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When’s Rishi going to risk a general election? – politicalbetting.com

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  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    eek said:

    This was a Michael Gove policy announced on the quiet in the hope no body would notice...

    Well it's either that or grade A incompetency - and I don't want to think which one it is...
    Just a case of people taking more of an interest in these 'technical consultations' on planning.

    It isn't a fraction as bad as some of the things they have been churning out over the last decade though. At one point they passed legislation to allow you to appoint an agent to grant yourself planning permission, circumventing the local planning authority completely. It never got enacted but the primary legislation is still there.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,263
    Andy_JS said:

    1994 isn't that long ago.
    It's nearly thirty years, Andy... :(
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,563
    Pagan2 said:

    Which was even worse as it came about because of the guy they kept having on blue peter , joey deacon as I remember
    Is it like ‘Bennies’ for Falkland Islanders?
  • Cyber attackers hacked into UK electoral registers
    'Hostile actors' gained access to servers of the Electoral Commission

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/08/08/election-watchdog-cyber-attack-hostile-actors/ (£££)

    Nothing to see here. The Electoral Commission is working with the NCSC to lock the stable door, which is the high-tech equivalent of lessons will be learnt.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,619
    DavidL said:

    I think not only the building but any prospect of future profits has gone up in smoke.
    Yep - I think the procedure is 6 weeks' notice.
  • Terrible really. At some point in the 1990s there must have been a noticeable drop-off in boys who were given that name by their parents.
    Joey from the 1990s makes me think of Joey Tribbiani. 🤷‍♂️

    How you doin'?
  • theProletheProle Posts: 1,302
    Sandpit said:

    That sounds eminently sensible. How does turning a barn into a house “decimate the landscapes”? The buildings are there already!
    It's one of the best things they look like doing in ages - my local national park authority takes great pride in being a total PITA and finding spurious reasons not to allow conversions like this.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,807

    Terrible really. At some point in the 1990s there must have been a noticeable drop-off in boys who were given that name by their parents.
    I doubt it was ever very common. Joey is a bit of a nickname for Joseph isn't it?
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,693
    Foxy said:

    It is a phenomenon of inflating euphemism. At one time moron and retarded were legitimate medical terms.

    I have heard youngsters describe each other disparaging as "special needs".

    We need to update our language, but even more so need to update our attitudes.
    When The Spastic Society changed its name to Scope, kids at my school were calling each other "scopers" within days. I don't know if it stuck.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    I doubt it was ever very common. Joey is a bit of a nickname for Joseph isn't it?
    https://www.scope.org.uk/news-and-stories/attitudes-towards-disability-in-the-80s-made-my-life-hell/
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,690
    .
    Leon said:

    Stick to your guns. Spastic is a brilliant term of abuse because it can be SPAT out with venom. SPASTIC

    It is deeply satisfying
    개새꺄
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,177
    PJH said:

    Mine just refer to someone as being 'Special' and you can hear the quote marks the way they say it
    It's weird how they can do that. A just discernible pause and the meaning is completely inverted. No wonder people find English a hard language to learn.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    More on this.

    "Cyber-attack on UK's electoral registers revealed
    Published 15 minutes ago"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-66441010
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited August 2023
    viewcode said:

    It's nearly thirty years, Andy... :(
    I've just been watching the 1959 election show, so 1994 seems pretty modern compared to that.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bGhJr7V-M50
  • eekeek Posts: 29,732
    edited August 2023
    theProle said:

    It's one of the best things they look like doing in ages - my local national park authority takes great pride in being a total PITA and finding spurious reasons not to allow conversions like this.
    It's one of the worst things possibly because with a house comes a track and a garden both of which are visible from miles around because you can see a long way when at the top of the path between 2 dales.

    The rules in the Dales are actually very generous - any non-modern roadside barn can be converted - those without road access can't be.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    edited August 2023
    darkage said:

    These farm buildings are functional and part of an agricultural landscape. If they get turned to residential, with all the paraphernalia, window openings, cladding etc they appear as oversized, alien features that are unduly prominent in the landscape. The landscape then just gets turned in to a semi rural landscape where you get more and more housing added in because 'where's the harm'? The national parks are supposed to have the very highest standard of protection against this.
    Barns are ‘alien features’ too of course.

    In our village (not in a National Park) you can knock down an existing dwelling and build a new one, and convert a barn to a house in certain circumstances, but that hasn’t led to any new buildings as such; the same number of buildings still exist.
  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375

    Terrible really. At some point in the 1990s there must have been a noticeable drop-off in boys who were given that name by their parents.
    It was more the early 80s. When I was at school 90% of the insults had Joey in them
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    darkage said:

    These farm buildings are functional and part of an agricultural landscape. If they get turned to residential, with all the paraphernalia, window openings, cladding etc they appear as oversized, alien features that are unduly prominent in the landscape. The landscape then just gets turned in to a semi rural landscape where you get more and more housing added in because 'where's the harm'? The national parks are supposed to have the very highest standard of protection against this.
    No-one was suggesting adding more and more housing added in, the proposal relates only to existing barn structures. Any additional structures will of course require planning permission in the usual way.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    What happens if someone is anti-Woke and anti-populist? Which political party are they supposed to support
  • eekeek Posts: 29,732

    Barns are ‘alien features’ too of course.

    In our village (not in a National Park) you can knock down an existing dwelling and build a new one, and convert a barn to a house in certain circumstances, but that hasn’t led to any new buildings as such.
    If you are playing the game of alien features - do you place sheep as alien features or not.

    Because the current landscape of the Dales / Lakes / Moors all come from sheep farming. Without that most of the areas would be woodland...
  • Simon_PeachSimon_Peach Posts: 424
    edited August 2023
    eek said:

    It's one of the worst things possibly because with a house comes a track and a garden both of which are visible from miles around because you can see a long way when at the top of the path between 2 dales.

    The rules in the Dales are actually very generous - any non-modern roadside barn can be converted - those without road access can't be.
    Contributors are invited to draw roads, domestic gardens, electricity poles and cars to the image below to illustrate how it will not affect the landscape in Upper Wharfdale..



  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855
    darkage said:

    These farm buildings are functional and part of an agricultural landscape. If they get turned to residential, with all the paraphernalia, window openings, cladding etc they appear as oversized, alien features that are unduly prominent in the landscape. The landscape then just gets turned in to a semi rural landscape where you get more and more housing added in because 'where's the harm'? The national parks are supposed to have the very highest standard of protection against this.
    darkage said:

    These farm buildings are functional and part of an agricultural landscape. If they get turned to residential, with all the paraphernalia, window openings, cladding etc they appear as oversized, alien features that are unduly prominent in the landscape. The landscape then just gets turned in to a semi rural landscape where you get more and more housing added in because 'where's the harm'? The national parks are supposed to have the very highest standard of protection against this.
    darkage said:

    These farm buildings are functional and part of an agricultural landscape. If they get turned to residential, with all the paraphernalia, window openings, cladding etc they appear as oversized, alien features that are unduly prominent in the landscape. The landscape then just gets turned in to a semi rural landscape where you get more and more housing added in because 'where's the harm'? The national parks are supposed to have the very highest standard of protection against this.
    Trouble is they aren't functional and haven't been since plastic wrap for hay/haylage was invented, and no use for stuff that still needs to be under cover because modern tractors can't get in to them. They're utterly useless for farming.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398

    Barns are ‘alien features’ too of course.

    In our village (not in a National Park) you can knock down an existing dwelling and build a new one, and convert a barn to a house in certain circumstances, but that hasn’t led to any new buildings as such; the same number of buildings still exist.
    I had some friends in an AONB who had a giant 1980's potato shed that looked like an aircraft hangar. I thought that they could get planning permission to knock it down and build a smaller more sensitive house but they didn't want to do the work in designing something that would complement the landscape (ie appointing an architect), they wanted instead to convert the barn in to a massive house. The problem with these Permitted Development rules are that they encourage the laziest, worst quality form of development in the most sensitive, high quality landscapes.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,732
    edited August 2023
    Miklosvar said:



    Trouble is they aren't functional and haven't been since plastic wrap for hay/haylage was invented, and no use for stuff that still needs to be under cover because modern tractors can't get in to them. They're utterly useless for farming.
    They are also too mostly too small to be converted into housing. But that won't stop people buying them and extending them to meet their needs....
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,091

    Those anger management courses still not succeeding I see, and I guess your most recent BTec from the University of Life still hasn't improved your wit or eloquence. Maybe you should try loosening your jackboots or spend less time jerking off to pictures of Alex Salmond to improve your mood?
    Consistently boring and lacking in any charisma, another one of you retreads. Sad lonely git with no wit or panache.
  • theakestheakes Posts: 958
    Ben Walker saw last weeks local by-election results and is nervous. Labour also know that if there is a by election in mid Beds they will probably end up third. So better go now and pre-empt further falls in support.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited August 2023
    theakes said:

    Ben Walker saw last weeks local by-election results and is nervous. Labour also know that if there is a by election in mid Beds they will probably end up third. So better go now and pre-empt further falls in support.

    The only thing Labour can achieve in Mid Beds is help the Tories win the seat by splitting the opposition vote.
  • PJHPJH Posts: 813
    DavidL said:

    It's weird how they can do that. A just discernible pause and the meaning is completely inverted. No wonder people find English a hard language to learn.
    In the same vein, Wicked=Good, and so on
  • Contributors are invited to draw roads, domestic gardens, electricity poles and cars to the image below to illustrate how it will not affect the landscape in Upper Wharfdale..



    People really don't bother reading posts when it gets in the way of a witty retort, do they? From the actual rules:

    In terms of accessibility, the barn must be ‘roadside’. There is a degree of flexibility here but essentially that means that the site must already be accessible by a standard road vehicle without the need to create new tracks

    In the light of this, could you pick out which of the barns in your image this policy actually applies to?

  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,188
    theakes said:

    Ben Walker saw last weeks local by-election results and is nervous. Labour also know that if there is a by election in mid Beds they will probably end up third. So better go now and pre-empt further falls in support.

    Anyone extrapolating anything from local by elections in July and August needs to go and get some sun somewhere....
  • eekeek Posts: 29,732

    People really don't bother reading posts when it gets in the way of a witty retort, do they? From the actual rules:

    In terms of accessibility, the barn must be ‘roadside’. There is a degree of flexibility here but essentially that means that the site must already be accessible by a standard road vehicle without the need to create new tracks

    In the light of this, could you pick out which of the barns in your image this policy actually applies to?

    The issue is that is the current rules.

    The proposed rules would make all those barns convertible... when the policy at the moment is to leave them as is and where not maintained let them fall into disrepair...
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860

    It was more the early 80s. When I was at school 90% of the insults had Joey in them
    Sorry to bite on the trolling bait, but they are horrible terms which have correctly been largely binned off as insults. I for one am quite glad that words for shagging and body parts have become more mainstream and less offensive, as nasty words based on race and disability become much less acceptable.

    Point of order on 'Joey' He died in 1981, the year I was born, and I never heard the term in the playground once (all the other ones above I certainly did).
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,091

    You had to go there.
    If I knew who the scumbag was I would knock the ugly barsteward handsome. The crumpets and the teapot would be shoved up his arse sideways on the end of a shovel.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348
    How do people prefer this large barn (in Trumpington)?

    As it was:
    https://goo.gl/maps/x7Fsa1JUqboAfyuN9

    As it is:
    https://goo.gl/maps/577dhs6cpRRhtJ6s9
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    Ghedebrav said:

    Sorry to bite on the trolling bait, but they are horrible terms which have correctly been largely binned off as insults. I for one am quite glad that words for shagging and body parts have become more mainstream and less offensive, as nasty words based on race and disability become much less acceptable.

    Point of order on 'Joey' He died in 1981, the year I was born, and I never heard the term in the playground once (all the other ones above I certainly did).
    I was born in 1974. I heard it all the time. Pretty horrible looking back. I remember we got called into an assembly when he died and one kid a few years above me got kicked out for laughing. I shudder at the memory.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,524
    Cicero said:

    Absolutely... Prison for a considerable term too.
    Just put them in Walsall and forbid them to leave it.
  • Young people are green and love SUVs


  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,091
    Leon said:

    Tut

    If you knew anything about pubs - which you clearly don't - you would know it has been spelt that way for decades and, more inportantly, has one of the airiest interiors and biggest beer gardens in north London, maybe in all of London. As for being "contrived", it is about 160 years old, built for the navvies that built the railways right next door

    It is a cracking pub, one that anyone would be delighted to call a local. It is 50 seconds walk from my flat. I love it

    And the food used to be desperately shit, and is now notably pleasant

    https://londonist.com/london/pubs/edinboro-castle

    Apart from that, you made an excellent comment
    So it is indeed poncy
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    DougSeal said:

    I was born in 1974. I heard it all the time. Pretty horrible looking back. I remember we got called into an assembly when he died and one kid a few years above me got kicked out for laughing. I shudder at the memory.
    Given my IRL name is Joe and I'm often called Joey by friends and family, I'd have definitely noticed if it was a term of abuse!

    Related but different, I notice the whole stroking-your-chin-to-signify-disbelief thing has died out now - we called that 'chinny reckon' or 'chinny Mandela'.
  • eek said:

    The issue is that is the current rules.

    The proposed rules would make all those barns convertible... when the policy at the moment is to leave them as is and where not maintained let them fall into disrepair...
    Well, indeed. The comment by @Chelyabinsk was somewhat ironic given it suggests they had not carefully read the thread so far…
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398

    How do people prefer this large barn (in Trumpington)?

    As it was:
    https://goo.gl/maps/x7Fsa1JUqboAfyuN9

    As it is:
    https://goo.gl/maps/577dhs6cpRRhtJ6s9

    In the vast majority of cases, to get something like this, the process has to be managed by 'PITA' local planning authority. The issue with PD rights is that the whole idea behind it is that they undermine the control of the local planning authority. It is basically a loophole that was deliberately and knowingly created by the government in the hope that it would be unnoticed as a 'technical' reform.

    The most idiotic of all the rules the government created over the past decade was office to residential PD rights, developers ended up building the worst kind of slum housing, ie new housing with no windows, new flats with less than 20m floorspace, etc.

    https://www.tcpa.org.uk/resources/these-are-homes-photobook/
  • eekeek Posts: 29,732
    edited August 2023

    How do people prefer this large barn (in Trumpington)?

    As it was:
    https://goo.gl/maps/x7Fsa1JUqboAfyuN9

    As it is:
    https://goo.gl/maps/577dhs6cpRRhtJ6s9

    Those roof lights wouldn't be allowed - when the sun reflects in them you can see them for miles...

    Also the yorkshire Dales is a Dark Skies area - so again not allowed for different reasons.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,794

    Is it like ‘Bennies’ for Falkland Islanders?
    That was another bad one assuming you are referring to bennie from crossroads
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,288
    Andy_JS said:

    What happens if someone is anti-Woke and anti-populist? Which political party are they supposed to support

    Not a political party, but for papers it's The Times.
    • The Times is anti-Woke and anti-Populist.
    • The Guardian is pro-Woke and anti-Populist.
    • The Telegraph is anti-Woke and pro-Populist.
    Question is what is pro-Woke and pro-Populist..

    Possibly Socialist Worker or Corbynite stuff?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Pagan2 said:

    That was another bad one assuming you are referring to bennie from crossroads
    It was.

    "By their own account, the islanders were a subdued, poorly educated people who had learnt not to stick their necks out. As in Victorian England, everyone knew their place. When the British soldiers arrived to liberate the islands, they nicknamed the islanders 'Bennies' after Benny, the simple soul in Crossroads. But this caused so much upset that the soldiers were banned from using the term, and instead nicknamed them 'Still' - as in 'Still a Benny'."

    https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2002/mar/17/features.magazine37
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,926
    Ghedebrav said:

    Given my IRL name is Joe and I'm often called Joey by friends and family, I'd have definitely noticed if it was a term of abuse!

    Related but different, I notice the whole stroking-your-chin-to-signify-disbelief thing has died out now - we called that 'chinny reckon' or 'chinny Mandela'.
    "Chin-eff" we used to say, which became "chineffry-jeffry" and ultimately "heffry-jeffrey"
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,288
    DougSeal said:

    I was born in 1974. I heard it all the time. Pretty horrible looking back. I remember we got called into an assembly when he died and one kid a few years above me got kicked out for laughing. I shudder at the memory.
    Unfortunately, insults and bullying still take place.

    Except, now, rather than being directly based on a form of "ist" they adopt different forms, like someone's physical appearance on social media, personality weaknesses, unfashionable views, their use of language, behaviours, or social skills..
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,637
    edited August 2023

    Contributors are invited to draw roads, domestic gardens, electricity poles and cars to the image below to illustrate how it will not affect the landscape in Upper Wharfdale..



    What a dump! Kidding! :lol:
  • ydoethur said:

    Just put them in Walsall and forbid them to leave it.
    The Walsall Ghetto!
  • PJH said:

    In the same vein, Wicked=Good, and so on
    Wicked! I is 'ere in da North Ilford Ghetto, hangin' wid me bitches!
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,926
    darkage said:

    I had some friends in an AONB who had a giant 1980's potato shed that looked like an aircraft hangar. I thought that they could get planning permission to knock it down and build a smaller more sensitive house but they didn't want to do the work in designing something that would complement the landscape (ie appointing an architect), they wanted instead to convert the barn in to a massive house. The problem with these Permitted Development rules are that they encourage the laziest, worst quality form of development in the most sensitive, high quality landscapes.
    Amusingly someone has just put in a planning application just a few metres down the valley from my vineyard for a huge corrugated iron agricultural barn. They presumably need permission for this because the land is a small paddock, less than a hectare, and in an AONB. I very much doubt it'll be granted.

    The neighbours are much aggrieved, and suspicious. Some are convinced it is a trojan horse for a later development into a dwelling, others that this means "travellers" (on account of the name of the person making the application).

    I'm staying well out of it, as I do at home when there are planning applications on the road or the mews behind us. (It would though probably help me as precedent in any future application for a cabin / shed / tasting room on my land, and would bring the mains electricity connection a bit closer).
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    Leon said:

    Fucking "Nunhead" doesn't even count as London. It's so far south and drearily suburban it's basically Kent or Surrey or Who Cares. I have literally never been to Nunhead and have zero desire to do so. UGH. It makes me want to vomit just thinking about it. NUNHEAD. lol. PUKE

    And yours hasn't got a massive beer garden. And it's not in groovy Camden, 2 minutes from Regent's Park

    FAIL
    It does actually have quite a substantial multi-tiered beer garden. It is two minutes from Telegraph Hill Park, the "new Hampstead Heath" according to the Daily Mail, which of a summer evening throngs with beautiful people (Goldsmiths students and the like).
    And to be honest Skehans isn't actually in Nunhead, it's in Telegraph Hill and has a New Cross postcode.
    And it is the best pub in London, and does excellent Thai food, none of your crushed peas and beer battered cod (yawn, so basic). So your loss!
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,288

    It used to be Spaz when I was a kid. We also had Flid and Mong. The cruelty in those terms is quite something.

    Again, I must be unusual here.

    Everyone will know how anti-Woke I am (virulently) but I don't think this is a term that should be revived.

    I am happy with idiot, moron, pillock and even (sometimes) retard but these ones should rightly stay in the dustbin.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,799
    Ghedebrav said:

    Given my IRL name is Joe and I'm often called Joey by friends and family, I'd have definitely noticed if it was a term of abuse!

    Related but different, I notice the whole stroking-your-chin-to-signify-disbelief thing has died out now - we called that 'chinny reckon' or 'chinny Mandela'.
    Yeah, I echo Doug. I was born in 1975 and I'd say that most playground insults were Joey Deacon related. Also, I don't think we necessarily knew there was a real life person with that name that the insults sprang from. At least I remember finding out, and thinking his parents had chosen a name very unwisely.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    Afternoon drinking in a proper pub, with the rain falling from dark clouds outside, shop lights reflecting in the puddles, is one of life's great pleasures.

    I once spent 13 hours in the same pub, it was brilliant.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    Again, I must be unusual here.

    Everyone will know how anti-Woke I am (virulently) but I don't think this is a term that should be revived.

    I am happy with idiot, moron, pillock and even (sometimes) retard but these ones should rightly stay in the dustbin.
    It's not a question of woke or not, just common decency.
  • Simon_PeachSimon_Peach Posts: 424
    edited August 2023
    A couple more thoughts on the proposal to develop desecrate the Yorkshire Dales… giving free rein to developers to create holiday homes or retirement homes for wealthy outsiders will help neither Julian Smith nor the Conservatives on NYCC to keep their seats… having said that, it will further enrich the landowners that are the bedrock of the Tories in this part of the world…
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,288

    I’ve found another woke cause for Leon et al.

    This farcical update from the Mary Rose museum which uses various objects in its collection to bang on, utterly tangentially, about queer identity and being non-binary.

    https://twitter.com/philiphensher/status/1688885747275763712?s=46&t=L9g_woCIqbo1MTuBFCK0xg

    It’s a form of insanity.

    I keep highlighting the insanity of the Woke mind virus, and being told it's a modern form of political correctness.

    It's not. It's a total obsession with making absolutely everything about identity politics, coupled with moral lectures to be imbibed on top, that are deeply contentious and divisive.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    A couple more thoughts on the proposal to develop desecrate the Yorkshire Dales… giving free rein to developers to create holiday homes or retirement homes for wealthy outsiders will help neither Julian Smith nor the Conservatives on NYCC to keep their seats… having said that, it will further enrich the landowners that are the bedrock of the Tories in this part of the world…

    If you are going to lose the election, what is the rational course of action?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,288

    It's not a question of woke or not, just common decency.
    Yes, the two things are distinct.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    I once spent 13 hours in the same pub, it was brilliant.
    That’s a good effort. I always try to find a pub for the last day of the Six Nations, which is usually about eight hours start to finish.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,732

    A couple more thoughts on the proposal to develop desecrate the Yorkshire Dales… giving free rein to developers to create holiday homes or retirement homes for wealthy outsiders will help neither Julian Smith nor the Conservatives on NYCC to keep their seats… having said that, it will further enrich the landowners that are the bedrock of the Tories in this part of the world…

    Irony is it would be local occupancy only - but that doesn't solve the problem when they are S106 houses for sale for over £500,000
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,288
    I love sports cars, not SUVs, but you sort of get funneled into the pragmatics of them when you have 2 or 3 kids and live outside London.

    Yes, shock horror, some people do live outside London.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348

    A couple more thoughts on the proposal to develop desecrate the Yorkshire Dales… giving free rein to developers to create holiday homes or retirement homes for wealthy outsiders will help neither Julian Smith nor the Conservatives on NYCC to keep their seats… having said that, it will further enrich the landowners that are the bedrock of the Tories in this part of the world…

    What were the Yorkshire Dales like 2,000 years ago? Every change that has happened since has 'desecrated' the landscape. It is not what it was. It is an 'unnatural' landscape, as is the vast majority of the UK. Why do you want it held in aspic now, with no change ever? Because someone can always call a minor change 'desecration'
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,193

    A couple more thoughts on the proposal to develop desecrate the Yorkshire Dales… giving free rein to developers to create holiday homes or retirement homes for wealthy outsiders will help neither Julian Smith nor the Conservatives on NYCC to keep their seats… having said that, it will further enrich the landowners that are the bedrock of the Tories in this part of the world…

    Indeed.

    We must keep the countryside exactly as it was. While demanding that immigration runs at a chunk of a percent per year.

    The obvious answer is to ship the more problematic excess population overseas. A clearance, as it were.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,766

    I love sports cars, not SUVs, but you sort of get funneled into the pragmatics of them when you have 2 or 3 kids and live outside London.

    Yes, shock horror, some people do live outside London.

    They exist outside London. I'm not sure you could call it "living"
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348

    I love sports cars, not SUVs, but you sort of get funneled into the pragmatics of them when you have 2 or 3 kids and live outside London.

    Yes, shock horror, some people do live outside London.

    Twenty years ago, my brother and his wife went on holiday to North Wales in his Lotus Elise. At least, he did. His wife drove another car carrying their first child and all the bags...
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,193
    eek said:

    Irony is it would be local occupancy only - but that doesn't solve the problem when they are S106 houses for sale for over £500,000
    Strangely, if you build enough houses, then people can afford to live in them.

    Look at rural France.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348

    I keep highlighting the insanity of the Woke mind virus, and being told it's a modern form of political correctness.

    It's not. It's a total obsession with making absolutely everything about identity politics, coupled with moral lectures to be imbibed on top, that are deeply contentious and divisive.
    The thing is, I find that link *funny*, as I believe it was meant to be. You find it 'woke'.

    I laugh at (and with) them. You get angry.
  • Indeed.

    We must keep the countryside exactly as it was. While demanding that immigration runs at a chunk of a percent per year.

    The obvious answer is to ship the more problematic excess population overseas. A clearance, as it were.
    You’re right, let’s allow every field barn in the Dales to be converted and that’ll absorb the Tory’s current level of net immigration for all of about three hours…
  • eekeek Posts: 29,732

    Strangely, if you build enough houses, then people can afford to live in them.

    Look at rural France.
    The houses at that price haven't sold - it was priced for hope over reality....
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348
    darkage said:

    In the vast majority of cases, to get something like this, the process has to be managed by 'PITA' local planning authority. The issue with PD rights is that the whole idea behind it is that they undermine the control of the local planning authority. It is basically a loophole that was deliberately and knowingly created by the government in the hope that it would be unnoticed as a 'technical' reform.

    The most idiotic of all the rules the government created over the past decade was office to residential PD rights, developers ended up building the worst kind of slum housing, ie new housing with no windows, new flats with less than 20m floorspace, etc.

    https://www.tcpa.org.uk/resources/these-are-homes-photobook/
    Which did not actually answer the question I asked. Which do you prefer? A pleasing and essentially useless ruin, or something that has amended or updated the structure to give it a modern use? Because so many of our 'timeless' structures have been heavily amended over time.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    The thing is, I find that link *funny*, as I believe it was meant to be. You find it 'woke'.

    I laugh at (and with) them. You get angry.
    I was astonished when I read it. Astounded.

    That is only (a) a blog (b) a personal comment and (c) a very brief one, not an exhibition. It's more about what one might be missing when looking at the obvious story. It's not even being used for exhibiton labels.

    Yet GW and CR regard it as the end of days ...

    Similar things can be - and should be, and are - written about poverty, or slavery, or wealth, implicit in museum collections and surviving objects. (For instance, how much a Victorian woman's dress cost, and the implications for those who worked on it.) It's standard social history and nothing new in it.

  • Carnyx said:

    Er? Is that good or bad in your opinion? Looks a bit shitty on a rainy day with the wind blowing across it, like Slough bus station. BUT NOT WONKY
    No I like it. It even won an award in time for the 1951 Festival of Britain. I took this on a sunny day:
    image
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    No I like it. It even won an award in time for the 1951 Festival of Britain. I took this on a sunny day:
    image
    I was rather taken with the shape, and if you reckon it works well enough from your expert scrutiny, that's good enough for me!
  • Interesting polling on using the barges

    Four months after arguments over housing asylum seekers on barges began, Britons are now slightly more likely to say such barges are an acceptable form of accommodation

    Acceptable: 59% (+9 from April)
    Unacceptable: 28% (-5)

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/survey-results/daily/2023/08/08/45727/1
  • I once spent 13 hours in the same pub, it was brilliant.
    Was it 22nd August 1988? When, finally, pubs could stay open all day.
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855

    The thing is, I find that link *funny*, as I believe it was meant to be. You find it 'woke'.

    I laugh at (and with) them. You get angry.
    I think you have misunderstood the link, which is to a gay man whose views on "woke" align very closely with Casino's.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348
    Miklosvar said:

    I think you have misunderstood the link, which is to a gay man whose views on "woke" align very closely with Casino's.
    I think I have understood it well enough. Have you?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Was it 22nd August 1988? When, finally, pubs could stay open all day.
    In England. In Scotland, earlier. 1976. Was always disconcerting to come south and find the doors locked if one wasn't thinking ahead.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,509

    I love sports cars, not SUVs, but you sort of get funneled into the pragmatics of them when you have 2 or 3 kids and live outside London.

    Yes, shock horror, some people do live outside London.

    If our last 3 cars are anything to go by (MPVs and now SUV [I think as I get confused]) the cars seem to get bigger outside but smaller inside. Sadly opposite of a Tardis really.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348
    Carnyx said:

    I was rather taken with the shape, and if you reckon it works well enough from your expert scrutiny, that's good enough for me!
    That has some appeal. If it works as a functional structure, then that's fine.

    Some listed WW2 aircraft hangers look worse ('worse' being in the eyes of the viewer).
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,193

    Which did not actually answer the question I asked. Which do you prefer? A pleasing and essentially useless ruin, or something that has amended or updated the structure to give it a modern use? Because so many of our 'timeless' structures have been heavily amended over time.
    Look at the Tower of London. No panning permission for most of the changes. Richard III didn’t even file for change of use, before burying people there.

    Can imagine what would happen if you tried to build Tower Bridge today?
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348
    kjh said:

    If our last 3 cars are anything to go by (MPVs and now SUV [I think as I get confused]) the cars seem to get bigger outside but smaller inside. Sadly opposite of a Tardis really.
    That might be to do with crumple zones and safety. More room to absorb impacts can mean safer (not always...).
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855

    I think I have understood it well enough. Have you?
    I really don't think you have. Oh look! a bandwagon! Must hop on, I am sure it's going somewhere nice.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,193
    eek said:

    The houses at that price haven't sold - it was priced for hope over reality....
    The point being that if you build property in line with the population, £500k properties out in the sticks would be manor houses.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,193

    You’re right, let’s allow every field barn in the Dales to be converted and that’ll absorb the Tory’s current level of net immigration for all of about three hours…
    Your alternative being a Japanese immigration policy?
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348

    Look at the Tower of London. No panning permission for most of the changes. Richard III didn’t even file for change of use, before burying people there.

    Can imagine what would happen if you tried to build Tower Bridge today?
    I was thinking of the reroofing of Westminster Hall in Richard 2's time. How the locals must have screeched about the desecration of an historic structure... ;)

    Incidentally, there was a plan in the 50s or 60s to remove the stonework from Tower Bridge and reclad in glass - the stonework being essentially an unstructural appeasement to Victorian NIMBYs. In that case, they probably got it right...
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348
    Miklosvar said:

    I really don't think you have. Oh look! a bandwagon! Must hop on, I am sure it's going somewhere nice.
    ???

    What 'bandwagon' ? I laughed at the link and thought it harmless. Others are getting irate about it.
  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,236
    TimS said:


    Amusingly someone has just put in a planning application just a few metres down the valley from my vineyard for a huge corrugated iron agricultural barn. They presumably need permission for this because the land is a small paddock, less than a hectare, and in an AONB. I very much doubt it'll be granted.

    The neighbours are much aggrieved, and suspicious. Some are convinced it is a trojan horse for a later development into a dwelling

    A Trojan horse in a paddock? Sounds like it's not even a change of use :-)
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    edited August 2023
    Carnyx said:

    I was astonished when I read it. Astounded.

    That is only (a) a blog (b) a personal comment and (c) a very brief one, not an exhibition. It's more about what one might be missing when looking at the obvious story. It's not even being used for exhibiton labels.

    Yet GW and CR regard it as the end of days ...

    Similar things can be - and should be, and are - written about poverty, or slavery, or wealth, implicit in museum collections and surviving objects. (For instance, how much a Victorian woman's dress cost, and the implications for those who worked on it.) It's standard social history and nothing new in it.

    Check out this re: The Woke Menace, from noted sporting commentator:

    NYT ($) - Trump Cheers the Defeat of Rapinoe and the U.S. Women’s Soccer Team
    The former president taunted a U.S. team after its defeat on the world stage.

    When the United States lost to Sweden in the Women’s World Cup on Sunday, many American viewers saw it as a painful collapse on the grandest stage — the sort of agonizing moment that happens in sports.

    For former President Donald J. Trump, it was a sign of national decline.

    The loss was “fully emblematic of what is happening to the our once great Nation under Crooked Joe Biden,” Mr. Trump wrote on his social media platform.

    “Many of our players were openly hostile to America — No other country behaved in such a manner, or even close,” he added. “WOKE EQUALS FAILURE. Nice shot Megan, the USA is going to Hell!!! MAGA.”

    The taunt was an extension of a longstanding feud between Mr. Trump and Megan Rapinoe, the retiring soccer star who once refused to visit the Trump White House, and whose missed penalty kick contributed to the team’s loss. . . .

    But it was also a striking example of the unforgiving moment in right-wing politics, when a former president will taunt an American team competing on the international stage and relish the agony of its defeat.

    SSI - No wonder so many who are obsessed with the Woke Menace are pimping for Trump, Putin, etc.

    Do note that #45 is actually working both sides of Woke Street, by mocking Megan Rapinoe for being super-Woke . . . and Ron DeSantis for being super anti-Woke!

    Very similar to his tap-dancing re: Ukraine.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348
    Carnyx said:

    I was astonished when I read it. Astounded.

    That is only (a) a blog (b) a personal comment and (c) a very brief one, not an exhibition. It's more about what one might be missing when looking at the obvious story. It's not even being used for exhibiton labels.

    Yet GW and CR regard it as the end of days ...

    Similar things can be - and should be, and are - written about poverty, or slavery, or wealth, implicit in museum collections and surviving objects. (For instance, how much a Victorian woman's dress cost, and the implications for those who worked on it.) It's standard social history and nothing new in it.

    You must remember that there can only ever be one view of history. One perspective. Anything else is utterly wrong and to be shouted at.
  • That has some appeal. If it works as a functional structure, then that's fine.

    Some listed WW2 aircraft hangers look worse ('worse' being in the eyes of the viewer).
    Newbury Park was supposed to have been inspired by the big airship hangars from the 1930s.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,509
    edited August 2023

    I keep highlighting the insanity of the Woke mind virus, and being told it's a modern form of political correctness.

    It's not. It's a total obsession with making absolutely everything about identity politics, coupled with moral lectures to be imbibed on top, that are deeply contentious and divisive.
    Well I will agree with you (and @Gardenwalker) that it is utterly bonkers, but I don't understand why you think this isn't a modern form of political correctness. It is the same sort of stuff that has always happened in different form or another. I also agree with you that those who do it are probably obsessed about making all sorts of stuff about identity politics and if I got into a discussion with them on it I would probably blow my top, but generally I find it humorous and I don't get angry about it, although I would if it directly impacted me, which may happen, but hasn't yet.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,517
    eek said:

    Irony is it would be local occupancy only - but that doesn't solve the problem when they are S106 houses for sale for over £500,000
    The conversion for local occupancy only rules are dead easy to get around.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,288

    The thing is, I find that link *funny*, as I believe it was meant to be. You find it 'woke'.

    I laugh at (and with) them. You get angry.
    No, that's all in your head. I just vociferously oppose it.

    You get far more angry when this subject comes up than I do.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,348

    Check out this re: The Woke Menace, from noted sporting commentator:

    NYT ($) - Trump Cheers the Defeat of Rapinoe and the U.S. Women’s Soccer Team
    The former president taunted a U.S. team after its defeat on the world stage.

    When the United States lost to Sweden in the Women’s World Cup on Sunday, many American viewers saw it as a painful collapse on the grandest stage — the sort of agonizing moment that happens in sports.

    For former President Donald J. Trump, it was a sign of national decline.

    The loss was “fully emblematic of what is happening to the our once great Nation under Crooked Joe Biden,” Mr. Trump wrote on his social media platform.

    “Many of our players were openly hostile to America — No other country behaved in such a manner, or even close,” he added. “WOKE EQUALS FAILURE. Nice shot Megan, the USA is going to Hell!!! MAGA.”

    The taunt was an extension of a longstanding feud between Mr. Trump and Megan Rapinoe, the retiring soccer star who once refused to visit the Trump White House, and whose missed penalty kick contributed to the team’s loss. . . .

    But it was also a striking example of the unforgiving moment in right-wing politics, when a former president will taunt an American team competing on the international stage and relish the agony of its defeat.

    SSI - No wonder so many who are obsessed with the Woke Menace are pimping for Trump, Putin, etc.

    Do note that #45 is actually working both sides of Woke Street, by mocking Megan Rapinoe for being super-Woke . . . and Ron DeSantis for being super anti-Woke!

    Very similar to his tap-dancing re: Ukraine.
    Megan Rapinoe represented her country for many years with apparent brilliance and skill. She helped the team she was in win many matches and competitions - she even got the Golden Boot and Golden Ball in 2019.

    Yet one missed kick and she's EVIL in the eyes of many I've seen on Twitter.

    Let's be honest. It was not about that kick. It's about the fact she's gay and will not quietly and meekly submit.

    Instead of congratulating her for her work over the years, and perhaps lamenting that this might have been one tournament to many, she's absolutely slated. By shits.
This discussion has been closed.