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Brexiteers, you may need a stiff drink – politicalbetting.com

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  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,815
    HYUFD said:

    My gut is the Tories might squeek Uxbridge but Labour will win Selby on a big swing and the LDs will romp home in Somerton.

    Uxbridge will more be an anti ULEZ vote if the Tories win it so I doubt Labour will change much in camp Starmer but camp Khan might panic
    You may be right and Uxbridge is saved by ULEZ. The fly in the ointment is so few voters in Uxbridge will be negatively impacted by non-compliant vehicles that I don't see it as a game changer. However if voters view ULEZ as the thin end of a pay as you drive wedge it may well be important.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,133

    The High Priestess of Cranks has spoken.

    Nobody here has actually read the article, it’s downright hilarious!
    (Raises hand nervously)

    Please Sir I did, and Chart 3 looks pretty compelling and model free.

    Either the UK really messed up COVID or something else happened in 2020. Or a bit of both.
  • maxhmaxh Posts: 1,571
    Leon said:

    I’m clearly trolling. But who would choose to be born in America, now? It is no longer the shining city on the hill

    The people banging on the door in Mexico now are very poor, from LatAm, Haiti, Africa. Very few East Asians, Europeans, Australians now go to America just coz it is America. They go for a top university place, or a great job offer, that’s it

    So where is THE place to be born, these days? The answer is not clear at all
    Norway, if you can tolerate the weather.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,227
    HYUFD said:

    Most socially liberal changes come from Labour governments though, most economically liberal changes from Conservative governments
    But isn't that looking to the past in exactly the way that kjh is saying we shouldn't? Yes most of the big social liberalisations have happened under Labour. But that doesn't mean it HAS to be that way. And as kjh said, with a few sad exceptions, ALL MPs of ALL parties are far more socially liberal now than they were 50 years ago.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,494

    What “measure of reality” has it been measured against and found wanting?

    It’s a counterfactual, based on a basket of analogous economies.

    You can minge about whether the basket/doppelgänger concept is even appropriate, and/or you could cavil about the especial weightings maybe?

    OR, like DavidL you could just dismiss it like Humpty Dumpty in Alice in Wonderland.
    Because it’s not plausible.

    We already grew the fastest of all Western European economies over the period (accepting it’s too short).

    To add an additional 5.5% would mean we grew at 12.9% vs the US at 10.8%
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,373
    Leon said:

    I’m clearly trolling. But who would choose to be born in America, now? It is no longer the shining city on the hill

    The people banging on the door in Mexico now are very poor, from LatAm, Haiti, Africa. Very few East Asians, Europeans, Australians now go to America just coz it is America. They go for a top university place, or a great job offer, that’s it

    So where is THE place to be born, these days? The answer is not clear at all
    Yeah I know you are and I still plan to go for a holiday. I have travelled a bit, but not far afield and I have quite a few places on my bucket list to get through. Nothing like you obviously.

    On another topic, I don't know whether you saw, but earlier there was a link to PB posts from 2006. There we both were. You probably don't remember (I'm definitely not as memorable as you) but we used to have conversations here then, although unlike now I never experienced the barb of your wit in those days. I think that is down to me deliberately tweaking your tail more these days, which I should stop.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729

    I do find it difficult to be completely critical of the Chinese (in particular) or the Indians. WHat they have done to improve living standards for their people has been nothing short of incredible. I still don't like them as a country/government - it is unfortunate (to say the least) that they are such an authoritarian state and I do think they are a threat to the West and to our way of life.

    But then you have to ask if, had they not been so authoritarian, they would have achieved so much to improve the basic* lives of their people.

    *By basic I mean dealing with hunger, sickness, living standards, education etc as opposed to civil rights, freedoms etc.
    The official CCP ideology under Deng had been: democracy and freedom good, but we have too many local elites who would use those freedoms to grab power and undermine them, so we need a time of central national authoritarian rule while the economy, media and social organisation develop and become self-sustaining. Needless to say, even that would get you sent to Xinjiang these days.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,309
    Leon said:

    Hmm. Good test

    “Act as if you are in the early days of a greater nation” as the Scot Nat Alisdair Gray put it

    Possibly Chile? Democratic, fairly calm, developing fast, with vast natural resources (and great wine)

    Unlikely to be invaded by anyone. A long way from geopolitical strife. Spanish speaking (so connected to a world culture). Shame it’s so weirdly long and slender and also far away from anywhere else that’s interesting

    Slovenia? But it’s not poor anymore

    If Montenegro can sort out corruption it’s a marvellously beautiful, climatically blessed if tiny country
    I think it's been an incredible time to have been born in most of the ex-Warsaw Pact countries, or Slovenia, at any time from 1970 onwards.

    Eastern Europe was one of the worst places on earth to have been born beween 1900 -40, however.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,371

    What “measure of reality” has it been measured against and found wanting?

    It’s a counterfactual, based on a basket of analogous economies.

    You can minge about whether the basket/doppelgänger concept is even appropriate, and/or you could cavil about the especial weightings maybe?

    OR, like DavidL you could just dismiss it like Humpty Dumpty in Alice in Wonderland.
    Ask yourself why he hasn't produced an update this year. If the methodology is valid, surely it could continue indefinitely?

  • MightyAlexMightyAlex Posts: 1,748
    Sean_F said:

    It's better to be in at the start than at the end.

    So, it's probably best to be born in a poor country that's going places, with a half-decent government.
    I think it'll be Norway for me. Can't beat a fjord and $1.4 trillion fund.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,494
    Pagan2 said:

    Fentanyl and guns
    The one thing that always strikes me about the US is how militarised as a society they are. Walking through JFK on Thursday, for example, they have dozens of regimental flags hanging from the ceiling
  • maxhmaxh Posts: 1,571

    I do find it difficult to be completely critical of the Chinese (in particular) or the Indians. WHat they have done to improve living standards for their people has been nothing short of incredible. I still don't like them as a country/government - it is unfortunate (to say the least) that they are such an authoritarian state and I do think they are a threat to the West and to our way of life.

    But then you have to ask if, had they not been so authoritarian, they would have achieved so much to improve the basic* lives of their people.

    *By basic I mean dealing with hunger, sickness, living standards, education etc as opposed to civil rights, freedoms etc.
    Entirely agree. Which poses a real
    challenge if you believe in democracy and want it to spread around the world. If you are a developing economy and see USA as one model to aim for, or China as another, which do you choose?
  • northern_monkeynorthern_monkey Posts: 1,640
    A few percentage points here and there on the economy, whether Brexit caused it, what would’ve happened if we’d remained, actually it’s better that we left, we’d all be riding unicorns if it wasn’t for Covid, Ukraine, whatever, it’s all noise. It’s for the anoraks. It doesn’t matter to 98% of people.

    People were told Brexit would only have considerable upsides, no downsides. We would have our cake and eat it. The easiest trade deal in history. All the advantages of the single market. Frictionless trade. German car manufacturers something something. A free trade deal with the US. Better unilateral trade deals.

    It was all horseshit.

    And beyond the ideological, leave-at-any-price it-might-be-shit-but-it’s-our-shit-glorious-sovereignty ocular rotators, everyone now knows it was bollocks. It’s made us poorer, it’s made everything more expensive, and we have fewer rights. Everyone knows it. It hasn’t improved anything other than the wages of HGV drivers. That’s why it’s the accepted wisdom amongst an ever growing majority that Brexit was a mistake. And it will only become more obvious as time passes. It will become unarguable.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,133

    Ask yourself why he hasn't produced an update this year. If the methodology is valid, surely it could continue indefinitely?

    You mean apart from the update dated 9 May 2023 that I linked to earlier?

    https://www.cer.eu/insights/are-costs-brexit-big-or-small
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,227
    maxh said:

    Norway, if you can tolerate the weather.
    Very strict alcohol laws and still very socially conservative/authoritarian in some ways.

    Remember (although admittedly it is now 40 years ago) Sweden advertised 'The Life of Brian' under the headline 'So funny they banned it in Norway'. And the Swedish telecoms minister nearly caused a diplomatic incident by referring to Norway as 'the last fucking communist country in the world' after a series of frustrating meetings about setting up the Scandinavian telecoms system.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,494

    But your figures don’t answer the question. You are comparing the UK to the EU, whereas the question at hand is to compare the UK to a counter factual UK that was still in the EU. These are not the same.
    They highlight the counter factual is implausible

  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,371

    You mean apart from the update dated 9 May 2023 that I linked to earlier?

    https://www.cer.eu/insights/are-costs-brexit-big-or-small
    That's just a defence of the previous report which covers the period up to June 2022. Unless I'm mistaken he hasn't updated the figures since then and has said he doesn't plan to.

  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,815
    ...

    Good evening

    Starmer was unequivocal on Kuennssberg this morning that the 2 child rule will remain

    I would just comment that Kuennssberg suggested he was a fiscal conservative which he did not deny

    Maybe the country needs to wake up that there really is no money

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/jul/16/labour-keep-two-child-benefit-cap-says-keir-starmer?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Other
    If Starmer can't find the money to spend on health and education that Rishi will be able to find for his substantial end of term tax cuts what is the point of voting Labour?
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    edited July 2023
    Answering the veil of ignorance thought experiment with "Norway" is rather cheating, though we should have a healthy disrespect for thought experiments anyway.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,240
    kjh said:

    Yeah I know you are and I still plan to go for a holiday. I have travelled a bit, but not far afield and I have quite a few places on my bucket list to get through. Nothing like you obviously.

    On another topic, I don't know whether you saw, but earlier there was a link to PB posts from 2006. There we both were. You probably don't remember (I'm definitely not as memorable as you) but we used to have conversations here then, although unlike now I never experienced the barb of your wit in those days. I think that is down to me deliberately tweaking your tail more these days, which I should stop.
    I like the banter! PB would be a bit dull if we didn’t cross swords from time to time

    America is a great place for holidays. Especially road trips - the ultimate way to see it. The best way

    I’d recommend the Deep South or the southwest deserts. Wonderful. The people are half the charm. So friendly and open

    But living there? No. No no no. I am too European. Or rather: too Old World

    I also love the fact I can be here in Warsaw - a totally different culture, history, language - within 2 hours from Heathrow. Just 2 hours!

    2 hours from most American cities puts me in a very similar American city, with the exact same strip malls
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,436
    edited July 2023

    When you look at attempts to decompose these differences (which are real), they do not by any means explain “all” the difference.
    Your maths needs work.

    American GDP per head is about 70% higher than ours ($76,398 vs $45,850 in 2022), so they make $17 for each $10 we make.

    If you cut their hours by twelve percent, they lose $2.04, giving them $14.96.

    If you cut their remaining GDP of $14.96 by twelve percent to give them the same level of healthcare spending per capita as ours, that's another $1.80 or so.

    So they are now making $13.16. Then if you cut their GDP by 20% to allow for dollar overvaluation, that's another $2.28 so they are now making $10.52, which is basically the same as us.

    That's before you allow for the skewed income distribution, or the ridiculous expense of eating well there, or the extra costs necessary because the poorer public transport or the more extreme climate.

    We have nothing to envy in the bastard child of the Empire.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,494
    edited July 2023
    Leon said:

    It’s not just “standard of living” it’s quality of life

    Yeah great you earn $120k a year but you have to drive everywhere, everyone is obese, your local downtown is a car lot, the
    local suburb is full of dangerous tranq addicts, you get one week holiday a year, the food is execrable, the landscapes are often dull, you have to fly ten hours to get anywhere that isn’t America and your kids have a 17% chance of being shot dead in kindergarten
    None of that is true about my small patch of America. Except the cheese. If there’s one thing I would change if I was world king it would be to outlaw American cheese
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173

    Good evening

    Starmer was unequivocal on Kuennssberg this morning that the 2 child rule will remain

    I would just comment that Kuennssberg suggested he was a fiscal conservative which he did not deny

    Maybe the country needs to wake up that there really is no money

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/jul/16/labour-keep-two-child-benefit-cap-says-keir-starmer?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Other
    There is plenty of money, it's simply in the hands of wealthy over 50s and the very rich, who are the Conservative core constituency. Except that it turns out that the Labour Party is also only interested in the votes of wealthy over 50s and the very rich. The two parties give a surface impression of being very different to one another - thanks to loud activist spats over fringe culture wars issues like transgenderism and refugees - but peel away the veneer and they're virtually identical. Just two cheeks of the same arse.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,815
    ...

    But isn't that looking to the past in exactly the way that kjh is saying we shouldn't? Yes most of the big social liberalisations have happened under Labour. But that doesn't mean it HAS to be that way. And as kjh said, with a few sad exceptions, ALL MPs of ALL parties are far more socially liberal now than they were 50 years ago.
    When HY is shoehorned into his safe seat he will reverse that trend and quite dramatically.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,373
    HYUFD said:

    ULEZ was mentioned at every other door in Uxbridge today, including by undecideds
    Did you lead with it though on the doorstep, or have you been highlighting it in your leaflets. By the way I am not saying you shouldn't. If it is a vote winner you should, but are you biasing the feedback?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,240

    Very strict alcohol laws and still very socially conservative/authoritarian in some ways.

    Remember (although admittedly it is now 40 years ago) Sweden advertised 'The Life of Brian' under the headline 'So funny they banned it in Norway'. And the Swedish telecoms minister nearly caused a diplomatic incident by referring to Norway as 'the last fucking communist country in the world' after a series of frustrating meetings about setting up the Scandinavian telecoms system.
    Yes, Norway is painfully boring

    I always like to think Munch’s The Scream is simply a portrait of a guy waking up in small town Norway and realising he is a guy who lives in small town Norway. Nothing to do with existential anguish in a Godless world. He’s simply bored to the point of suicide
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,815
    edited July 2023
    kjh said:

    Did you lead with it though on the doorstep, or have you been highlighting it in your leaflets. By the way I am not saying you shouldn't. If it is a vote winner you should, but are you biasing the feedback?
    It could work, although it could also be a reworking of the hopeless "save the pound" campaign of 2001. Lots of promise and no delivery.
  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,219
    Sean_F said:

    Well, they went down a rabbit hole with Mao, from 1949 to 1976. Deng Xiao Ping thought that Chinese living standards were scarcely higher in 1976 than twenty years earlier, and for that, the Chinese had to endure famine, and repression.

    The achievements from 1976 have still been hugely impressive. Could a less authoritarian China have done this? My own view is probably yes, South Korea and Taiwan grew steadily less auhtoritarian from the 1970's, and did even better than China.

    Yes, on this I tend to agree with Piketty's view that post-WW2 there was a lot of scope for "catch-up" with the current world leading edge in terms of industrialisation, which gives you a one-time growth bonus; once you're on or around the leading edge for most of your population it gets much harder.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,436
    edited July 2023
    Fishing said:

    Your maths needs work.

    American GDP per head is about 70% higher than ours ($76,398 vs $45,850 in 2022), so they make $17 for each $10 we make.

    If you cut their hours by twelve percent, they lose $2.04, giving them $14.96.

    If you cut their remaining GDP of $14.96 by twelve percent to give them the same level of healthcare spending per capita as ours, that's another $1.80 or so.

    So they are now making $13.16. Then if you cut their GDP by 20% to allow for dollar overvaluation, that's another $2.28 so they are now making $10.52, which is basically the same as us.

    That's before you allow for the skewed income distribution, or the ridiculous expense of eating well there, or the extra costs necessary because the poorer public transport or the more extreme climate.

    We have nothing to envy in the bastard child of the Empire.
    Sorry, $2.63, not $2.28!

    My typing needs work.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,373
    Leon said:

    I like the banter! PB would be a bit dull if we didn’t cross swords from time to time

    America is a great place for holidays. Especially road trips - the ultimate way to see it. The best way

    I’d recommend the Deep South or the southwest deserts. Wonderful. The people are half the charm. So friendly and open

    But living there? No. No no no. I am too European. Or rather: too Old World

    I also love the fact I can be here in Warsaw - a totally different culture, history, language - within 2 hours from Heathrow. Just 2 hours!

    2 hours from most American cities puts me in a very similar American city, with the exact same strip malls
    Nice post.

    Both my trips are planned to be road trips. East Coast first and then West Coast but then driving up to Las Vegas via Death Valley. Pretty standard tourist stuff I am afraid. The latter was previously cancelled due to covid.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,973
    Tres said:

    the only people I know who are bothered about it would have voted tory anyway.
    They're the only people who matter though
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,494
    "Ukraine war: Last grain ship leaves Odesa as deal deadline looms"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-66216782
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,438
    edited July 2023

    But isn't that looking to the past in exactly the way that kjh is saying we shouldn't? Yes most of the big social liberalisations have happened under Labour. But that doesn't mean it HAS to be that way. And as kjh said, with a few sad exceptions, ALL MPs of ALL parties are far more socially liberal now than they were 50 years ago.

    And economically more liberal but that may change too, with populist parties on the rise in the West, especially in Europe, which are economically more statist but socially more authoritarian
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,899
    pigeon said:

    I'm pretty certain that it is true. I didn't see the interview on Kuenssberg this morning because I was out doing something more constructive, but Starmer refused to get rid of the two child limit for the provision of social security to families. It's emblematic of Labour's entire approach, which is to suck up to the grey vote (note that no element of means testing is to be applied to pensioner benefits, so we are somehow too broke to help children who have more than one sibling but have oceans of cash to fund gold-plated handouts for oldies who own million pound houses in Surrey,) whilst telling everybody else to get knotted. It is Conservative policy, with one or two minor cosmetic changes to give the illusion that Starmer doesn't propose to lead yet another Conservative Government.

    John Harris in the same paper sums up the Labour approach succinctly as follows: "Right now, Labour is emphasising two contradictory ideas. With one voice, it tells us that we cannot go on like this; but it then changes register, and suggests that is exactly what we are going to have to do." There is no point at all in having a change of Government if all we are going to get is more of the same exhausted, failed, miserable rubbish.
    Both Starmer and Sunak are technocratic managerialists, frantically placing sticking plasters on the ship as it continues on the wrong course. I'm beginning to think @Casino_Royale is right: it'll be a one-term government. Like Sunak, Starmer doesn't know what the strategic problems are and doesn't know how to fix them. I'm sure he'll like the limo and the title, so he'll get something out of it, but as for the rest of us we are kind of f***ed.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,494
    RobD said:

    I think that's highly atypical. Americans get a raw deal when it comes to bank holidays and annual leave.
    Not so much these days

    New Years Day
    Presidents Day
    MLK
    Easter
    Memorial Day
    Juneteenth
    Independence Day
    Labor Day
    Veterans Day
    Thanksgiving
    Christmas

    Wiki has 11 vs UK of 8-10
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,354
    ...

    It could work, although it could also be a reworking of the hopeless "save the pound" campaign of 2001. Lots of promise and no delivery.
    Nobody thought there was a serious prospect of losing the pound. They do think there's a serious prospect of ULEZ being introduced, because there is.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,973
    HYUFD said:


    And economically more liberal but that may change too, with populist parties on the rise in the West, especially in Europe, which are economically more statist but socially more authoritarian
    Is there any evidence that British youth are more socially authoritarian?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,899
    pigeon said:

    ...John Harris...

    Why haven't we knighted him yet?

  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,240

    A few percentage points here and there on the economy, whether Brexit caused it, what would’ve happened if we’d remained, actually it’s better that we left, we’d all be riding unicorns if it wasn’t for Covid, Ukraine, whatever, it’s all noise. It’s for the anoraks. It doesn’t matter to 98% of people.

    People were told Brexit would only have considerable upsides, no downsides. We would have our cake and eat it. The easiest trade deal in history. All the advantages of the single market. Frictionless trade. German car manufacturers something something. A free trade deal with the US. Better unilateral trade deals.

    It was all horseshit.

    And beyond the ideological, leave-at-any-price it-might-be-shit-but-it’s-our-shit-glorious-sovereignty ocular rotators, everyone now knows it was bollocks. It’s made us poorer, it’s made everything more expensive, and we have fewer rights. Everyone knows it. It hasn’t improved anything other than the wages of HGV drivers. That’s why it’s the accepted wisdom amongst an ever growing majority that Brexit was a mistake. And it will only become more obvious as time passes. It will become unarguable.

    Yes, everything is going beautifully in the EU, that’s why the Swedes have voted for Nazis, the Italians have voted for post Fascists, the Hungarians and Poles are ruled by the racist hard right, the new Nazis are second in the polls in Germany, the Spaniards are about to elect Francoites, and the French may well make Le Pen president

    Soon it will become “inarguable” that we must rejoin this healthy, wholesome, entirely progressive polity
  • maxhmaxh Posts: 1,571
    edited July 2023

    -

    Thing is, if the Leave campaign had put forward Richard's preferred version of Brexit then Remain would have won by about twenty points. To get the WWC voters in Stoke and Hartlepool to bother turning at the polling stations you needed to say we could have all the benefits of the single market without FoM.
    And yet, perhaps Richard’s version of Brexit might actually

    Very strict alcohol laws and still very socially conservative/authoritarian in some ways.

    Remember (although admittedly it is now 40 years ago) Sweden advertised 'The Life of Brian' under the headline 'So funny they banned it in Norway'. And the Swedish telecoms minister nearly caused a diplomatic incident by referring to Norway as 'the last fucking communist country in the world' after a series of frustrating meetings about setting up the Scandinavian telecoms system.
    Great anecdotes- I’d never heard those.

    My views are coloured by spending my honeymoon there, but I couldn’t get over the fact that there were no chain stores of any real description outside Oslo, you’d turn up in a small town to find only one restaurant that served exquisite food, and wild camping was positively encouraged.

    There was also a very healthy distaste of braggadocio and narcissism amongst the Norwegians I got to know.

    Perhaps it’s the place that has done communism properly?

    ETA: sorry for messing up blockquotes!
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,899

    Entirely off-topic. Have spent the day up at the father-in-law's villa. Family day, various Spanish relatives coming over. FIL has definitely swung right and vocally supports Vox and despises the government. May not actually vote, but that's where he is.

    Anyway, one of his gripes seems to be against changes to Spanish society. Can't wolf-whistle at beautiful women. Ministry of equality promoting women threatens men. Gays being pushed on people.

    Then he declares "all these LGBT people are demented." Coooeeee :* Bisexual man here. Who shaved his legs again this morning. With a non-binary offspring who's in a thruple and whose two previous partners were both trans.

    I did manage to giggle rather than call him out. Entertainingly I did manage to slip on "that's the 'why can't I slap my wife' complaint". FFS.

    Now you see. That's interesting.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,735
    I think what I'd love for any new government to do in 2025 after the election is investigate all of the anti growth regulation and legislation the country has in place that other countries don't bother with. Stuff like ULEZ, which though I personally favour, is undoubtedly a drag on growth, a lot of the agricultural regulation is a huge drag on growth (pro-badger policies that other countries laugh at) in our farming sector, lack of competition in key sectors and a swathe of planning regulations and eliminating council control over any project that drives continual positive GDP.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,815
    edited July 2023

    ...

    Nobody thought there was a serious prospect of losing the pound. They do think there's a serious prospect of ULEZ being introduced, because there is.
    But who does it negatively impact, in terms of numbers? What I am asking is how many voters have pre- Euro 6 diesels?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,438
    edited July 2023
    Fishing said:

    Your maths needs work.

    American GDP per head is about 70% higher than ours ($76,398 vs $45,850 in 2022), so they make $17 for each $10 we make.

    If you cut their hours by twelve percent, they lose $2.04, giving them $14.96.

    If you cut their remaining GDP of $14.96 by twelve percent to give them the same level of healthcare spending per capita as ours, that's another $1.80 or so.

    So they are now making $13.16. Then if you cut their GDP by 20% to allow for dollar overvaluation, that's another $2.28 so they are now making $10.52, which is basically the same as us.

    That's before you allow for the skewed income distribution, or the ridiculous expense of eating well there, or the extra costs necessary because the poorer public transport or the more extreme climate.

    We have nothing to envy in the bastard child of the Empire.
    And home owners in Surrey or London have assets almost double the US average house price
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,133

    It could work, although it could also be a reworking of the hopeless "save the pound" campaign of 2001. Lots of promise and no delivery.
    In outer Outer London (much of Hillingdon, most of Havering, Bromley except for the bits round Crystal Palace, southern Croydon) ULEZ will remain unpopular until about the end of September. By then, the scare stories will have settled down, people will have adjusted and there will be benefits to notice. There will be a lot less pressure to revert.

    If, for some crazy reason, there were to be a by election in Hornchurch & Upminster (NB NOT Romford, despite today's papers) I doubt that "scrap the ULEZ in place" would get traction.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,899

    Not so much these days

    New Years Day
    Presidents Day
    MLK
    Easter
    Memorial Day
    Juneteenth
    Independence Day
    Labor Day
    Veterans Day
    Thanksgiving
    Christmas

    Wiki has 11 vs UK of 8-10
    Yes, but for annual leave UK gets 4-6 weeks, US gets about 2 weeks a year
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,973

    In outer Outer London (much of Hillingdon, most of Havering, Bromley except for the bits round Crystal Palace, southern Croydon) ULEZ will remain unpopular until about the end of September. By then, the scare stories will have settled down, people will have adjusted and there will be benefits to notice. There will be a lot less pressure to revert.

    If, for some crazy reason, there were to be a by election in Hornchurch & Upminster (NB NOT Romford, despite today's papers) I doubt that "scrap the ULEZ in place" would get traction.
    Uxbridge must be full of absolute whoppers
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559

    The one thing that always strikes me about the US is how militarised as a society they are. Walking through JFK on Thursday, for example, they have dozens of regimental flags hanging from the ceiling
    Bet you a plugged nickel to a purloined groat, that there are more regimental flags displayed in public places in the UK than in USA.

    Heck, just for you will sweeten the loads for you, raising plugged nickel to one thin dime.

    IF possible, could you be more specific, for example, which regiments? Am thinking perhaps NY State units deployed overseas?

    Also wondering IF maybe flags you noted were actually state flags? Or something other than regimental?

    Quasi-vexillology walking hand-in-hand with pseudo-psephology!
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    HYUFD said:

    And home owners in Surrey or London have assets almost double the US average house price
    Because of deliberate inflation by your party, with catastrophic results for the UK economy.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,354

    But who does it negatively impact, in terms of numbers? What I am asking is how many voters have pre- Euro 6 diesels?
    You don't have to be a genius to work out that it would be daft to put in all that vastly expensive surveillance equipment, to get rid of some old cars that will naturally leave the road soon anyway. Once it's in, they will ratchet it up.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Bet you a plugged nickel to a purloined groat, that there are more regimental flags displayed in public places in the UK than in USA.

    Heck, just for you will sweeten the loads for you, raising plugged nickel to one thin dime.

    IF possible, could you be more specific, for example, which regiments? Am thinking perhaps NY State units deployed overseas?

    Also wondering IF maybe flags you noted were actually state flags? Or something other than regimental?

    Quasi-vexillology walking hand-in-hand with pseudo-psephology!
    Umpteen regimental flags hanging from the average cathedral, certainly.
  • maxhmaxh Posts: 1,571

    ...

    If Starmer can't find the money to spend on health and education that Rishi will be able to find for his substantial end of term tax cuts what is the point of voting Labour?
    Fiscal probity and the future of our economy?
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,572
    For what its worth I very much enjoy @Leon sending photos of drinkies on his travels. People interacting with places and environments are far more interesting than just the places themselves.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,815

    In outer Outer London (much of Hillingdon, most of Havering, Bromley except for the bits round Crystal Palace, southern Croydon) ULEZ will remain unpopular until about the end of September. By then, the scare stories will have settled down, people will have adjusted and there will be benefits to notice. There will be a lot less pressure to revert.

    If, for some crazy reason, there were to be a by election in Hornchurch & Upminster (NB NOT Romford, despite today's papers) I doubt that "scrap the ULEZ in place" would get traction.
    It is something of the last resort of scoundrels. Like the Tories give a flying **** about poor people and their non-compliant diesels. It is sold as an extension of the nanny state so despised by Boris Johnson, who of course detests ULEZ. Now remind me which Mayor developed ULEZ?
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,973
    Carnyx said:

    Because of deliberate inflation by your party, with catastrophic results for the UK economy.
    Who cares about the UK economy if Tory voters are rich?
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,133

    But who does it negatively impact, in terms of numbers? What I am asking is how many voters have pre- Euro 6 diesels?
    Depending how you count, it's between 10 and 16 percent of vehicles in outer London that were non-compliant at the end of 2022.

    https://www.standard.co.uk/news/transport/thousands-drivers-ulez-expansion-greater-london-sadiq-khan-tfl-b1082057.html

    (And it has presumably fallen since then, by both natural turnover and pre ULEZ buying.)
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,815
    maxh said:

    Fiscal probity and the future of our economy?
    But Starmer is saying there is no money left. Rishi is saying I have money to spend and here is your tax cut. Rishi know where the magic money tree grows, Starmer does not.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited July 2023

    Who cares about the UK economy if Tory voters are rich?
    It's also bizarre that HYUFD compares extreme values in the UK (Surrey or London) with the average US house price. Like comparing NYC house prices with the average UK price. One might think he's trying to persuade us of something.

    PS Just for the record, this is what he said, before he edits it: "And home owners in Surrey or London have assets almost double the US average house price"
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,794
    Ulez has been working (and working well) inside the North and South Circ for 19 months. This is merely the extension of an existing scheme. People can and will adapt.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,133

    Uxbridge must be full of absolute whoppers
    That's by election leaflets for you.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,899
    edited July 2023

    For what its worth I very much enjoy @Leon sending photos of drinkies on his travels. People interacting with places and environments are far more interesting than just the places themselves.

    Oh God, I am trapped in the Website Comments Section Of No Taste. :(

    Incidentally I saw two Teslas in a car park today. Next to B&Q.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,815

    Depending how you count, it's between 10 and 16 percent of vehicles in outer London that were non-compliant at the end of 2022.

    https://www.standard.co.uk/news/transport/thousands-drivers-ulez-expansion-greater-london-sadiq-khan-tfl-b1082057.html

    (And it has presumably fallen since then, by both natural turnover and pre ULEZ buying.)
    So it could shift a tightish election, but what about an election where the previous incumbent was deposed for being outrageously morally corrupt, and the incumbent party is utterly discredited at this moment in time?
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    Carnyx said:

    Umpteen regimental flags hanging from the average cathedral, certainly.
    Great (and/or warped) minds thinking alike.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,612

    The one thing that always strikes me about the US is how militarised as a society they are. Walking through JFK on Thursday, for example, they have dozens of regimental flags hanging from the ceiling
    You can get a tshirt with a stylized doll on it with the logo below...show me on the doll where you want the tsa agent to touch you....it ensures your exposure to americans is brief
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,494

    Bet you a plugged nickel to a purloined groat, that there are more regimental flags displayed in public places in the UK than in USA.

    Heck, just for you will sweeten the loads for you, raising plugged nickel to one thin dime.

    IF possible, could you be more specific, for example, which regiments? Am thinking perhaps NY State units deployed overseas?

    Also wondering IF maybe flags you noted were actually state flags? Or something other than regimental?

    Quasi-vexillology walking hand-in-hand with pseudo-psephology!
    “Regimental” was a shorthand

    The ones I remember were the Marine Corps, US Navy, Coastguard, the POW/MIA association and so on.

    Plus all military get to board planes first and “thank you for your service” every way you turn.

    It’s not a bad thing. Just very noticeable

  • maxhmaxh Posts: 1,571
    edited July 2023
    Leon said:

    Yes, Norway is painfully boring

    I always like to think Munch’s The Scream is simply a portrait of a guy waking up in small town Norway and realising he is a guy who lives in small town Norway. Nothing to do with existential anguish in a Godless world. He’s simply bored to the point of suicide
    What is the opposite to a doppelgänger? I think we’re whatever that is.
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855
    Carnyx said:

    Because of deliberate inflation by your party, with catastrophic results for the UK economy.
    The greatest uptick in house prices was about 2000 - 2007, and the greatest non-financial driver in living memory was the leap in immigration over about the same period. Tories suck but I don't see how they are more blameworthy than nulab on this particular issue.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,919

    What annoys me most about that is that it actually didn't (and doesn't) have to be that way. Yes there was always going to be a hit on the economy - all change is disruptive but that is not a good enough argument not to change. But May and Johnson chose the very worst forms of change whilst smiling and telling us it was all fine.

    It hasn't changed my view of Brexit one iota. Funnily enough it hasn't really changed my view of Johnson or May either. I always knew they were shits and one or two extra data points confirming that view doesn't change anything.
    Brexit in theory, doesn’t and never will exist. A more level headed approach might have been to have appraised the proposal in the light of the people who were most likely to be charged with implementing it. Since Brexit in practice, implemented by Tories, was always going to be crap.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,919
    Jeremy Corbyn should come to Norway.

    There really are some stunning old manhole covers here.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,133

    So it could shift a tightish election, but what about an election where the previous incumbent was deposed for being outrageously morally corrupt, and the incumbent party is utterly discredited at this moment in time?
    That's my (distant) guess. Enough to noticeably reduce the swing, but not enough to save the seat.

    Unless anyone knows any different.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,438
    Carnyx said:

    It's also bizarre that HYUFD compares extreme values in the UK (Surrey or London) with the average US house price. Like comparing NYC house prices with the average UK price. One might think he's trying to persuade us of something.

    PS Just for the record, this is what he said, before he edits it: "And home owners in Surrey or London have assets almost double the US average house price"
    The average UK house price is now £372,812, still higher than the average US house price of $384,500 at the current rate of
    £1= $1.3.
    https://www.rightmove.co.uk/news/house-price-index/
    https://www.noradarealestate.com/blog/housing-prices/
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Miklosvar said:

    The greatest uptick in house prices was about 2000 - 2007, and the greatest non-financial driver in living memory was the leap in immigration over about the same period. Tories suck but I don't see how they are more blameworthy than nulab on this particular issue.
    But they are always claiming to be totally different from NuLab, mind. And they have had a chance to do something about it for the last 13 years, but instead come up with such schemes as support fort petty landlordism.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,899
    maxh said:

    What is the opposite to a doppelgänger? I think we’re whatever that is.
    Antithesis?
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    kjh said:

    Nice post.

    Both my trips are planned to be road trips. East Coast first and then West Coast but then driving up to Las Vegas via Death Valley. Pretty standard tourist stuff I am afraid. The latter was previously cancelled due to covid.
    Of course THE Great American Road Trip is - and will always be - east to west, or other way around.

    Been that way since way before Lewis and Clark.

    For notable late 20th-century example (real thing still a thing) check out clips from;

    Cannonball Run (1981)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4X86OwKkme0&t=697s

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    HYUFD said:

    The average UK house price is now £372,812, still higher than the average US house price of $384,500 at the current rate of
    £1= $1.3.
    https://www.rightmove.co.uk/news/house-price-index/
    https://www.noradarealestate.com/blog/housing-prices/
    Moving goalposts. Suddenly "almost double" is only 1.3X. Bollocks to that, to quote some other PBers.

    I suggest you buy some Cuisenaire sets. Very illuminating.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuisenaire_rods
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,899
    Miklosvar said:

    The greatest uptick in house prices was about 2000 - 2007, and the greatest non-financial driver in living memory was the leap in immigration over about the same period. Tories suck but I don't see how they are more blameworthy than nulab on this particular issue.
    Because after prices were stable-ish from 2009/10 to 2012/13 George Osborne created Help To Buy and the whole thing took off again.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,342

    It is something of the last resort of scoundrels. Like the Tories give a flying **** about poor people and their non-compliant diesels. It is sold as an extension of the nanny state so despised by Boris Johnson, who of course detests ULEZ. Now remind me which Mayor developed ULEZ?
    Boris? Surely not!
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855
    viewcode said:

    Antithesis?
    Gegenteil
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Miklosvar said:

    Gegenteil
    Morphic resonance.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,985
    Brexit was a lie perpetrated by Boris.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,919
    edited July 2023
    maxh said:

    Norway, if you can tolerate the weather.
    It’s a fantastic country. And everything just works.

    Stunning to think that within some of our lifetimes it was a relatively backward country mostly dependent on farming, fishing, and logging. They’re proud of it, and there are black and white photos of old Norwegians standing by piles of fish in every hotel and in most towns. And tales of hardship in every museum.

    Oil was only discovered here in 1969. And my, haven’t they put the proceeds to good use.

    First non-English speaking country to get the internet. 5G is now everywhere. The highest proportion of fully electric cars on the road of any country in the world. Almost all radio is DAB. I’ve been up and down and out to sea and there’s always a mobile connection.

    Whenever I get into conversation with Norwegians, I ask about the winter. They bear it, in an almost British way. But it’s more than that. At school they have some classes outside all year round, even in pouring rain. They’re brought up to cope with crap weather. I was on a ferry just last Thursday, it was grey, not much wind, but we hadn’t seen the sun all day and although it wasn’t raining, there was a little water in the air, as is often the case in Norway. But the fjord was calm and we weren’t getting drenched. I got chatting to a crew member and he was genuinely expressing what a fine day it was.

    Everything is relative, I guess. When the sun does come out, all of Norway certainly does come out to enjoy it.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Brexit was a lie perpetrated by Boris.

    Certainly, it still hasn't happened properly. Customs still not organised. What is the UK, a whelk stall?
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855
    viewcode said:

    Because after prices were stable-ish from 2009/10 to 2012/13 George Osborne created Help To Buy and the whole thing took off again.
    Let's try to understand the difference between "equally" and "more".
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,148
    Leon said:

    Yes, everything is going beautifully in the EU, that’s why the Swedes have voted for Nazis, the Italians have voted for post Fascists, the Hungarians and Poles are ruled by the racist hard right, the new Nazis are second in the polls in Germany, the Spaniards are about to elect Francoites, and the French may well make Le Pen president

    Soon it will become “inarguable” that we must rejoin this healthy, wholesome, entirely progressive polity
    It all sounds right up your street tbh.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,438
    Carnyx said:

    Moving goalposts. Suddenly "almost double" is only 1.3X. Bollocks to that, to quote some other PBers.

    I suggest you buy some Cuisenaire sets. Very illuminating.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuisenaire_rods
    In Surrey and London it is almost double, exactly as I said
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559

    “Regimental” was a shorthand

    The ones I remember were the Marine Corps, US Navy, Coastguard, the POW/MIA association and so on.

    Plus all military get to board planes first and “thank you for your service” every way you turn.

    It’s not a bad thing. Just very noticeable

    Thanks for info. So major branches of US military plus vets.

    You are correct re: "thank you for your service". Which was NOT a thing in USA until the 1990-91 Gulf War.

    Is consequence of two inter-related factors:

    > lingering sense of guilt at how badly returning Vietnam War veterans were treated by fellow Americans, and NOT just left-wing pinkos;

    > fact that since the effective end of military conscription in USA from 1973 until today, the percentage of Americans currently serving in military OR who served in the past, has nosedived in past half-century; to point where a small minority are bearing the burdens of US defense and foreign policy - which also engenders some at least subliminal guilt.

    Seems like a small price to pay for freedom AND armchair generalship, to give some poor soldier boy or girl priority boarding or a coupon for free meal at Denny's.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,735

    Why is ULEZ a drag on growth? It encourages additional spending and transactions in the auto retail sector, and it will lead to improved health outcomes and thus higher productivity.
    The biggest drags on growth right now come from inadequate government spending on health and education, which is leaving people too ill and too poorly-educated to be as productive as they could be. And too little spending on infrastructure that could unlock new housing development (eg in my neck of the woods, failure to fund the Bakerloo Line extension that could allow for loads of new housing down the Old Kent Road). At the moment it feels like the government has a deliberate policy to impoverish us.
    It prevents some number of people driving in outer London and we're a net importer of vehicles so we're not going to benefit as a country from new vehicle sales outside of the sales chain, most of the value chain exists outside of the UK, especially for cars being bought in wealthy outer London suburbs.

    My biggest issue, however, isn't ULEZ, which as I said I do support because I live in London and the summer air quality is atrocious. The biggest issue is local planning and local councils. They are the biggest barrier to growth in the country, they seem to exist to snuff out all enterprise in the nation a thousand paper cuts at a time.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,438

    It is something of the last resort of scoundrels. Like the Tories give a flying **** about poor people and their non-compliant diesels. It is sold as an extension of the nanny state so despised by Boris Johnson, who of course detests ULEZ. Now remind me which Mayor developed ULEZ?
    It is Khan who is extending ULEZ to the London suburbs from inner London, not Boris
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,133

    Brexit was a lie perpetrated by Boris.

    That's a gross oversimplification, but... basically yes. No Boris, No Brexit and certainly not the Brexit he manovered us into for personal ambition.

    We know that for Gove, there was an element of it that was personal (his father's fish business and all that- whatever the reality, it was the story Gove seems to have told himself). Stanley Johnson was an MEP for a while; has anyone tried to link that to Johnson's euroscepticism?

    And even if Boris wasn't responsible for Brexit, it's likely that he gets the blame in the history books. Much easier to blame a hasbeen when the country decides to move on, whatever form that takes. And Boris always wanted to go down in history.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,794
    I live in outer London and only occasionally hear people even mention the Ulez-x. The vast majority of the whining I encounter is from the bumpkins on PB.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,124

    Not so much these days

    New Years Day
    Presidents Day
    MLK
    Easter
    Memorial Day
    Juneteenth
    Independence Day
    Labor Day
    Veterans Day
    Thanksgiving
    Christmas

    Wiki has 11 vs UK of 8-10
    Thanks for doing this comparison.
    Not only this, but some holidays do not fall on a Monday and so there is a culture of “making the bridge” as well, whereas a majority of British bank holidays are statutorily designed to keep on a Monday.

    Americans are less likely to take long holidays (2 weeks is slightly decadent) but between the above, and a general tendency to take the entire summer slowly, I’m convinced Americans have *more* time off than Brits.

    I’m exchange, they work longer/harder on the days they’re supposed to be at work.

    Again, anecdote of 1.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,342
    HYUFD said:

    It is Khan who is extending ULEZ to the London suburbs from inner London, not Boris
    But Boris created the damn thing!
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,298

    Thanks for doing this comparison.
    Not only this, but some holidays do not fall on a Monday and so there is a culture of “making the bridge” as well, whereas a majority of British bank holidays are statutorily designed to keep on a Monday.

    Americans are less likely to take long holidays (2 weeks is slightly decadent) but between the above, and a general tendency to take the entire summer slowly, I’m convinced Americans have *more* time off than Brits.

    I’m exchange, they work longer/harder on the days they’re supposed to be at work.

    Again, anecdote of 1.
    While that list may be accurate for federal employees, is it true for everyone else?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,735

    I live in outer London and only occasionally hear people even mention the Ulez-x. The vast majority of the whining I encounter is from the bumpkins on PB.

    Most people I know are in favour.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,124
    RobD said:

    While that list may be accurate for federal employees, is it true for everyone else?
    It’s true in my company.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    HYUFD said:

    In Surrey and London it is almost double, exactly as I said
    BUT it is misleading to compare Surrey and London ONLY with the avewrage house prices in the USA.

    When you compare average prices, UK house prices are barely ahead despite frantic inflation by your party. Which means the true worth is LESS.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,373

    That's a gross oversimplification, but... basically yes. No Boris, No Brexit and certainly not the Brexit he manovered us into for personal ambition.

    We know that for Gove, there was an element of it that was personal (his father's fish business and all that- whatever the reality, it was the story Gove seems to have told himself). Stanley Johnson was an MEP for a while; has anyone tried to link that to Johnson's euroscepticism?

    And even if Boris wasn't responsible for Brexit, it's likely that he gets the blame in the history books. Much easier to blame a hasbeen when the country decides to move on, whatever form that takes. And Boris always wanted to go down in history.
    He is certainly going to do that. He might not like what the historians say though.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,899
    Here is an interesting thing.

    All US presidents were descended from King John.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Most_royal_candidate_theory
    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/8epsI5-3HRo
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,520
    HYUFD said:

    The average UK house price is now £372,812, still higher than the average US house price of $384,500 at the current rate of
    £1= $1.3.
    https://www.rightmove.co.uk/news/house-price-index/
    https://www.noradarealestate.com/blog/housing-prices/
    This is not a good thing, given that the average US buyer gets a whole lot more square footage for their $.

    In the UK the older property owning generation is holding the next hostage & forcing them to pay through the nose for shelter in order to line their own pockets to pay for their expensive cruises.

    Economically this is not productive & it’s far from obvious why a fortunate subset of the population deserve this unearned income.
This discussion has been closed.