencers and offering up the same style of “over-the-top, clickbait tweets.” . . .

    For some months, the Erica Marsh account profile included a link to a Venmo account, which would’ve allowed readers to send her money. Venmo didn’t respond immediately to a request for comment. . . .

    Did they have any interest in flint knapping perchance?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,730
    EPG said:

    Lincoln didn't move much on colonisation except for the rather important caveat that it should be voluntary, which rendered it a notion and a dead letter. You could pay people to move to Australia. Not Belize.

    Both Liberia and Sierra Leone were founded as colonies for freed slaves. This leaves a legacy to the present day as both countries have had some tensions between the creoles and the local indigenous peoples.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,058
    IanB2 said:

    Evening at Nærøyfjord

    Your hound looks like he is having a grand old time.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,462
    ydoethur said:

    'Always' is pitching it very strong there. Since 1932, arguably, but before World War 1 you could make a very good case it was the other way around.
    Even the 19th century Republican party was the party of northern Protestants and professionals, wealthy farmers and later added former black slaves.

    However business was divided between free trade Bourbon Democrats and protectionist Republican businessmen. Labour and unions became increasingly Democrat as the franchise expanded.

    Most businessmen are now Republicans and farmers still very Republican but African Americans now strongly Democrat and professionals increasingly Democrat.

  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,679
    kinabalu said:

    I'm just back from Buxton.
    Nice. I still remember your post from atop Thorpe Cloud. Can't keep you away from Derbyshire.
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855
    viewcode said:

    We understand it intellectually, not at gut level. People do horrific things and we eventually sanitize it. We don't hold the memory of pain in long-term memory and (as @SeanT wrote about in the Spectator) we remember wars but forget pandemics.
    You sound as if you are selling psychopathy as a natural and laudable characteristic. Your imagination may have a 100 year cut off, mine does not. So please don't write "We" when you mean "I".
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,155
    ydoethur said:

    We all Noah that.
    I suspect his rain may be coming to an end.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,257
    Another nugget from my recent reading. The soldiers of the Union were often as brutally racist as the Confederates

    eg They would "liberate" a Southern Plantation and immediately rape all the young, attractive, female slaves. Then they'd set the slaves to work, cooking, cleaning, farming - for no money. So life got no better for slaves at all, unless you could get away, and for the women slaves it got worse

    A cruel cruel war
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,257
    Miklosvar said:

    You sound as if you are selling psychopathy as a natural and laudable characteristic. Your imagination may have a 100 year cut off, mine does not. So please don't write "We" when you mean "I".
    He's right tho. I reckon 100 years is about right. Maybe 150 tops

    There will come a time when the Holocaust means as much to us as the Black Death does now. Some terrible but very distant thing, a colourful period of awfulness, which we read with some relish for the gory stories

    Is there anyone who honestly gets emotionally roiled by the Irish Famine? Maybe a few, but vanishingly few. Its final embers are dying
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,148
    Foxy said:

    He certainly needs faith in the Job.
    I think everyone is now expecting many Lamentations from Conservative candidates on election night.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,730

    I think everyone is now expecting many Lamentations from Conservative candidates on election night.
    Though there will be twists and turns and perhaps ultimately some Revalations.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    ydoethur said:

    'Always' is pitching it very strong there. Since 1932, arguably, but before World War 1 you could make a very good case it was the other way around.
    Before 1930s BOTH Republicans and Democrats vied to represent business, at least SOME business interests and businessmen. NOTE that they tended to appeal (for votes AND contributions) upon different economic sectors:

    > Republicans being the party of protectionism, with support from manufacturing including mainly business but also plenty of working people, as well as some farmers (for example, sugar planters in south Louisiana) also concerned with foreign competition.

    > Democrats being the party of free trade, with support from many commercial interests who mostly wanted open markets and low tariffs for imports, and many farmers and other ag-based concerns, who wanted to open the door to EXPORT their produce to foreign markets.

    Toward and after turn of 19th>20th century this basic pattern started to get scrambled, first by dispute between hard dollar versus expanded money supply. With farmers being mostly in favor of the latter (for example Greenbackers > Populists) and providing the mass, joined by silver mining.

    And while "bimetalism" waned as a burning issue after 1896 (due in part to major gold-rushes in Yukon and South Africa) its place was taken by rising tide of concern and controversy over rise of corporate "trusts" dominating the economy, AND worsening conditions for labor.

    Which again scrambled, or substantially blurred, party lines, and in 1912 split the GOP (Theodore Roosevelt versus Wm Howard Taft) giving victory to Democrats under Woodrow Wilson. His administration opened the door, a bit anyway, for organized labor of moderate tendency, but WW1 and aftermath led to both significant labor strife, particularly with more radical and broad-based unions (such as IWW = Wobblies) and seriously diminished even moderate (AFL) unionism.

    Note that in the midst of the economic boom for (many but hardly all) American of the "Roaring Twenties" the Democrats nominated . . . a Wall Street lawyer (and Wilson's ambassador to Court of St. James) John W. Davis (originally from WVa). This along with GOP nomination of stand-pat Calvin Coolidge, prompted a serious 3rd-party Progressive campaign lead by Republican insurgent Robert "Fighting Bob" LaFollette that united disaffected liberals, farmers and labor - with the result that Davis was the WORST performing Democratic nominee of 20th century.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,155

    I think everyone is now expecting many Lamentations from Conservative candidates on election night.
    After which, with any luck, they will wander about in the wilderness for 40 years.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,148
    Leon said:

    He's right tho. I reckon 100 years is about right. Maybe 150 tops

    There will come a time when the Holocaust means as much to us as the Black Death does now. Some terrible but very distant thing, a colourful period of awfulness, which we read with some relish for the gory stories

    Is there anyone who honestly gets emotionally roiled by the Irish Famine? Maybe a few, but vanishingly few. Its final embers are dying
    I guess the question is, what determines the events that enter the canon of human memory?
    You've mentioned before the awfulness of the Khmer Rouge, which was huge at the time (on Blue Peter and everything) and is now semi forgotten. There are some stories that just touch enough nerves to become unforgettable.

    It sends some advocates potty- why have you forgotten X? And it is a capricious process. But it's possible that something about the Holocaust, maybe as the first really industrial attempt to eradicate a race, will make it stick in our collective memory.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,098
    "FACT 1: After two Test matches, England have a better collective batting average than Australia in this summer's Ashes.

    FACT 2: England are 2-0 down.

    It is a strange cricketing universe in which both of those statements are true."

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/66097255
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,355
    Leon said:

    Another nugget from my recent reading. The soldiers of the Union were often as brutally racist as the Confederates

    eg They would "liberate" a Southern Plantation and immediately rape all the young, attractive, female slaves. Then they'd set the slaves to work, cooking, cleaning, farming - for no money. So life got no better for slaves at all, unless you could get away, and for the women slaves it got worse

    A cruel cruel war

    "War is hell" - William Tecumseh Sherman.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,257

    I guess the question is, what determines the events that enter the canon of human memory?
    You've mentioned before the awfulness of the Khmer Rouge, which was huge at the time (on Blue Peter and everything) and is now semi forgotten. There are some stories that just touch enough nerves to become unforgettable.

    It sends some advocates potty- why have you forgotten X? And it is a capricious process. But it's possible that something about the Holocaust, maybe as the first really industrial attempt to eradicate a race, will make it stick in our collective memory.
    It will always be in big in the history books, but I am firmly comvinced it will lose that OMFG quality which it possesses now. Indeed I suspect it is already losing it. No number of Holocaust museums can keep people caring

    Once all the living witnesses to an event have died, no matter how enormous and heinous, it begins to fade

    Indeed if I was looking for an exception to this it might be World War One, not the Holocaust
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,516
    Cookie said:

    Nice. I still remember your post from atop Thorpe Cloud. Can't keep you away from Derbyshire.
    Yes it's become an annual. Although climbing a challenging peak was a one off.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,155
    Andy_JS said:

    "FACT 1: After two Test matches, England have a better collective batting average than Australia in this summer's Ashes.

    FACT 2: England are 2-0 down.

    It is a strange cricketing universe in which both of those statements are true."

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/66097255

    As pointed out by yours truly on this very forum yesterday.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729

    Before 1930s BOTH Republicans and Democrats vied to represent business, at least SOME business interests and businessmen. NOTE that they tended to appeal (for votes AND contributions) upon different economic sectors:

    > Republicans being the party of protectionism, with support from manufacturing including mainly business but also plenty of working people, as well as some farmers (for example, sugar planters in south Louisiana) also concerned with foreign competition.

    > Democrats being the party of free trade, with support from many commercial interests who mostly wanted open markets and low tariffs for imports, and many farmers and other ag-based concerns, who wanted to open the door to EXPORT their produce to foreign markets.

    Toward and after turn of 19th>20th century this basic pattern started to get scrambled, first by dispute between hard dollar versus expanded money supply. With farmers being mostly in favor of the latter (for example Greenbackers > Populists) and providing the mass, joined by silver mining.

    And while "bimetalism" waned as a burning issue after 1896 (due in part to major gold-rushes in Yukon and South Africa) its place was taken by rising tide of concern and controversy over rise of corporate "trusts" dominating the economy, AND worsening conditions for labor.

    Which again scrambled, or substantially blurred, party lines, and in 1912 split the GOP (Theodore Roosevelt versus Wm Howard Taft) giving victory to Democrats under Woodrow Wilson. His administration opened the door, a bit anyway, for organized labor of moderate tendency, but WW1 and aftermath led to both significant labor strife, particularly with more radical and broad-based unions (such as IWW = Wobblies) and seriously diminished even moderate (AFL) unionism.

    Note that in the midst of the economic boom for (many but hardly all) American of the "Roaring Twenties" the Democrats nominated . . . a Wall Street lawyer (and Wilson's ambassador to Court of St. James) John W. Davis (originally from WVa). This along with GOP nomination of stand-pat Calvin Coolidge, prompted a serious 3rd-party Progressive campaign lead by Republican insurgent Robert "Fighting Bob" LaFollette that united disaffected liberals, farmers and labor - with the result that Davis was the WORST performing Democratic nominee of 20th century.
    With the macro-context between the war and FDR being that - at national level - Republicans dominated two of three branches of the growing federal government, plus the US Senate, and did fine in the US House. In effect the Republicans were the party of government and Democrats the party of opposition. So at a sheer numerical level, among electorates where the Republicans did well, they tended to do VERY well compared to today.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,242

    After which, with any luck, they will wander about in the wilderness for 40 years.
    Labour will only have wandered for another 9 years after their leader displayed a giant stone tablet with commands on it.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,049

    I guess the question is, what determines the events that enter the canon of human memory?
    You've mentioned before the awfulness of the Khmer Rouge, which was huge at the time (on Blue Peter and everything) and is now semi forgotten. There are some stories that just touch enough nerves to become unforgettable.

    It sends some advocates potty- why have you forgotten X? And it is a capricious process. But it's possible that something about the Holocaust, maybe as the first really industrial attempt to eradicate a race, will make it stick in our collective memory.
    That's an interesting question. Some potential factors I've plucked out of my posterior:

    *) Documentation. The more photographs and names of victims, and recorded testimony of survivors there are, the more it will be mentioned.
    *) Long-term effect. Does the effect of what happened still cause ripples in world events today?
    *) (Sadly) how like us are the victims and the perpetrators? Could they have been / be us?
    *) Are there groups trying to raise awareness of the events?
    *) Are there groups / countries claiming that the event was *not* as stated?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,005

    Adam Payne
    @adampayne26
    Government is looking at reviving post-Brexit plans to restore imperial measurements,
    @politicshome
    is told
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,257

    "War is hell" - William Tecumseh Sherman.
    Seeing the Elephant

    https://www.historynet.com/seeing-the-elephant-on-the-civil-war-battlefields/
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,355
    Leon said:

    Believe it or not, yes I am

    My recent roadtrip around America, and the reading I did, has made me a little more sympathetic to the Wokerati and the statue-topplers, in America (and this on top of previous recent trips to the Deep South, Louisiana etc)

    The visits to Monticello, Antietam, Lexington and Staunton were particularly powerful

    I still think Wokeness is a mortal danger to the Enlightenment, and has gone way too far, and needs to be stopped. But I can more easily see why so many Americans are uncomfortable with anything that remotely reminds them of the slaving past

    See: travel broadens the mind. It really really does. You have to get out there and see and feel and read, and see again
    Indeed. One of the reasons I can't abide statues to slavers is that I lived in the Caribbean and in Washington DC for several years. When you've spent time in societies still disfigured by the legacy of slavery it's hard to stomach monuments venerating the people responsible for it.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,730
    edited July 2023
    kle4 said:

    Labour will only have wandered for another 9 years after their leader displayed a giant stone tablet with commands on it.
    As I recall, the Edstone had 5 pledges. Presumably he has another 5 on the next one.

    Hopefully one pledge will be the free owls. I was very disappointed when that was dropped.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,377
    Leon said:

    Seeing the Elephant

    https://www.historynet.com/seeing-the-elephant-on-the-civil-war-battlefields/
    Have you apologised for spreading fake news about the French riots?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,257

    Have you apologised for spreading fake news about the French riots?
    Was one of the photos I resnapped of dubious origin?

    Desole, if so. Also: pfff!
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,929
    Pulpstar said:

    Your hound looks like he is having a grand old time.
    Hopefully, although as a road trip heading for Finland he also gets to spend a lot of time in the car.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,377
    edited July 2023
    Leon said:

    Was one of the photos I resnapped of dubious origin?

    Desole, if so. Also: pfff!
    Several in fact.

    The sniper most egregiously.

    So many PBers were shocked that you fell for obvious bullshit.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    edited July 2023
    Leon said:

    Another nugget from my recent reading. The soldiers of the Union were often as brutally racist as the Confederates

    eg They would "liberate" a Southern Plantation and immediately rape all the young, attractive, female slaves. Then they'd set the slaves to work, cooking, cleaning, farming - for no money. So life got no better for slaves at all, unless you could get away, and for the women slaves it got worse

    A cruel cruel war

    This is about as much of a parody as that fake Twit woman.

    Did such things happen? Yes. Were they the norm? Way less than you might guess from Leon's commentary.

    Note that slaves started heading toward Union lines, as soon as there were Union troops in reasonable proximity. In significant numbers, that way before the Emancipation they'd been nicknamed "Contrabands" which in fact was used as justification for putting them to work but NOT re-enslaving them, say by selling to Union slave holders.

    EDIT - Implication that lives of former slaves re: Union army, got WORSE in general than their previous condition of servitude, is NOT correct, again in general.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,929
    edited July 2023
    Here's the same shot as earlier but in the style of Leon

    Just as the evening ferry is coming up the fjord, sadly behind that guy's head


  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,098
    Rain is forecast nearly every day at Wimbledon between next Saturday and the Sunday a week later.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/weather/2633866
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,098

    As pointed out by yours truly on this very forum yesterday.
    I missed that comment.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,155
    IanB2 said:

    Hopefully, although as a road trip heading for Finland he also gets to spend a lot of time in the car.
    What's your itinerary Ian? I have often fancied driving up the coast of Norway.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,098
    Leon said:

    Another nugget from my recent reading. The soldiers of the Union were often as brutally racist as the Confederates

    eg They would "liberate" a Southern Plantation and immediately rape all the young, attractive, female slaves. Then they'd set the slaves to work, cooking, cleaning, farming - for no money. So life got no better for slaves at all, unless you could get away, and for the women slaves it got worse

    A cruel cruel war

    I'd be interested to know what life was like in Canada for black people at that time, (acknowledging that there probably weren't many of them).
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,651

    Several in fact.

    The sniper most egregiously.

    So many PBers were shocked that you fell for obvious bullshit.
    Not shocked so much as disappointed
This discussion has been closed.