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How the LDs are using their by-election victories – politicalbetting.com

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  • Options
    OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 15,127

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
  • Options
    TimSTimS Posts: 9,690
    viewcode said:

    viewcode said:

    TimS said:

    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.

    Arthur Scargill. Tony Benn. Clement Attlee. Aneurin Bevan. (technically, Oswald Mosely?) Keir Hardie.

    Worst version of Madonna's rap from 'Vogue' ever?
    We didn't start the fire... :)
    You guys took one hell of a beating
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,783
    Omnium said:



    edit: prior stuff cut out

    But it will speed up Scotland's entry to the EU.....so that's OK.....

    Even if all the deck chairs were perfectly aligned I really struggle to see Scotland becoming part of the EU. That changes of course if the UK, or a devolved England does.

    Realistically though I think its almost impossible.
    Today's Scottish Govt Paper, in between the numerous blank spaces, airily claims that Scotland would continue in the Common Travel Area.

    That is not within their gift. But they are going to have a Burgundy Passport.
  • Options
    TimSTimS Posts: 9,690
    Nigelb said:

    viewcode said:

    TimS said:

    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.

    Arthur Scargill. Tony Benn. Clement Attlee. Aneurin Bevan. (technically, Oswald Mosely?) Keir Hardie.

    mutters to self
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)

    Jezza.
    Did he shift elite opinion? I don't think he did.
  • Options
    OmniumOmnium Posts: 9,796

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Farage isn't dangerous. Denial of whatever he might choose to rant about is.

    I'll never vote for him, but I'll always listen to him.

    The proper place for Farage is the Lords.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,101

    viewcode said:

    TimS said:

    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.

    Arthur Scargill. Tony Benn. Clement Attlee. Aneurin Bevan. (technically, Oswald Mosely?) Keir Hardie.

    Worst version of Madonna's rap from 'Vogue' ever?
    Don't just stand there, man the picket
    Striking's how we work our ticket
  • Options
    OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 15,127
    viewcode said:

    TimS said:

    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.

    Arthur Scargill. Tony Benn. Clement Attlee. Aneurin Bevan. (technically, Oswald Mosely?) Keir Hardie.

    mutters to self
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)


    Walking through a Cornish fishing village today I saw a sign advertising a forthcoming dramatic performance in a tiny neighbouring village's church hall. Of the Ragged Trousered Philanthropists.
    The mood of the country has shifted. Labour victory incoming!
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,731
    TimS said:

    Nigelb said:

    viewcode said:

    TimS said:

    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.

    Arthur Scargill. Tony Benn. Clement Attlee. Aneurin Bevan. (technically, Oswald Mosely?) Keir Hardie.

    mutters to self
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)

    Jezza.
    Did he shift elite opinion? I don't think he did.
    I don't know.

    You could argue that the Tories are in a perpetual state of fear that Farage will do something similar to their party - and have determined that they will do it first, themselves.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,731
    viewcode said:

    Foxy said:

    viewcode said:

    TimS said:

    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.

    Arthur Scargill. Tony Benn. Clement Attlee. Aneurin Bevan. (technically, Oswald Mosely?) Keir Hardie.

    mutters to self
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)


    Jeremy Corbyn!
    Some of you may remember @Ishmael_Z , who for two-thirds of the time could be a reasonably pleasant commentator who made interesting points. He asked one day if there had ever been an elected political party with "fascist" in the title. I damn nearly cried. PB beats on, borne back ceaselessly into the present... :(
    Though in 1924 (following the March on Rome) Mussolini took power and got 64% of the vote in the election, but the party was officially the "National List" were there any elections after that?
  • Options
    DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 24,462

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    A sober claim:

    Living in today's Brexitland is living in a cesspit of corruption & cryptofacism. And this is a sober claim, not hyperbole: the agents of this are acting undisguisedly in broad daylight.
    Take a short position on a bank then engineer a fall in its share price? Anarcho-capitalism.


    https://twitter.com/acgrayling/status/1684516047393619968
    True lunacy cannot be suppressed. And to be fair Grayling doesn't even try.
    Well, it's not a conspiracy but if it were, what exactly would look different?
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,101

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Arguably progressive detachement from the European federalist project was the British consensus position anyway from the moment we shunned the Euro. Farage just forced us off the fence.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,452

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    A sober claim:

    Living in today's Brexitland is living in a cesspit of corruption & cryptofacism. And this is a sober claim, not hyperbole: the agents of this are acting undisguisedly in broad daylight.
    Take a short position on a bank then engineer a fall in its share price? Anarcho-capitalism.


    https://twitter.com/acgrayling/status/1684516047393619968
    Scott has started his own Twitter account?
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,504
    Foxy said:

    viewcode said:

    Foxy said:

    viewcode said:

    TimS said:

    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.

    Arthur Scargill. Tony Benn. Clement Attlee. Aneurin Bevan. (technically, Oswald Mosely?) Keir Hardie.

    mutters to self
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)


    Jeremy Corbyn!
    Some of you may remember @Ishmael_Z , who for two-thirds of the time could be a reasonably pleasant commentator who made interesting points. He asked one day if there had ever been an elected political party with "fascist" in the title. I damn nearly cried. PB beats on, borne back ceaselessly into the present... :(
    Though in 1924 (following the March on Rome) Mussolini took power and got 64% of the vote in the election, but the party was officially the "National List" were there any elections after that?
    BUF
  • Options
    OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 15,127
    Foxy said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    What does he engage with that no other mainstream lpolitician doesn't? We have a government constantly banging on about migrants etc.

    They though are in the more difficult position of actually having to do something, rather than sounding off like a saloon room bore.

    What policy has Farage ever delivered in his years in politics? Even Brexit wasn't delivered by him, and increasingly that is the Tory Party's concrete overshoes.
    Brexit wouldn't have happened without Farage. Along with the two Etonian PMs, the three of them were each necessary and jointly sufficient.
    (Maybe Corbyn as Labour leader was necessary too, that's debatable).
  • Options
    OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 15,127

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Arguably progressive detachement from the European federalist project was the British consensus position anyway from the moment we shunned the Euro. Farage just forced us off the fence.
    Being on the fence was better than lying face down in the ditch.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,452

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Arguably progressive detachement from the European federalist project was the British consensus position anyway from the moment we shunned the Euro. Farage just forced us off the fence.
    I wouldn't say it was the consensus of the politicians but it was the where the centre of gravity of public opinion had moved toward.
  • Options
    SandraMcSandraMc Posts: 600

    viewcode said:

    TimS said:

    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.

    Arthur Scargill. Tony Benn. Clement Attlee. Aneurin Bevan. (technically, Oswald Mosely?) Keir Hardie.

    mutters to self
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)


    Walking through a Cornish fishing village today I saw a sign advertising a forthcoming dramatic performance in a tiny neighbouring village's church hall. Of the Ragged Trousered Philanthropists.
    The mood of the country has shifted. Labour victory incoming!
    There are productions of that play all the time. Chichester Festival Theatre did one in 2010. The Coalition got in that year and Chichester remains Conservative.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,452
    Foxy said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    What does he engage with that no other mainstream lpolitician doesn't? We have a government constantly banging on about migrants etc.

    They though are in the more difficult position of actually having to do something, rather than sounding off like a saloon room bore.

    What policy has Farage ever delivered in his years in politics? Even Brexit wasn't delivered by him, and increasingly that is the Tory Party's concrete overshoes.
    If you have to ask that question then you'll never understand the answer.
  • Options
    TimSTimS Posts: 9,690
    Omnium said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Farage isn't dangerous. Denial of whatever he might choose to rant about is.

    I'll never vote for him, but I'll always listen to him.

    The proper place for Farage is the Lords.
    I think Farage is a large part of the reason we got a Brexit referendum. Would UKIP have scored anywhere near as highly without him?

    There is a key moment - an inflection point of crucial importance to British political history - which if it had turned out differently might have changed things massively. Either for the better (no Brexit, no Boris, UK still doing OK economically), or for the worse (no Brexit, no lancing of the boil of populism, someone more dangerous grows to lead a more powerful far right). That was his plane crash in 2010. He was very lucky to escape with a few cuts and bruises.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,504

    Foxy said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    What does he engage with that no other mainstream lpolitician doesn't? We have a government constantly banging on about migrants etc.

    They though are in the more difficult position of actually having to do something, rather than sounding off like a saloon room bore.

    What policy has Farage ever delivered in his years in politics? Even Brexit wasn't delivered by him, and increasingly that is the Tory Party's concrete overshoes.
    Brexit wouldn't have happened without Farage. Along with the two Etonian PMs, the three of them were each necessary and jointly sufficient.
    (Maybe Corbyn as Labour leader was necessary too, that's debatable).
    Also the Lib Dem’s blocking an earlier referendum.
  • Options
    OmniumOmnium Posts: 9,796
    TimS said:

    Omnium said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Farage isn't dangerous. Denial of whatever he might choose to rant about is.

    I'll never vote for him, but I'll always listen to him.

    The proper place for Farage is the Lords.
    I think Farage is a large part of the reason we got a Brexit referendum. Would UKIP have scored anywhere near as highly without him?

    There is a key moment - an inflection point of crucial importance to British political history - which if it had turned out differently might have changed things massively. Either for the better (no Brexit, no Boris, UK still doing OK economically), or for the worse (no Brexit, no lancing of the boil of populism, someone more dangerous grows to lead a more powerful far right). That was his plane crash in 2010. He was very lucky to escape with a few cuts and bruises.
    Well yes. He's the greatest politician of our time. Perhaps arguably of all time. That doesn't mean we have to like him or agree with him.
  • Options
    kinabalukinabalu Posts: 39,293
    TimS said:

    Cicero said:

    Ghedebrav said:

    Farage is a one man shorting machine. He can clearly get massive media coverage, generate action from the current UK government and so move markets. If he targets a publicly-quoted business, then that business has a serious problem. It’s like shareholder activism, but without the shares. That is serious power.

    And yet there's nothing behind the curtain. It is bizarre.

    I wonder how much of this is our generally posh media thinking (wrongly) that Nige is a voice of 'the working clahs' with their awful flags and their chips and whatnot and so giving him a constant platform that vastly outweighs his actual political achievements is an easy shortcut to giving a voice to that group?

    They are in absolute thrall to the guy, and I just don't get it.

    Yep, it's similar to Lee Anderson. There is a general media assumption that the salt of the earth white working class in England are very right wing. Obviously, you can only hold such an opinion if you don't get out much! More seriously, Farage and Anderson are on the Boomer/Gen X dividing line. The same generation as many senior media decision makers and newspaper columnists (and hard copy readers). They are a very recognisable type that probably existed much more widely 20 years ago. Their passing into serious minority status in the normal world has not been noticed because most senior media folk and newspaper columnists do not live in the normal world.
    Private Eye now call him Lee Anderthal.
    Mildly amusing and quite apt, I thought.
    Some poll wrangling on the subject:

    Farage's appeal to 'the ordinary public' has always been overstated. There is no doubt he is a good politician and that his plain speaking appeals to some. But I think what is often missed is that his strength lies in shifting *elite*, rather than popular opinion.

    https://twitter.com/LukeTryl/status/1684503488477163522
    The "elite's" idea of a man in touch with the proles, rather than the twatmeister he actually is?
    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.
    The populist left doesn't seem as potent (electorally) as the populist right. I think probably the main reason for this is it majors on economic matters ('soak the rich' etc) rather than pushing buttons around 'nation' and 'identity' and 'patriotism'. I personally find this stuff highly objectionable but it undeniably has wide appeal. Eg it's a big part of what drove Brexit.
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,731
    For @Leon

    Here's my interpretation of what's happening in DC:

    These people are like millenarian cultists. The UFO is their savior and higher power. The telltale sign is always the huge gap between what they believe (which is full of amazing claims) and what they actually prove (which is always very little). The gap never bothers them—because this what millenarians always do.

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

    The personality profile of the millenarian is very similar to the utopian AT advocates who are now a growing faith group—they also explain away all sorts of embarrassing AI mishaps (lying, plagiarizing, etc.), because that's what millenarians do. They have identified their 'higher power' and thus have put all doubt aside.

    The only difference now is that these UFO cultists work for the government. And that's simply because a true believing senator provided funds to hire a bunch of them. But giving cultists a government badge doesn't change anything. They still operate on hearsay and blind faith, and even when given a huge media spotlight at a congressional hearing, can only repeat their fantastic tales.

    https://twitter.com/tedgioia/status/1684593922016784384
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,370
    Nigelb said:

    TimS said:

    Nigelb said:

    viewcode said:

    TimS said:

    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.

    Arthur Scargill. Tony Benn. Clement Attlee. Aneurin Bevan. (technically, Oswald Mosely?) Keir Hardie.

    mutters to self
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)

    Jezza.
    Did he shift elite opinion? I don't think he did.
    I don't know.

    You could argue that the Tories are in a perpetual state of fear that Farage will do something similar to their party - and have determined that they will do it first, themselves.
    Yes he is a one man focus group for CCHQ. And he has quite some track record so of course they should take note.

    He does indeed articulate what many wish could be said and of course also he overdoes it but he certainly knows that the message will get across.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,452

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    I don't see him as any more negative than figures like Alastair Campbell, Alex Salmond or Glenda Jackson. And I'd say he's better than Lloyd Russell-Moyle or John McDonnell. It really is in the eye of the beholder.

    His opposition to the Euro, the EU constitution and the Lisbon Treaty certainly had a positive effect in the noughties, as far as I'm concerned, as has his calling out of Wokery early on.

    I think it's a good thing to have a political challenge to any fashionable consensus position across all mainstream political parties - it forces them to think and prevents bad policy.
  • Options
    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,575
    edited July 2023

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Farage has to be seen in the context of post war UK politics and policy. There are two long term and massive multi party policies which have changed the face of the UK. One is in relation to the EU and how we have allowed it to be structured, the other in relation to creating a UK with enormous global input in terms of population, altering its ethnic and cultural nature dramatically in a number of places.

    In neither policy has the voter been very clearly consulted as these things have gone along. Neither the past nor the present situation has the degree of voter consent, and losers consent, that would be desirable.

    We end up with a Brexit vote where neither Remain nor Leave has either overwhelming support or losers' consent. We have to be in the EU because of its trading importance, but can't be in it on account of political union.

    And we end up in a situation where the birthrate is tiny, but the population rises very rapidly.

    This leading country, instead of producing so many top medics etc that we can help developing countries by staffing their hospitals scandalously ask them to staff ours.

    Farage (who I do not support) merely reflects the failure of UK statecraft over 60 years. Don't blame him because the grown ups have done badly.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,370

    Foxy said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    What does he engage with that no other mainstream lpolitician doesn't? We have a government constantly banging on about migrants etc.

    They though are in the more difficult position of actually having to do something, rather than sounding off like a saloon room bore.

    What policy has Farage ever delivered in his years in politics? Even Brexit wasn't delivered by him, and increasingly that is the Tory Party's concrete overshoes.
    Brexit wouldn't have happened without Farage. Along with the two Etonian PMs, the three of them were each necessary and jointly sufficient.
    (Maybe Corbyn as Labour leader was necessary too, that's debatable).
    Nigel Farage and two Etonian PMs all raging against the Establishment.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,731

    Foxy said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    What does he engage with that no other mainstream lpolitician doesn't? We have a government constantly banging on about migrants etc.

    They though are in the more difficult position of actually having to do something, rather than sounding off like a saloon room bore.

    What policy has Farage ever delivered in his years in politics? Even Brexit wasn't delivered by him, and increasingly that is the Tory Party's concrete overshoes.
    If you have to ask that question then you'll never understand the answer.
    No really, what policy is he advocating now that other "mainstream politicians" do not?
  • Options
    DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 24,462
    Man wrongly jailed for rape may have to pay for prison ‘board and lodgings’
    Andrew Malkinson says he will be liable to pay back money to prison service if he wins compensation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/27/innocent-andrew-malkinson-wrongful-conviction-compensation/ (£££)
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,370
    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,452
    TimS said:

    Omnium said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Farage isn't dangerous. Denial of whatever he might choose to rant about is.

    I'll never vote for him, but I'll always listen to him.

    The proper place for Farage is the Lords.
    I think Farage is a large part of the reason we got a Brexit referendum. Would UKIP have scored anywhere near as highly without him?

    There is a key moment - an inflection point of crucial importance to British political history - which if it had turned out differently might have changed things massively. Either for the better (no Brexit, no Boris, UK still doing OK economically), or for the worse (no Brexit, no lancing of the boil of populism, someone more dangerous grows to lead a more powerful far right). That was his plane crash in 2010. He was very lucky to escape with a few cuts and bruises.
    I think that's wishful thinking.

    A Brexit vote was inevitable, and even Brexit itself might have been - if not in 2016 it would have been close and happened later instead.
  • Options
    TimSTimS Posts: 9,690
    kinabalu said:

    TimS said:

    Cicero said:

    Ghedebrav said:

    Farage is a one man shorting machine. He can clearly get massive media coverage, generate action from the current UK government and so move markets. If he targets a publicly-quoted business, then that business has a serious problem. It’s like shareholder activism, but without the shares. That is serious power.

    And yet there's nothing behind the curtain. It is bizarre.

    I wonder how much of this is our generally posh media thinking (wrongly) that Nige is a voice of 'the working clahs' with their awful flags and their chips and whatnot and so giving him a constant platform that vastly outweighs his actual political achievements is an easy shortcut to giving a voice to that group?

    They are in absolute thrall to the guy, and I just don't get it.

    Yep, it's similar to Lee Anderson. There is a general media assumption that the salt of the earth white working class in England are very right wing. Obviously, you can only hold such an opinion if you don't get out much! More seriously, Farage and Anderson are on the Boomer/Gen X dividing line. The same generation as many senior media decision makers and newspaper columnists (and hard copy readers). They are a very recognisable type that probably existed much more widely 20 years ago. Their passing into serious minority status in the normal world has not been noticed because most senior media folk and newspaper columnists do not live in the normal world.
    Private Eye now call him Lee Anderthal.
    Mildly amusing and quite apt, I thought.
    Some poll wrangling on the subject:

    Farage's appeal to 'the ordinary public' has always been overstated. There is no doubt he is a good politician and that his plain speaking appeals to some. But I think what is often missed is that his strength lies in shifting *elite*, rather than popular opinion.

    https://twitter.com/LukeTryl/status/1684503488477163522
    The "elite's" idea of a man in touch with the proles, rather than the twatmeister he actually is?
    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.
    The populist left doesn't seem as potent (electorally) as the populist right. I think probably the main reason for this is it majors on economic matters ('soak the rich' etc) rather than pushing buttons around 'nation' and 'identity' and 'patriotism'. I personally find this stuff highly objectionable but it undeniably has wide appeal. Eg it's a big part of what drove Brexit.
    And notably many of the most prominent populist leftwingers have had a national and identitarian angle to their ideology. Often anti-US/West (Chavez and Maduro, Castro, Ho Chi Minh, Kim Il Sung) or separatists / anti-colonial like the Basques and Catalans in the civil war, arguably Sinn Fein, or supporting the rights of a repressed ethnic group like Mandela or Mugabe.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,731
    algarkirk said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Farage has to be seen in the context of post war UK politics and policy. There are two long term and massive multi party policies which have changed the face of the UK. One is in relation to the EU and how we have allowed it to be structured, the other in relation to creating a UK with enormous global input in terms of population, altering its ethnic and cultural nature dramatically in a number of places.

    In neither policy has the voter been very clearly consulted as these things have gone along. Neither the past nor the present situation has the degree of voter consent, and losers consent, that would be desirable.

    We end up with a Brexit vote where neither Remain nor Leave has either overwhelming support or losers' consent. We have to be in the EU because of its trading importance, but can't be in it on account of political union.

    And we end up in a situation where the birthrate is tiny, but the population rises very rapidly.

    This leading country, instead of producing so many top medics etc that we can help developing countries by staffing their hospitals scandalously ask them to staff ours.

    Farage (who I do not support) merely reflects the failure of UK statecraft over 60 years. Don't blame him because the grown ups have done badly.
    Considering immigration and the EU have been major debates at least since the Sixties ("If you want a n****r for a neighbour, vote Labour" and "Rivers of Blood" were both in the Sixties) and EU membership a major issue at GE's in Sixties, Seventies, Eighties and onwards, as well as 2 referendums; in what way do you think the people of Britain should have been consulted that wasn't taken?
  • Options
    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 30,969

    Carnyx said:

    Ghedebrav said:

    Farage is a one man shorting machine. He can clearly get massive media coverage, generate action from the current UK government and so move markets. If he targets a publicly-quoted business, then that business has a serious problem. It’s like shareholder activism, but without the shares. That is serious power.

    And yet there's nothing behind the curtain. It is bizarre.

    I wonder how much of this is our generally posh media thinking (wrongly) that Nige is a voice of 'the working clahs' with their awful flags and their chips and whatnot and so giving him a constant platform that vastly outweighs his actual political achievements is an easy shortcut to giving a voice to that group?

    They are in absolute thrall to the guy, and I just don't get it.

    Yep, it's similar to Lee Anderson. There is a general media assumption that the salt of the earth white working class in England are very right wing. Obviously, you can only hold such an opinion if you don't get out much! More seriously, Farage and Anderson are on the Boomer/Gen X dividing line. The same generation as many senior media decision makers and newspaper columnists (and hard copy readers). They are a very recognisable type that probably existed much more widely 20 years ago. Their passing into serious minority status in the normal world has not been noticed because most senior media folk and newspaper columnists do not live in the normal world.
    Private Eye now call him Lee Anderthal.
    Mildly amusing and quite apt, I thought.
    Bit unfair. Neanderthals had enlarged ideas on diet. Evverything from mammoth to crab to nuts. You won't get that for 30p.
    Yes you would. It was a cashless society back then.
    So Farage wants to send us back to the 1950s and Anabob wants to send us back to the Upper Palaeolithic. :)
  • Options
    TimSTimS Posts: 9,690

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    I don't see him as any more negative than figures like Alastair Campbell, Alex Salmond or Glenda Jackson. And I'd say he's better than Lloyd Russell-Moyle or John McDonnell. It really is in the eye of the beholder.

    His opposition to the Euro, the EU constitution and the Lisbon Treaty certainly had a positive effect in the noughties, as far as I'm concerned, as has his calling out of Wokery early on.

    I think it's a good thing to have a political challenge to any fashionable consensus position across all mainstream political parties - it forces them to think and prevents bad policy.
    The thing that distinguishes him from those others on the debit side is his simpering for Putin. It's fortunately a rare thing in Britain whereas the US seems to be throbbing with Vatniks.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,452

    Foxy said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    What does he engage with that no other mainstream lpolitician doesn't? We have a government constantly banging on about migrants etc.

    They though are in the more difficult position of actually having to do something, rather than sounding off like a saloon room bore.

    What policy has Farage ever delivered in his years in politics? Even Brexit wasn't delivered by him, and increasingly that is the Tory Party's concrete overshoes.
    Brexit wouldn't have happened without Farage. Along with the two Etonian PMs, the three of them were each necessary and jointly sufficient.
    (Maybe Corbyn as Labour leader was necessary too, that's debatable).
    Also the Lib Dem’s blocking an earlier referendum.
    But, storming out of the House of Commons in a theatrical strop several years earlier because they didn't get one then.
  • Options
    Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 33,068

    A Brexit vote was inevitable

    Yes and no.

    When the BBC put Nigel Fucking Farage on Question Time every week for 3 years, perhaps, but they didn't need to do that.

    When Tory politicians ran scared of him instead of laughing at him, perhaps, but they didn't need to do that.

    He tried to get elected 7 times, and 7 times the voters told him where to stick it.

    If the 'establishment' had done the same, Brexit was not inevitable.
  • Options
    TazTaz Posts: 11,244

    Man wrongly jailed for rape may have to pay for prison ‘board and lodgings’
    Andrew Malkinson says he will be liable to pay back money to prison service if he wins compensation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/27/innocent-andrew-malkinson-wrongful-conviction-compensation/ (£££)

    This is nothing new. I remember this happened to the surviving members of the Bridgwater Four, wrongly jailed for the murder of a paperboy in 1978.

    They lost about 25% of their compensation.
  • Options
    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,575
    edited July 2023

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Arguably progressive detachement from the European federalist project was the British consensus position anyway from the moment we shunned the Euro. Farage just forced us off the fence.
    The Euro was about the most decisive moment at which the intentions of the federalists was clear and obvious, and either the entire project had to be scuppered or else we would at some point leave. The Major compromise was remarkable in getting the EU to face two ways at once, but Cameron's failure get get minimal concessions showed the long term direction. At that point it was essential to be in the EU and essential to leave. as we are discovering, this is not sustainable. The same would have been revealed if the 52-48 had gone the other way.

  • Options
    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 30,969

    Man wrongly jailed for rape may have to pay for prison ‘board and lodgings’
    Andrew Malkinson says he will be liable to pay back money to prison service if he wins compensation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/27/innocent-andrew-malkinson-wrongful-conviction-compensation/ (£££)

    The Telegraph has been reading PB. This is exactly the question I raised yesterday evening.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,340
    Scott_xP said:

    A Brexit vote was inevitable

    Yes and no.

    When the BBC put Nigel Fucking Farage on Question Time every week for 3 years, perhaps, but they didn't need to do that.

    When Tory politicians ran scared of him instead of laughing at him, perhaps, but they didn't need to do that.

    He tried to get elected 7 times, and 7 times the voters told him where to stick it.

    If the 'establishment' had done the same, Brexit was not inevitable.
    You know, it was the remain camp who lost the vote by failing to make the case which should have been far easier

    Yes Farage was a forceful campaigner, but the establishment took the electorate for granted hence why vote leave won
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,731

    Foxy said:

    viewcode said:

    Foxy said:

    viewcode said:

    TimS said:

    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.

    Arthur Scargill. Tony Benn. Clement Attlee. Aneurin Bevan. (technically, Oswald Mosely?) Keir Hardie.

    mutters to self
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)


    Jeremy Corbyn!
    Some of you may remember @Ishmael_Z , who for two-thirds of the time could be a reasonably pleasant commentator who made interesting points. He asked one day if there had ever been an elected political party with "fascist" in the title. I damn nearly cried. PB beats on, borne back ceaselessly into the present... :(
    Though in 1924 (following the March on Rome) Mussolini took power and got 64% of the vote in the election, but the party was officially the "National List" were there any elections after that?
    BUF
    I don't think they won an election under that name.
  • Options
    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 30,969

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Arguably progressive detachement from the European federalist project was the British consensus position anyway from the moment we shunned the Euro. Farage just forced us off the fence.
    Being on the fence was better than lying face down in the ditch.
    Yep that is a good metaphore for where we would have been had we stayed in the EU.
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,218

    Telegraph:

    "Pressed why he wanted to ditch passports that were blue, the dominant colour on the Scottish flag, Mr Yousaf claimed the switch to “burgundy red” could help a separate Scotland gain speedier EU membership."

    He really is the idiot's idiot.


    https://twitter.com/AgentP22/status/1684566490379591680?s=20

    In admittedly a crowded field.....

    Surely only an idiot would consider this to be the colour of the Scottish flag.


    It's a heck of a lot closer than Burgundy - and pretty close to the original Saltire blue until the Scottish Parliament opted for a lighter shade:



    But it will speed up Scotland's entry to the EU.....so that's OK.....
    No worries, I always had you pegged as someone who preferred those of us in a far away country to be under the unelected aegis of the passport fetishists, several of whom have frotted themselves to death over the colour of passports. I’m sure you’re not one of those fetishists of course..
  • Options
    viewcodeviewcode Posts: 18,899
    Foxy said:

    viewcode said:

    Foxy said:

    viewcode said:

    TimS said:

    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.

    Arthur Scargill. Tony Benn. Clement Attlee. Aneurin Bevan. (technically, Oswald Mosely?) Keir Hardie.

    mutters to self
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)
    PB has no memory (punches wall....)


    Jeremy Corbyn!
    Some of you may remember @Ishmael_Z , who for two-thirds of the time could be a reasonably pleasant commentator who made interesting points. He asked one day if there had ever been an elected political party with "fascist" in the title. I damn nearly cried. PB beats on, borne back ceaselessly into the present... :(
    Though in 1924 (following the March on Rome) Mussolini took power and got 64% of the vote in the election, but the party was officially the "National List" were there any elections after that?
    A list is not a party. A list is a bag of things. Some of the things are people, some of the things are parties. In 1924 the National List included the National Fascist Party and other parties and people.

    Lists are not well understood in the UK because they aren't used except in PR-ish elections and all the people on lists are members of the same party, so people think they are synonyms. In mid to central Europe they are more popular, especially EP elections.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,452
    Scott_xP said:

    A Brexit vote was inevitable

    Yes and no.

    When the BBC put Nigel Fucking Farage on Question Time every week for 3 years, perhaps, but they didn't need to do that.

    When Tory politicians ran scared of him instead of laughing at him, perhaps, but they didn't need to do that.

    He tried to get elected 7 times, and 7 times the voters told him where to stick it.

    If the 'establishment' had done the same, Brexit was not inevitable.
    So the alternative was not to put Nigel Farage - who'd polled well in Euro elections - on Question Time, and thus fuel a narrative around the mainstream media suppressing debate on issues like this?

    You can't just wish away views you don't like and would prefer to go away.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,452

    Man wrongly jailed for rape may have to pay for prison ‘board and lodgings’
    Andrew Malkinson says he will be liable to pay back money to prison service if he wins compensation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/27/innocent-andrew-malkinson-wrongful-conviction-compensation/ (£££)

    The Telegraph has been reading PB. This is exactly the question I raised yesterday evening.
    Loads of journalists read this blog (secretly) for insights, and below the line too, and take our arguments into mainstream publication. Uncredited, of course.

    I'm sort of OK with that. I don't have the time, skin or profile to do it myself and it's sort of flattering- I can't think of many (any?) other UK political blogs that have that much bearing on national debate.
  • Options
    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    Will Farage stand as a Conservative? It was an unthinkable thing, but they’re desperate.
  • Options
    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,575
    m
    Foxy said:

    algarkirk said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Farage has to be seen in the context of post war UK politics and policy. There are two long term and massive multi party policies which have changed the face of the UK. One is in relation to the EU and how we have allowed it to be structured, the other in relation to creating a UK with enormous global input in terms of population, altering its ethnic and cultural nature dramatically in a number of places.

    In neither policy has the voter been very clearly consulted as these things have gone along. Neither the past nor the present situation has the degree of voter consent, and losers consent, that would be desirable.

    We end up with a Brexit vote where neither Remain nor Leave has either overwhelming support or losers' consent. We have to be in the EU because of its trading importance, but can't be in it on account of political union.

    And we end up in a situation where the birthrate is tiny, but the population rises very rapidly.

    This leading country, instead of producing so many top medics etc that we can help developing countries by staffing their hospitals scandalously ask them to staff ours.

    Farage (who I do not support) merely reflects the failure of UK statecraft over 60 years. Don't blame him because the grown ups have done badly.
    Considering immigration and the EU have been major debates at least since the Sixties ("If you want a n****r for a neighbour, vote Labour" and "Rivers of Blood" were both in the Sixties) and EU membership a major issue at GE's in Sixties, Seventies, Eighties and onwards, as well as 2 referendums; in what way do you think the people of Britain should have been consulted that wasn't taken?
    Thanks. Good questions. On the degree of cultural change due to migration, the answer is truly difficult because the subject is so layered with racism and hypocrisy I hardly know where to start.
    The EU is simpler. We had two referendums, the first way before anyone had any idea what the ultimate destination was, in the 1970s; the second way too late.

    What was needed, because of the EU's constitutional implications was a series of referenda on the big calls - Lisbon treaty, Euro (whether it should happen at all); FoM as part of single market. We watched others do it.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,452
    TimS said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    I don't see him as any more negative than figures like Alastair Campbell, Alex Salmond or Glenda Jackson. And I'd say he's better than Lloyd Russell-Moyle or John McDonnell. It really is in the eye of the beholder.

    His opposition to the Euro, the EU constitution and the Lisbon Treaty certainly had a positive effect in the noughties, as far as I'm concerned, as has his calling out of Wokery early on.

    I think it's a good thing to have a political challenge to any fashionable consensus position across all mainstream political parties - it forces them to think and prevents bad policy.
    The thing that distinguishes him from those others on the debit side is his simpering for Putin. It's fortunately a rare thing in Britain whereas the US seems to be throbbing with Vatniks.
    Yes, that's the biggest black mark against him in my view.

    That said, it should be noted he is not a supporter of his actions in Ukraine.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,897
    Taz said:

    Man wrongly jailed for rape may have to pay for prison ‘board and lodgings’
    Andrew Malkinson says he will be liable to pay back money to prison service if he wins compensation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/27/innocent-andrew-malkinson-wrongful-conviction-compensation/ (£££)

    This is nothing new. I remember this happened to the surviving members of the Bridgwater Four, wrongly jailed for the murder of a paperboy in 1978.

    They lost about 25% of their compensation.
    It's insane. Even the logic of it confounds me.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,504
    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
  • Options
    Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 33,068

    So the alternative was not to put Nigel Farage - who'd polled well in Euro elections - on Question Time, and thus fuel a narrative around the mainstream media suppressing debate on issues like this?

    I didn't say that.

    He should have been on at least as often as Nick Griffin
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,720
    The Australians are showing what a docile wicket this is. 80 without loss at stumps and 400-6 by close tomorrow.
  • Options
    FossFoss Posts: 694
    .

    Man wrongly jailed for rape may have to pay for prison ‘board and lodgings’
    Andrew Malkinson says he will be liable to pay back money to prison service if he wins compensation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/27/innocent-andrew-malkinson-wrongful-conviction-compensation/ (£££)

    The Telegraph has been reading PB. This is exactly the question I raised yesterday evening.
    Loads of journalists read this blog (secretly) for insights, and below the line too, and take our arguments into mainstream publication. Uncredited, of course.

    I'm sort of OK with that. I don't have the time, skin or profile to do it myself and it's sort of flattering- I can't think of many (any?) other UK political blogs that have that much bearing on national debate.
    Order-Order might be close.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,897

    Scott_xP said:

    A Brexit vote was inevitable

    Yes and no.

    When the BBC put Nigel Fucking Farage on Question Time every week for 3 years, perhaps, but they didn't need to do that.

    When Tory politicians ran scared of him instead of laughing at him, perhaps, but they didn't need to do that.

    He tried to get elected 7 times, and 7 times the voters told him where to stick it.

    If the 'establishment' had done the same, Brexit was not inevitable.
    So the alternative was not to put Nigel Farage - who'd polled well in Euro elections - on Question Time, and thus fuel a narrative around the mainstream media suppressing debate on issues like this?

    You can't just wish away views you don't like and would prefer to go away.
    I think there is a latent belief that is out there that there was not really any real Brexit related divisions in the country, and it was manufactured by politicians and media. See the 'it was not listed as a top priority in surveys' kind of thing.

    Fact is it because a live political issue of at least significant minority urgency, which impacted the politicians, and when the public were asked they turned out and engaged on both sides in big numbers passionately.

    I think it's pretty insulting to the public to in effect say they were somehow hypnotised into believing it was an issue.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,897
    If a journalist is reading below the line comments on any website I would urge them to stop and spend their time more productively.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,504

    Carnyx said:

    Ghedebrav said:

    Farage is a one man shorting machine. He can clearly get massive media coverage, generate action from the current UK government and so move markets. If he targets a publicly-quoted business, then that business has a serious problem. It’s like shareholder activism, but without the shares. That is serious power.

    And yet there's nothing behind the curtain. It is bizarre.

    I wonder how much of this is our generally posh media thinking (wrongly) that Nige is a voice of 'the working clahs' with their awful flags and their chips and whatnot and so giving him a constant platform that vastly outweighs his actual political achievements is an easy shortcut to giving a voice to that group?

    They are in absolute thrall to the guy, and I just don't get it.

    Yep, it's similar to Lee Anderson. There is a general media assumption that the salt of the earth white working class in England are very right wing. Obviously, you can only hold such an opinion if you don't get out much! More seriously, Farage and Anderson are on the Boomer/Gen X dividing line. The same generation as many senior media decision makers and newspaper columnists (and hard copy readers). They are a very recognisable type that probably existed much more widely 20 years ago. Their passing into serious minority status in the normal world has not been noticed because most senior media folk and newspaper columnists do not live in the normal world.
    Private Eye now call him Lee Anderthal.
    Mildly amusing and quite apt, I thought.
    Bit unfair. Neanderthals had enlarged ideas on diet. Evverything from mammoth to crab to nuts. You won't get that for 30p.
    Yes you would. It was a cashless society back then.
    So Farage wants to send us back to the 1950s and Anabob wants to send us back to the Upper Palaeolithic. :)
    These Johnny Come Latelies want us in the Palaeolithic, eh? Bloody modernisers.

    The mid Devonian is a Proper Period. Pshaw!
  • Options
    Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 33,068
    kle4 said:

    Fact is it because a live political issue of at least significant minority urgency, which impacted the politicians, and when the public were asked they turned out and engaged on both sides in big numbers passionately.

    I think it's pretty insulting to the public to in effect say they were somehow hypnotised into believing it was an issue.

    Nigel Fucking Farage asked voters directly 7 times if they cared, and 7 times they told him they did not.

    If the BBC Question Time editors had not forced it down our throats every fucking week I don't think there would have been riots...
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,942

    The Australians are showing what a docile wicket this is. 80 without loss at stumps and 400-6 by close tomorrow.

    I feel like you could either be right or happy with this comment ;)
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,370
    edited July 2023

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Arguably progressive detachement from the European federalist project was the British consensus position anyway from the moment we shunned the Euro. Farage just forced us off the fence.
    Being on the fence was better than lying face down in the ditch.
    Yep that is a good metaphore for where we would have been had we stayed in the EU.
    It is disappointing that you have such little faith in the UK. If we'd stayed the nasty EU would have bullied us and made us do horrible things wah wah.

    I have great confidence that if the UK had stayed in the EU we would have been at the centre of decision-making and maintained our strong standing in the organisation.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,362

    Carnyx said:

    Ghedebrav said:

    Farage is a one man shorting machine. He can clearly get massive media coverage, generate action from the current UK government and so move markets. If he targets a publicly-quoted business, then that business has a serious problem. It’s like shareholder activism, but without the shares. That is serious power.

    And yet there's nothing behind the curtain. It is bizarre.

    I wonder how much of this is our generally posh media thinking (wrongly) that Nige is a voice of 'the working clahs' with their awful flags and their chips and whatnot and so giving him a constant platform that vastly outweighs his actual political achievements is an easy shortcut to giving a voice to that group?

    They are in absolute thrall to the guy, and I just don't get it.

    Yep, it's similar to Lee Anderson. There is a general media assumption that the salt of the earth white working class in England are very right wing. Obviously, you can only hold such an opinion if you don't get out much! More seriously, Farage and Anderson are on the Boomer/Gen X dividing line. The same generation as many senior media decision makers and newspaper columnists (and hard copy readers). They are a very recognisable type that probably existed much more widely 20 years ago. Their passing into serious minority status in the normal world has not been noticed because most senior media folk and newspaper columnists do not live in the normal world.
    Private Eye now call him Lee Anderthal.
    Mildly amusing and quite apt, I thought.
    Bit unfair. Neanderthals had enlarged ideas on diet. Evverything from mammoth to crab to nuts. You won't get that for 30p.
    Yes you would. It was a cashless society back then.
    So Farage wants to send us back to the 1950s and Anabob wants to send us back to the Upper Palaeolithic. :)
    These Johnny Come Latelies want us in the Palaeolithic, eh? Bloody modernisers.

    The mid Devonian is a Proper Period. Pshaw!
    Pre-Cambrian is all!
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,897
    Scott_xP said:

    kle4 said:

    Fact is it because a live political issue of at least significant minority urgency, which impacted the politicians, and when the public were asked they turned out and engaged on both sides in big numbers passionately.

    I think it's pretty insulting to the public to in effect say they were somehow hypnotised into believing it was an issue.

    Nigel Fucking Farage asked voters directly 7 times if they cared, and 7 times they told him they did not.

    If the BBC Question Time editors had not forced it down our throats every fucking week I don't think there would have been riots...
    He couldn't win in a FPTP constituency election with an outider party and that means the issue which got over 50% of the vote in a referendum was not something people cared about?

    I think the argument is nonsense, personally. The issue was bigger than him, his failure to become an MP quite obviously didn't prevent it being of significance for enough people to keep it going, and to give their view when asked.

    I see the argument as an attempt to sidestep blaming the public for their choice by saying they should never have been given a choice. People like me voted for Brexit, it's our fault it's a shit show, not the BBC for putting Farage on QT occasionally.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,377
    I can see hills. Carpathian hills
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,504
    TOPPING said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Arguably progressive detachement from the European federalist project was the British consensus position anyway from the moment we shunned the Euro. Farage just forced us off the fence.
    Being on the fence was better than lying face down in the ditch.
    Yep that is a good metaphore for where we would have been had we stayed in the EU.
    It is disappointing that you have such little faith in the UK. If we'd stayed the nasty EU would have bullied us and made us do horrible things wah wah.

    I have great confidence that if the UK had stayed in the EU we would have been at the centre of decision-making and maintained our strong standing in the organisation.
    I’m quite sure we would have continued the “if we sacrifice enough, the French and Germans will love us” policy

    See the farce of Beale and Sombrero Island


  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,370

    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
    Surely they can go to their local Spa and buy a six-pack to take away. I don't get the distinction.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,897
    Leon said:

    I can see hills. Carpathian hills

    Glad to hear you avoided more missiles.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,370

    TOPPING said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Arguably progressive detachement from the European federalist project was the British consensus position anyway from the moment we shunned the Euro. Farage just forced us off the fence.
    Being on the fence was better than lying face down in the ditch.
    Yep that is a good metaphore for where we would have been had we stayed in the EU.
    It is disappointing that you have such little faith in the UK. If we'd stayed the nasty EU would have bullied us and made us do horrible things wah wah.

    I have great confidence that if the UK had stayed in the EU we would have been at the centre of decision-making and maintained our strong standing in the organisation.
    I’m quite sure we would have continued the “if we sacrifice enough, the French and Germans will love us” policy

    See the farce of Beale and Sombrero Island
    Another one talking down the UK. Have a bit more confidence in your country.
  • Options
    DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 24,462
    Foss said:

    .

    Man wrongly jailed for rape may have to pay for prison ‘board and lodgings’
    Andrew Malkinson says he will be liable to pay back money to prison service if he wins compensation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/27/innocent-andrew-malkinson-wrongful-conviction-compensation/ (£££)

    The Telegraph has been reading PB. This is exactly the question I raised yesterday evening.
    Loads of journalists read this blog (secretly) for insights, and below the line too, and take our arguments into mainstream publication. Uncredited, of course.

    I'm sort of OK with that. I don't have the time, skin or profile to do it myself and it's sort of flattering- I can't think of many (any?) other UK political blogs that have that much bearing on national debate.
    Order-Order might be close.
    Guido lacks a top travel writer, and tilted to the right some years back.
  • Options
    kinabalukinabalu Posts: 39,293
    TimS said:

    kinabalu said:

    TimS said:

    Cicero said:

    Ghedebrav said:

    Farage is a one man shorting machine. He can clearly get massive media coverage, generate action from the current UK government and so move markets. If he targets a publicly-quoted business, then that business has a serious problem. It’s like shareholder activism, but without the shares. That is serious power.

    And yet there's nothing behind the curtain. It is bizarre.

    I wonder how much of this is our generally posh media thinking (wrongly) that Nige is a voice of 'the working clahs' with their awful flags and their chips and whatnot and so giving him a constant platform that vastly outweighs his actual political achievements is an easy shortcut to giving a voice to that group?

    They are in absolute thrall to the guy, and I just don't get it.

    Yep, it's similar to Lee Anderson. There is a general media assumption that the salt of the earth white working class in England are very right wing. Obviously, you can only hold such an opinion if you don't get out much! More seriously, Farage and Anderson are on the Boomer/Gen X dividing line. The same generation as many senior media decision makers and newspaper columnists (and hard copy readers). They are a very recognisable type that probably existed much more widely 20 years ago. Their passing into serious minority status in the normal world has not been noticed because most senior media folk and newspaper columnists do not live in the normal world.
    Private Eye now call him Lee Anderthal.
    Mildly amusing and quite apt, I thought.
    Some poll wrangling on the subject:

    Farage's appeal to 'the ordinary public' has always been overstated. There is no doubt he is a good politician and that his plain speaking appeals to some. But I think what is often missed is that his strength lies in shifting *elite*, rather than popular opinion.

    https://twitter.com/LukeTryl/status/1684503488477163522
    The "elite's" idea of a man in touch with the proles, rather than the twatmeister he actually is?
    It's a very apt description that he is good at shifting elite opinion. Trump and Johnson had some of the same strengths.

    Has anyone on the populist left had the same effect, striking fear into more mainstream politicians? Nobody obvious springs to mind.
    The populist left doesn't seem as potent (electorally) as the populist right. I think probably the main reason for this is it majors on economic matters ('soak the rich' etc) rather than pushing buttons around 'nation' and 'identity' and 'patriotism'. I personally find this stuff highly objectionable but it undeniably has wide appeal. Eg it's a big part of what drove Brexit.
    And notably many of the most prominent populist leftwingers have had a national and identitarian angle to their ideology. Often anti-US/West (Chavez and Maduro, Castro, Ho Chi Minh, Kim Il Sung) or separatists / anti-colonial like the Basques and Catalans in the civil war, arguably Sinn Fein, or supporting the rights of a repressed ethnic group like Mandela or Mugabe.
    Yes you need that. That's your 'edge'. Available to the left in some places but not so much here.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,504
    edited July 2023
    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
    Surely they can go to their local Spa and buy a six-pack to take away. I don't get the distinction.
    Having seen this in action, the landlords need to be responsible for the booze they sell. It is their job.

    In the case I mentioned, the landlord was trying to argue that a woman being assaulted a dozen metres from his pub by alcohol fuelled people was not his responsibility. The police evidence included the fact that the assailants possessed plastic, branded cups from the pub…

    In the end, the brewery kicked him out and replaced him with a landlord who keeps “an orderly pub”.
  • Options
    kinabalukinabalu Posts: 39,293
    Foss said:

    .

    Man wrongly jailed for rape may have to pay for prison ‘board and lodgings’
    Andrew Malkinson says he will be liable to pay back money to prison service if he wins compensation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/27/innocent-andrew-malkinson-wrongful-conviction-compensation/ (£££)

    The Telegraph has been reading PB. This is exactly the question I raised yesterday evening.
    Loads of journalists read this blog (secretly) for insights, and below the line too, and take our arguments into mainstream publication. Uncredited, of course.

    I'm sort of OK with that. I don't have the time, skin or profile to do it myself and it's sort of flattering- I can't think of many (any?) other UK political blogs that have that much bearing on national debate.
    Order-Order might be close.
    That's a pit above and below the line. Esp below.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,919
    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
    Surely they can go to their local Spa and buy a six-pack to take away. I don't get the distinction.
    Is the distinction now, that the government are cutting the duty on beer sold in pubs as opposed to off-licences. Which is why they don’t want pubs making off-sales.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,370

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
    Surely they can go to their local Spa and buy a six-pack to take away. I don't get the distinction.
    Having seen this in action, the landlords need to be responsible for the booze they sell. It is their job.

    In the case I mentioned, the landlord was trying to argue that a woman being assaulted a dozen metres from his pub by alcohol fuelled people was not his responsibility. The police evidence included the fact that the assailants possessed plastic, branded cups from the pub…

    In the end, the brewery kicked him out and replaced him with a landlord who keeps “an orderly pub”.
    So if every alcohol sales outlet is responsible for the behviour resulting from those who consume it we're going to need a lot of new prisons.

    The guy was right, it wasn't his fault, it was the fault of the people who assaulted the woman.
  • Options
    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,575
    edited July 2023
    kle4 said:

    If a journalist is reading below the line comments on any website I would urge them to stop and spend their time more productively.

    This is very nearly self referentially incoherent.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,343

    The Australians are showing what a docile wicket this is. 80 without loss at stumps and 400-6 by close tomorrow.

    I take it you are claiming Warner.
  • Options
    Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 8,846
    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Arguably progressive detachement from the European federalist project was the British consensus position anyway from the moment we shunned the Euro. Farage just forced us off the fence.
    Being on the fence was better than lying face down in the ditch.
    Yep that is a good metaphore for where we would have been had we stayed in the EU.
    It is disappointing that you have such little faith in the UK. If we'd stayed the nasty EU would have bullied us and made us do horrible things wah wah.

    I have great confidence that if the UK had stayed in the EU we would have been at the centre of decision-making and maintained our strong standing in the organisation.
    I’m quite sure we would have continued the “if we sacrifice enough, the French and Germans will love us” policy

    See the farce of Beale and Sombrero Island
    Another one talking down the UK. Have a bit more confidence in your country.
    We had so much influence that when blair gave up a big chunk of our rebate for the promise of CAP reform that the promise was honoured.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,504
    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    It's quite funny watching the deeply-confused Commentariat desperately trying to comprehend how Farage is still on the scene at all and has befuddled them all - yet again.

    It's much easier to dial-up the insults or accuse his admirers of false consciousness, that engage with that, and sometimes both, so lo and behold that's what we're seeing.

    It shouldn't befuddle them. Farage is really the only highly skilled politician that we have in this country. Our tragedy is that he is fundamentally wrong about everything.
    I disagree with him on much but on many things but he really isn't - he's filling a vacuum that no-one else dare enter, and that's why he gets traction.

    To stop him getting traction you should ask why mainstream politicians can't engage with the issues he raises and come up with better solutions, because they seem to prefer to wrinkling up their noses, clothes-pegging themselves and condemning him and his supporters.

    So he keeps coming back and disorientating them time after time after time. And they never learn.
    He identifies issues that other politicians don't want to talk about because they know there are no easy solutions and that the public don't want to face up to the difficult trade-offs. And then he offers simplistic solutions - or more often is content simply to lob in grenades from the sidelines. If we had skillful mainstream politicians they could help to lead public opinion towards genuine solutions and fruitful compromises but we don't, so he cuts through.
    But he is a fundamentally negative figure. He enjoys extremely negative net approvals because most voters don't like him. And his signature policy - Brexit - the one where he got mainstream politicians to deliver what he wanted, is now derided and growing more unpopular by the day, widely seen by voters as a historic fuck-up.
    He is a reminder that genuinely talented populist politicians are extremely dangerous, especially when mainstream politicians are so witless and incompetent.
    Arguably progressive detachement from the European federalist project was the British consensus position anyway from the moment we shunned the Euro. Farage just forced us off the fence.
    Being on the fence was better than lying face down in the ditch.
    Yep that is a good metaphore for where we would have been had we stayed in the EU.
    It is disappointing that you have such little faith in the UK. If we'd stayed the nasty EU would have bullied us and made us do horrible things wah wah.

    I have great confidence that if the UK had stayed in the EU we would have been at the centre of decision-making and maintained our strong standing in the organisation.
    I’m quite sure we would have continued the “if we sacrifice enough, the French and Germans will love us” policy

    See the farce of Beale and Sombrero Island
    Another one talking down the UK. Have a bit more confidence in your country.
    Nope. I’m talking the country UP.

    French diplomat - “Can’t you stop the nasty American who might compete with Ariane?”

    Malmesbury - “Well maybe. First off you need the local government - you’ll need a suitcase of *your* cash. Plus there is our fee for the introduction….I know - French military can buy Starstreak. Top notch weapon. As soon as you publicly announce the buy, I’ll have the local chaps round for a nice lunch.”
  • Options
    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,575
    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
    Surely they can go to their local Spa and buy a six-pack to take away. I don't get the distinction.
    You could try but I would go to the local Spar. Grated carrot and mineral water at the spa.

  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,919
    algarkirk said:

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
    Surely they can go to their local Spa and buy a six-pack to take away. I don't get the distinction.
    You could try but I would go to the local Spar. Grated carrot and mineral water at the spa.

    The car racing at Spa is of a better quality, than the cars racing outside your local Spar.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,504
    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
    Surely they can go to their local Spa and buy a six-pack to take away. I don't get the distinction.
    Having seen this in action, the landlords need to be responsible for the booze they sell. It is their job.

    In the case I mentioned, the landlord was trying to argue that a woman being assaulted a dozen metres from his pub by alcohol fuelled people was not his responsibility. The police evidence included the fact that the assailants possessed plastic, branded cups from the pub…

    In the end, the brewery kicked him out and replaced him with a landlord who keeps “an orderly pub”.
    So if every alcohol sales outlet is responsible for the behviour resulting from those who consume it we're going to need a lot of new prisons.

    The guy was right, it wasn't his fault, it was the fault of the people who assaulted the woman.
    Strangely, within a week of the new landlord coming in, the crowds of drunk wankers vanished. He refused to serve them.

    The pub actually got more business from the neighbourhood not being a Fight Club
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,031
    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    The idea “this will all turn out well for Coutts” is refreshingly original. I can imagine there must be loads of billionaires applying for accounts right now, in the hope they can be morally audited by 19 year olds, and get their entire social media histories combed over, to see if they ever retweeted anything possibly transphobic, and if they fail, this will all be leaked to the BBC

    Really rich people LOVE that kind of attention

    I'd be surprised if many fantastically rich people use Coutts in the first place. But those who do will already have had their personal account managers on the phone talking through any issues they may have and soothing any concerns. It's a real pain switching these kinds of accounts - and it can cost a fair amount of money to do it. But you are right, discretion really matters. If people are genuinely concerned their names are going to get into the papers, they'll be off like a shot.

    Yes I doubt that many people will switch accounts from Coutts if they already have one. It’s a hassle as you say. But who knows

    What it will do is deter anyone from OPENING an account there. Why take the risk?

    It is potentially a True Ratner Moment. A few monumentally stupid, indiscreet remarks, said to the wrong audience, have terminally damaged an entire business. Insanely dumb

    Also what kind of arrogant fuckwit does this in the first place? Isn’t Alison rose meant to be some experienced person? A safe pair of hands? 30 years with the firm?

    I wonder if she was really drunk and trying to impress a BBC journo she fancied. Didn’t this happen at some banquet?

    I am a Coutts customer*, and I think they have behaved appallingly. If they had downgraded him to a regular NatWest card, on the basis that he's no longer meeting the eligibility requirements, that would be one thing.

    But to (a) kick him out, and (b) say the stupid things they did is quite another.

    I'm planning to return to the UK once I've sold my current business, so would appreciate a proper UK bank, that doesn't mind having a UK tax reesident customer. If Charles was still on the site, I'd ask if Hoare's would have me.

    * Not by choice: RBS closed the bank (Adam & Co) that I was a customer of, and transferred me to Coutts.
  • Options
    DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 24,462
    Sandpit said:

    algarkirk said:

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
    Surely they can go to their local Spa and buy a six-pack to take away. I don't get the distinction.
    You could try but I would go to the local Spar. Grated carrot and mineral water at the spa.

    The car racing at Spa is of a better quality, than the cars racing outside your local Spar.
    iirc there was much concern about increased alcoholism when supermarkets became off-licences.
  • Options
    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,220

    Yes, good piece from Mike and it echoes my own view that this could be a very good election for the LDs.

    Their biggest stumbling block is that they have to overcome some seriously large majorities to win a lot of seats from the Conservatives, but as the bar illustrates, they are capable of doing this.

    I am going to provisionally estimate that yhey will emerge from the GE with at least 30 seats. They may even displace the SNP as the third largest Party.

    As Generals go, Davey is almost as lucky as Starmer.

    Good morning

    Fair comment and as things stand entirely possible

    On the Farage banking affair there are times, when no matter how you dislike someone's political views, when a stand has to be made against an injustice

    Yesterday, Nick Thomas Symonds was terrible on Sky attempting to defend Alison Rose and even worse, Rachel Reeves penned a piece (before Rose resigned) accusing Farage and the media of 'bullying' Rose which was just crass in the extreme

    Starmer eventually endorsed her resignation, but only after seeing the way the wind was blowing

    This was not a political issue, but the difference between trust and confidentiality, and no doubt if it had been anyone other than Farage, these labour politicians would have had a different response

    And I would say the same thing if it had been Corbyn who had been subject to this injustice

    Agreed, Big G.

    Awkward as it is to find oneself supporting Farage, it has to be said that he has as much right to privacy as the rest of us.

    What possessed this woman to blurt out his private details to a journalist is beyond me.
    The whole way the bank - from the Board down - responded suggests a lack of joined up thinking / strategy followed by panic. This does not surprise me. People can be very effective CEOs but fall to pieces in a crisis and make elementary and stupid mistakes.
  • Options
    felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    Scott_xP said:

    kle4 said:

    Fact is it because a live political issue of at least significant minority urgency, which impacted the politicians, and when the public were asked they turned out and engaged on both sides in big numbers passionately.

    I think it's pretty insulting to the public to in effect say they were somehow hypnotised into believing it was an issue.

    Nigel Fucking Farage asked voters directly 7 times if they cared, and 7 times they told him they did not.

    If the BBC Question Time editors had not forced it down our throats every fucking week I don't think there would have been riots...
    You dorealise that your continued use of the f word in this context shows just how effectively Farage has blown your mind to smithereens.
  • Options
    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,575

    Foss said:

    .

    Man wrongly jailed for rape may have to pay for prison ‘board and lodgings’
    Andrew Malkinson says he will be liable to pay back money to prison service if he wins compensation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/27/innocent-andrew-malkinson-wrongful-conviction-compensation/ (£££)

    The Telegraph has been reading PB. This is exactly the question I raised yesterday evening.
    Loads of journalists read this blog (secretly) for insights, and below the line too, and take our arguments into mainstream publication. Uncredited, of course.

    I'm sort of OK with that. I don't have the time, skin or profile to do it myself and it's sort of flattering- I can't think of many (any?) other UK political blogs that have that much bearing on national debate.
    Order-Order might be close.
    Guido lacks a top travel writer, and tilted to the right some years back.
    Guido also lacks the indiscriminate randomness of opinion and subject matter to be found elsewhere, including here. "Let me tell you all about my forthcoming book on medieval Mongolian fireplaces and my recent visit to the new coffee machine at South Greenford station illustrated by 20 large photos...."

  • Options
    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,575
    Sandpit said:

    algarkirk said:

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
    Surely they can go to their local Spa and buy a six-pack to take away. I don't get the distinction.
    You could try but I would go to the local Spar. Grated carrot and mineral water at the spa.

    The car racing at Spa is of a better quality, than the cars racing outside your local Spar.
    In Cumberland you get a better quality of tractor racing outside Spar than you do at Spa. (I am not making this up).
  • Options
    EPGEPG Posts: 6,013
    When was Paul Staines last relevant? 2009? Before journos discovered Twitter? When attacking the government, and calling the PM "bonkers", no longer suited the paymasters under a Tory government?
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,362
    algarkirk said:

    Foss said:

    .

    Man wrongly jailed for rape may have to pay for prison ‘board and lodgings’
    Andrew Malkinson says he will be liable to pay back money to prison service if he wins compensation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/27/innocent-andrew-malkinson-wrongful-conviction-compensation/ (£££)

    The Telegraph has been reading PB. This is exactly the question I raised yesterday evening.
    Loads of journalists read this blog (secretly) for insights, and below the line too, and take our arguments into mainstream publication. Uncredited, of course.

    I'm sort of OK with that. I don't have the time, skin or profile to do it myself and it's sort of flattering- I can't think of many (any?) other UK political blogs that have that much bearing on national debate.
    Order-Order might be close.
    Guido lacks a top travel writer, and tilted to the right some years back.
    Guido also lacks the indiscriminate randomness of opinion and subject matter to be found elsewhere, including here. "Let me tell you all about my forthcoming book on medieval Mongolian fireplaces and my recent visit to the new coffee machine at South Greenford station illustrated by 20 large photos...."

    South Greenford doesn't have a coffee machine!

    https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?search="South+Greenford"+Sunil060902&title=Special:MediaSearch&go=Go&type=image
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    FairlieredFairliered Posts: 4,014
    edited July 2023
    Sandpit said:

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
    Surely they can go to their local Spa and buy a six-pack to take away. I don't get the distinction.
    Is the distinction now, that the government are cutting the duty on beer sold in pubs as opposed to off-licences. Which is why they don’t want pubs making off-sales.
    It’s to try and make it more attractive to drink beer in the sociable and managed environment of a pub than drinking cheap supermarket booze at home or in the park. A downside is that beer festivals cannot sell carry outs and at the end of the festival, staff - usually volunteers - will have to pour unsold beer down the drain instead of taking it home.
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    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,370
    OK Jeez it's Spar not Spa. I get it. Still doesn't make people responsible for the behaviour of the people they sell alcohol to.

    Hmmph.
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,919
    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    Bizarre decision by the govt to end off sales of alcohol by pubs. They will now have to apply to the council for a licence to sell alcohol for people to take away.

    Covid - the gift that keeps giving to idiotic government policy.

    There have been significant problems with pubs selling takeaway beer, that end up with drunk teenagers all over the place, wandering around and smashing stuff up.

    Essentially, selling it over the wall can end up with a total loss of control.

    One pub on the river, near me, was nearly shut down over this stuff. A stupid landlord tried the “nothing to do with me line” - with the licensing committee!
    Surely they can go to their local Spa and buy a six-pack to take away. I don't get the distinction.
    Having seen this in action, the landlords need to be responsible for the booze they sell. It is their job.

    In the case I mentioned, the landlord was trying to argue that a woman being assaulted a dozen metres from his pub by alcohol fuelled people was not his responsibility. The police evidence included the fact that the assailants possessed plastic, branded cups from the pub…

    In the end, the brewery kicked him out and replaced him with a landlord who keeps “an orderly pub”.
    So if every alcohol sales outlet is responsible for the behviour resulting from those who consume it we're going to need a lot of new prisons.

    The guy was right, it wasn't his fault, it was the fault of the people who assaulted the woman.
    The local authorities and magistrates don’t see it that way.

    There have been a lot of licences revoked over the years, as a result of antisocial behaviour originating from people who had been drinking irresponsibly at particular pubs.

    That’s why the brewery will replace the manager if things start to get out of hand, because they don’t want things to escalate to the point where it threatens their licence.
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    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,343
    Picking Anderson for this test is looking like a serious mistake. His extremely accurate line and length would frustrate an English equivalent team determined to score but the Aussies seem content to wait him out. Without that aggressive intent he looks harmless and ineffective.
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    SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 15,622
    edited July 2023
    Cyclefree said:

    Yes, good piece from Mike and it echoes my own view that this could be a very good election for the LDs.

    Their biggest stumbling block is that they have to overcome some seriously large majorities to win a lot of seats from the Conservatives, but as the bar illustrates, they are capable of doing this.

    I am going to provisionally estimate that yhey will emerge from the GE with at least 30 seats. They may even displace the SNP as the third largest Party.

    As Generals go, Davey is almost as lucky as Starmer.

    Good morning

    Fair comment and as things stand entirely possible

    On the Farage banking affair there are times, when no matter how you dislike someone's political views, when a stand has to be made against an injustice

    Yesterday, Nick Thomas Symonds was terrible on Sky attempting to defend Alison Rose and even worse, Rachel Reeves penned a piece (before Rose resigned) accusing Farage and the media of 'bullying' Rose which was just crass in the extreme

    Starmer eventually endorsed her resignation, but only after seeing the way the wind was blowing

    This was not a political issue, but the difference between trust and confidentiality, and no doubt if it had been anyone other than Farage, these labour politicians would have had a different response

    And I would say the same thing if it had been Corbyn who had been subject to this injustice

    Agreed, Big G.

    Awkward as it is to find oneself supporting Farage, it has to be said that he has as much right to privacy as the rest of us.

    What possessed this woman to blurt out his private details to a journalist is beyond me.
    The whole way the bank - from the Board down - responded suggests a lack of joined up thinking / strategy followed by panic. This does not surprise me. People can be very effective CEOs but fall to pieces in a crisis and make elementary and stupid mistakes.
    Isn't Coutts a refuge for well-connected, chinless wonders?

    That is, lumpen-aristocrats who, re: Farage, decided to black-ball a leading representative of the lumpen-bourgeoisie.
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    lintolinto Posts: 32
    edited July 2023
    Don't know if this has already been mentioned but some researchers have claimed that they have created a room temperature super conductor known as LK-99.
    Massive if true especially since it seemingly uses normal materials and straight forward methods to create it. Obviously the science community seems very reticent to announce it untill it's been replicated as they've fallen for elaborate hoaxes before.


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    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,575

    algarkirk said:

    Foss said:

    .

    Man wrongly jailed for rape may have to pay for prison ‘board and lodgings’
    Andrew Malkinson says he will be liable to pay back money to prison service if he wins compensation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/27/innocent-andrew-malkinson-wrongful-conviction-compensation/ (£££)

    The Telegraph has been reading PB. This is exactly the question I raised yesterday evening.
    Loads of journalists read this blog (secretly) for insights, and below the line too, and take our arguments into mainstream publication. Uncredited, of course.

    I'm sort of OK with that. I don't have the time, skin or profile to do it myself and it's sort of flattering- I can't think of many (any?) other UK political blogs that have that much bearing on national debate.
    Order-Order might be close.
    Guido lacks a top travel writer, and tilted to the right some years back.
    Guido also lacks the indiscriminate randomness of opinion and subject matter to be found elsewhere, including here. "Let me tell you all about my forthcoming book on medieval Mongolian fireplaces and my recent visit to the new coffee machine at South Greenford station illustrated by 20 large photos...."

    South Greenford doesn't have a coffee machine!

    https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?search="South+Greenford"+Sunil060902&title=Special:MediaSearch&go=Go&type=image


    Yes. I remember South Greenford—
    The name, because one afternoon
    Of heat the express-train drew up there
    Unwontedly. It was late June.

    The steam hissed. Someone cleared his throat.
    No one left and no one came
    On the bare platform. What I saw
    Was South Greenford—only the name,

    No coffee machine but grass,
    And meadowsweet, and haycocks dry,
    No whit less still and lonely fair
    Than the high cloudlets in the sky.
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    SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 15,622
    Seattle Times ($) - The purr-fect rescue: Ferry crew saves kitten from waterFerry staff whiskered a kitten out of the water near Whidbey Island on Wednesday morning after a game of cat and mouse.

    Clinton Ferry Terminal staff members saw a kitten in a wingwall, a landing aid for vessels, right after the ferry Tokitae departed, Washington State Ferries spokesperson Dana Warr said. A Kitsap crew member donned a life jacket and climbed out to look for it, but the kitten had fallen into the water.

    The crew launched a rescue boat and found the kitten clinging to one of his nine lives on an offshore piling. They retrieved him safely.

    “It looks like the cat was pretty happy; they cradled him in the rescue boat,” Warr said.

    Terminal staff made a makeshift kennel for the kitten before taking him to the South Whidbey Animal Clinic, where staff members began calling him Bosun — a nautical title for the highest ranking member of a ship’s crew.

    The kitten was meow-mentarily too cold and wet for a thermometer to read his temperature when he first came in, said lead veterinary technician Sabra Whitlock. Bosun began feline good after staffers gave him a bath and a technician tucked him into their scrub top until he was warm enough to go into a kennel.

    Whitlock said the kitten is probably three or four months old, and is gray with a white patch on his belly. The cat did not have a microchip.

    One thing is for sure: It will paw-sitively not take long for Bosun to find his fur-ever home.

    “He’s a little grumpy kitty now that he’s feeling better,” Whitlock said. “One of the employees here would like to adopt if needed, and we’ve had a couple of calls from the ferry workers who are interested in adopting him if he doesn’t find a home.”

    https://images.seattletimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/07262023_Bosun-Clinton_Ferry_Terminal_Cat_155233.jpg?d=1152x1536

    SSI - I've taken this ferry a time or two, connects Whidbey Island with mainland, a short 20-min journey.
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    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,504
    edited July 2023
    A
    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    The idea “this will all turn out well for Coutts” is refreshingly original. I can imagine there must be loads of billionaires applying for accounts right now, in the hope they can be morally audited by 19 year olds, and get their entire social media histories combed over, to see if they ever retweeted anything possibly transphobic, and if they fail, this will all be leaked to the BBC

    Really rich people LOVE that kind of attention

    I'd be surprised if many fantastically rich people use Coutts in the first place. But those who do will already have had their personal account managers on the phone talking through any issues they may have and soothing any concerns. It's a real pain switching these kinds of accounts - and it can cost a fair amount of money to do it. But you are right, discretion really matters. If people are genuinely concerned their names are going to get into the papers, they'll be off like a shot.

    Yes I doubt that many people will switch accounts from Coutts if they already have one. It’s a hassle as you say. But who knows

    What it will do is deter anyone from OPENING an account there. Why take the risk?

    It is potentially a True Ratner Moment. A few monumentally stupid, indiscreet remarks, said to the wrong audience, have terminally damaged an entire business. Insanely dumb

    Also what kind of arrogant fuckwit does this in the first place? Isn’t Alison rose meant to be some experienced person? A safe pair of hands? 30 years with the firm?

    I wonder if she was really drunk and trying to impress a BBC journo she fancied. Didn’t this happen at some banquet?

    I am a Coutts customer*, and I think they have behaved appallingly. If they had downgraded him to a regular NatWest card, on the basis that he's no longer meeting the eligibility requirements, that would be one thing.

    But to (a) kick him out, and (b) say the stupid things they did is quite another.

    I'm planning to return to the UK once I've sold my current business, so would appreciate a proper UK bank, that doesn't mind having a UK tax reesident customer. If Charles was still on the site, I'd ask if Hoare's would have me.

    * Not by choice: RBS closed the bank (Adam & Co) that I was a customer of, and transferred me to Coutts.
    Quite

    The way it should have been handled -

    {Farage ushered into mahogany lined office, loudest sound - the sledgehammer tick of grandfather clock. The portrait of the founder of the bank glowers down from above the fireplace}

    Private banker {Three piece suit from Turnbull & Asser, watch chain with a Winchester miniature coat of arms} - “Port? No? You’re missing a treat…. I’m sorry to say that we are having to let you go, Mr Farage. Some of the chaps are not sure that you are a good fit with the bank. Sadly, that’s a final decision. I’ve arranged for a transfer of your affairs to our partners” {produces leather folio with the banks coat of arms on it} “it’s all here”

    Some little time later, door closes, ticking of the clock..

    At a dinner later that day

    BBC journalist - “Whats this about Farage?”
    CEO - “Farage - you mean the UKIP chap? No, I’ve no idea if he’s even with our bank. Not my job to know, either. Got good chaps for that. Port?”
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    logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,723

    Scott_xP said:

    A Brexit vote was inevitable

    Yes and no.

    When the BBC put Nigel Fucking Farage on Question Time every week for 3 years, perhaps, but they didn't need to do that.

    When Tory politicians ran scared of him instead of laughing at him, perhaps, but they didn't need to do that.

    He tried to get elected 7 times, and 7 times the voters told him where to stick it.

    If the 'establishment' had done the same, Brexit was not inevitable.
    You know, it was the remain camp who lost the vote by failing to make the case which should have been far easier

    Yes Farage was a forceful campaigner, but the establishment took the electorate for granted hence why vote leave won
    No, Leave wasn't defined, so it could mean whatever people wanted it to - and some of those were contradictory. Cameron should have got the Leave campaigns to define what it meant before the referendum was called.
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    northern_monkeynorthern_monkey Posts: 1,520
    I’ve just been to the supermarket where I used to work as a student, stacking shelves. I wanted some wraps. I like a freshly made wrap for my dinner.

    No wraps. A vast expanse of empty shelving. And when you pay attention, when you properly look, there are huge gaps everywhere that they just fill up with shit loads of one product.

    We’ve quickly become conditioned to having a massively reduced choice of food, with many items simply out of stock, time after time. Vastly reduced choice.

    And let’s not get started on the prices.

    Still, sovereignty, eh?
This discussion has been closed.