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The voters say I can’t get no satisfaction with the Tories – politicalbetting.com

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  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516
    Carnyx said:

    The RNLI, for some reason I can't possibly imagine, floats to the surface of my mind.
    Well, that's good. They wouldn't be able to help if they sank.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745

    Ability to afford insurance and being willing to pay it are different things. I suspect people who aren't bothered that their dog is aggressive aren't bothered about complying with the law either. I would assume that owners of dogs that have previously been troublesome would mean premiums go up. Probably premiums would be higher for certain (dangerous) breeds. Or the insurance companies won't insure dangerous dogs. So owners of dangerous breeds don't insure.

    To summarise,
    I don't think those with dangerous dogs would insure them.
    Having insurance won't stop the dog attacking or killing someone (only pay medical costs or compensation)
    There will need to be a resource for enforcement, otherwise it's ineffective
    What will we do with uninsured dogs and people who fail to insure and can't afford the fine?



    Kill the dog? Does it for me

    The owner loses all that money, they won't buy another
  • nico679 said:

    I was going to say put the owner and the dog down but that might be a bit extreme! . Jail the owner and put the dog down seems fair . No ones forced the owner to keep these dogs . There are no excuses. These horror dogs are generally kept by low life scum who want to parade around looking all tough . They won’t be so tough once they’re turned into the prison bxtch and other inmates get wind that their dog murdered a child .
    What about the average guy who couldn't afford/didn't know he had to insure his (normal) dog? Put him/her in jail and put their dog down?
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,593

    Ability to afford insurance and being willing to pay it are different things. I suspect people who aren't bothered that their dog is aggressive aren't bothered about complying with the law either. I would assume that owners of dogs that have previously been troublesome would mean premiums go up. Probably premiums would be higher for certain (dangerous) breeds. Or the insurance companies won't insure dangerous dogs. So owners of dangerous breeds don't insure.

    To summarise,
    I don't think those with dangerous dogs would insure them.
    Having insurance won't stop the dog attacking or killing someone (only pay medical costs or compensation)
    There will need to be a resource for enforcement, otherwise it's ineffective
    What will we do with uninsured dogs and people who fail to insure and can't afford the fine?



    A bully XL should be classed as a lethal weapon. Then the owner an be charged with being in possession of a lethal weapon. Get the dogs and their dangerous owners off the streets.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745
    Good defence from Wales
  • ClippP said:

    The question of content is bound up with the question of subject - and the whole things boils down to supposed knowledge andits transmission and how to do it and what its rules are. This is the essence of the Conservative understanding of education. If that was really the case, then anybody could be a teacher.....
    I've always thought of teaching as like nursing, a vocation rather than a career. The reward is not the pay but the satisfaction. Two of a number of jobs that are incredibly important but poorly paid.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745
    Wales!
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154
    Leon said:

    Kill the dog? Does it for me

    The owner loses all that money, they won't buy another
    I’m sure we can be more creative with the dogs’ fates. Maybe collect them all and sneak them into Russian occupied Ukraine with little go-pros attached and watch the hilarity commence.

    Or put them in a giant dog pound where they put Lucy Letby in as dog warden and replaced with another murderer once the inevitable happens.

    Lethal Injections would be a bit of a cop out.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,617
    edited September 2023

    Ability to afford insurance and being willing to pay it are different things. I suspect people who aren't bothered that their dog is aggressive aren't bothered about complying with the law either. I would assume that owners of dogs that have previously been troublesome would mean premiums go up. Probably premiums would be higher for certain (dangerous) breeds. Or the insurance companies won't insure dangerous dogs. So owners of dangerous breeds don't insure.

    To summarise,
    I don't think those with dangerous dogs would insure them.
    Having insurance won't stop the dog attacking or killing someone (only pay medical costs or compensation)
    There will need to be a resource for enforcement, otherwise it's ineffective
    What will we do with uninsured dogs and people who fail to insure and can't afford the fine?
    I'd be with you tightening up on dangerous dogs - but you have the legal problem of defining them.

    The resource for enforcement are local authorities and police. It's the same as antisocial parking - it's not seen as a priority so nothing happens (*), and becomes an accepted culture.

    Personally I'd go for more thorough penalties, including destruction of dogs that attack, but I'm not an animal-sentimentalist.

    The Braverman thing is just Politics by PR Stunt, whilst ignoring here real job.

    * I'm currently writing an objection to an obstructed footpath, which includes amongst others German Shepherds roaming loose on the Public Highway and "beware of the dog" signs, plus threats from the part-landowner - all offences. It's part of an issue with illegal development of a gypsy site, involving attempts to close down the Right of Way, drive a bus through the planning system, and also steal land. I'm having a go at the pathway, which County have a duty to keep clear (District have been useless, and imo possibly corrupt).
  • Besides, it's quite possible that Suella's Law has unfortunate side effects. True for any new law, but especially under the current government.
    My view is that hastily drawn up legislation as a knee jerk reaction to an issue of concern is poorly thought out, difficult to enforce and littered with unintended consequences. Often doesn't actually deal with the central issue.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,189
    Leon said:

    There will still be problems, but far far fewer

    Because if the dogs are banned you can’t take the dog outside, coz you will immediately be reported and your dog will be shot and you will get a fine

    Result: no more Satan dogs in parks or streets, lots more happy unmauled kids and smaller non-psycho dogs etc
    Jail the dog. Put the owner down.

    Will save in the end.

    We can send the dog, afterwards, to a private school and a Russell Group university….
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,189
    ydoethur said:

    When you say 'deal with the drug trade...'
    Sir Harry asks if this drug squad is well named…
  • there is an argument that having insurance makes you more complacent (as no financial consequence to you ) if you own a dog so such a proposed law is another dreary law that extends the state. Frankly dog attacks is one of those areas where the status quo is probably correct ie if such an incident happens , the owner gets prosecuted and convicted after due process
  • Jail the dog. Put the owner down.

    Will save in the end.

    We can send the dog, afterwards, to a private school and a Russell Group university….
    How many dangerous dogs (appropriately chained up, natch,) would it take to protect the Channel coast?
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,617

    Jail the dog. Put the owner down.

    Will save in the end.

    We can send the dog, afterwards, to a private school and a Russell Group university….
    It can also inherit from its owner free of IHT.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,617
    boulay said:

    I’m sure we can be more creative with the dogs’ fates. Maybe collect them all and sneak them into Russian occupied Ukraine with little go-pros attached and watch the hilarity commence.

    Or put them in a giant dog pound where they put Lucy Letby in as dog warden and replaced with another murderer once the inevitable happens.

    Lethal Injections would be a bit of a cop out.
    Lethal Injections would be a good name for a grunge band.
  • boulay said:

    I’m sure we can be more creative with the dogs’ fates. Maybe collect them all and sneak them into Russian occupied Ukraine with little go-pros attached and watch the hilarity commence.

    Or put them in a giant dog pound where they put Lucy Letby in as dog warden and replaced with another murderer once the inevitable happens.

    Lethal Injections would be a bit of a cop out.
    It's been a good 20 years since it was demolished, but I still remember the graffiti on the old A13 Beckton Flyover (one-way!) that said "South Korea KILL and EAT dogs!"
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,617
    Piss poor defending from Wales.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516
    edited September 2023
    As an alternative to insurance for dogs, we could bring back dog licences. That could be done relatively straightforwardly. In fact I'm not even sure if they've ever technically lapsed.

    Somebody who wants to own a spaniel crossbreed pays a fiver, somebody who wants to own an Akita has to have training in managing dogs, insurance and an inspection of their house before they can get one for £500.

    Edit - apparently they were abandoned in 1987, but bringing them back would be fairly easy.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,189
    Carnyx said:

    The RNLI, for some reason I can't possibly imagine, floats to the surface of my mind.
    Confiscate the Bully XXXXLs, put them on the lifeboats to eat the immigrants?

    Out of the box thinking to enhance the KPIs, and turbocharge the team goals….

  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516

    Sir Harry asks if this drug squad is well named…
    A friend of mine and I had a very loud conversation about that once.

    In a police museum.

    Run by retired officers acting as volunteers.

    Near Birmingham.

    The looks we got...I swear that they followed us out of the room in the hope of catching us nicking stuff.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,617
    Two cracking tries for Fiji. Wales looking mediocre. Wales will probably win but, by god, Fiji are exciting to watch.
  • Leon said:

    Yes, but now the cops will be given the powers they need. And the coppers hate these dogs as much as anyone

    And anyone can anonymously report a dog in a park, and these dogs need to be walked; the owner won't know who did it

    A ban, should it happen (I wouldn't put it past this inept govt to flub it) will, I think, be effecitve enough to get the menace off our streets
    The cops don't have the resources/can't be bothered to do the work they already have

    Yes, anyone can report an anonymous dog in the park or the street. Do you expect the police to turn up immediately and apprehend the dog walker? Because otherwise how are they to know who the person is? It would have to be reported by someone who knows them, and where they live, which narrows things down considerably for the dog owner. Compare with drug dealers - how many of their neighbours dare report them despite them being responsible for mnay deaths?

    In an ideal world insurance might work, but in the real world it will only increase the costs of owning a dog for responsible dog owners, and have little impact on getting dangerous dogs out of circulation

  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745

    The cops don't have the resources/can't be bothered to do the work they already have

    Yes, anyone can report an anonymous dog in the park or the street. Do you expect the police to turn up immediately and apprehend the dog walker? Because otherwise how are they to know who the person is? It would have to be reported by someone who knows them, and where they live, which narrows things down considerably for the dog owner. Compare with drug dealers - how many of their neighbours dare report them despite them being responsible for mnay deaths?

    In an ideal world insurance might work, but in the real world it will only increase the costs of owning a dog for responsible dog owners, and have little impact on getting dangerous dogs out of circulation

    What a load of defeatist nonsense. A ban - with the threat of your dog being shot, if seen - means no one will walk the dogs, for fear of being spotted. These dogs will probably turn on their owners in madness (let's hope so). Anyway, end of problem

    Without the demand for new dogs the breeders will stop spplying them, which mwans the breed disappears. This isn't hard. It works in Australia
  • Leon said:

    Kill the dog? Does it for me

    The owner loses all that money, they won't buy another
    That *would* work, but it would have the animal lovers all over you. Most wouldn't object to a dangerous dog being put down, but they would be upset it it was Rover belonging to old Mrs Jones at no 22.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,189

    It's been a good 20 years since it was demolished, but I still remember the graffiti on the old A13 Beckton Flyover (one-way!) that said "South Korea KILL and EAT dogs!"
    IIRC, one of Rab C. Nesbitts chums was a cannibal who ate his own Rottweiler for LOLs.
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,262
    If these dogs are really that capable fighters, why not send them over to Ukraine -- and drop them from drones on Russian positions -- at night.

    (In this area, dangerous dogs are often kept by men selling illegal drugs. Same in the UK?)
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745

    That *would* work, but it would have the animal lovers all over you. Most wouldn't object to a dangerous dog being put down, but they would be upset it it was Rover belonging to old Mrs Jones at no 22.
    The Daily Mail has a poll on this. 94% want a ban

    94%!

    For you, mister Bully XL owner, ze war is over
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,262
    Quick reminder: The Seahawks game starts in less than an hour.
  • Leon said:

    What a load of defeatist nonsense. A ban - with the threat of your dog being shot, if seen - means no one will walk the dogs, for fear of being spotted. These dogs will probably turn on their owners in madness (let's hope so). Anyway, end of problem

    Without the demand for new dogs the breeders will stop spplying them, which mwans the breed disappears. This isn't hard. It works in Australia
    Not defeatist, just pointing out some potential pitfalls

    If we just implemented every first idea someone suggested that sounded good, we'd be in a right mess.

    Anyway, I'm sure the government will. Introduce some totally ineffective control measures, so this is probably a redundant discussion
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,617
    edited September 2023
    Question on tax.

    Is the threshold level for Additional Rate Income Tax currently frozen, like the Basic and Higher rates?

    (Reflecting on what measures I would adjust in response to HYUFD's "interesting" post.)
  • Leon said:

    The Daily Mail has a poll on this. 94% want a ban

    94%!

    For you, mister Bully XL owner, ze war is over
    I'd like a ban. But I'd like it to be successful.
  • IIRC, one of Rab C. Nesbitts chums was a cannibal who ate his own Rottweiler for LOLs.
    Well. It's one way to help the cost of living crisis.

    "Eat dog to help out"
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745

    If these dogs are really that capable fighters, why not send them over to Ukraine -- and drop them from drones on Russian positions -- at night.

    (In this area, dangerous dogs are often kept by men selling illegal drugs. Same in the UK?)

    Yes, but also a particular kind of inadequate male who needs to shore up his masculinity, plus some truly insane young women who see them as "glamorous" and cannot hope to control them on a leash

    From what I see a big grown man cannot always control them if they flip
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516

    I've always thought of teaching as like nursing, a vocation rather than a career. The reward is not the pay but the satisfaction. Two of a number of jobs that are incredibly important but poorly paid.
    TBF, the pay of a teacher isn't bad. There are jobs where you work less and are paid more, but they have less security and usually worse pensions so it evens out.

    The problem is the job satisfaction at the moment is off the scale in minus numbers.

    And the people who have promised to turn it round are the selfsame twats who buggered it up to start with.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516
    edited September 2023
    Leon said:

    Yes, but also a particular kind of inadequate male who needs to shore up his masculinity, plus some truly insane young women who see them as "glamorous" and cannot hope to control them on a leash

    From what I see a big grown man cannot always control them if they flip
    Ummmm...which insane young women keep inadequate males on the leash, and why can big grown men not always control insane young women if they flip?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,256
    ...

    FPT for @Mexicanpete

    You do realise that the pejorative "Karen" is RACIST against the KAREN people of Burma?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen_people
    But that is not

    FPT for @Mexicanpete

    You do realise that the pejorative "Karen" is RACIST against the KAREN people of Burma?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen_people
    But that is not from where the pejorative "Karen" is derived. The derivation is from a popular American name popular amongst women if a particular age.

    Whereas the term may be sexist, I do not believe it to be racist.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745

    Not defeatist, just pointing out some potential pitfalls

    If we just implemented every first idea someone suggested that sounded good, we'd be in a right mess.

    Anyway, I'm sure the government will. Introduce some totally ineffective control measures, so this is probably a redundant discussion
    OK, Kommissar Sensible, what would you do if you were Home Sec, confronted by that awful vid from Brum? Do nothing? That doesn't work. If you do nothing there will inevitably be another video in a day or two, possibly worse (a child dying? An old lady ripped apart) and then still more videos, and the public is clamouring for a ban, and social media is demanding a ban, and YOU will get the blame for any deaths after this video

    She really had no choice. A ban it is. But what would you do that's "better"?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745
    Fantastic match: best yet
  • ydoethur said:

    As an alternative to insurance for dogs, we could bring back dog licences. That could be done relatively straightforwardly. In fact I'm not even sure if they've ever technically lapsed.

    Somebody who wants to own a spaniel crossbreed pays a fiver, somebody who wants to own an Akita has to have training in managing dogs, insurance and an inspection of their house before they can get one for £500.

    Edit - apparently they were abandoned in 1987, but bringing them back would be fairly easy.

    ISTR they were 7/6 per dog in 1964 and the Wilson government didn't bother to raise it. Under Heath they were still 37.5p and impossible to enforce. I'm surprised they lasted two whole terms of Mrs Thatcher. Almost nothing else did.
  • ...

    But that is not But that is not from where the pejorative "Karen" is derived. The derivation is from a popular American name popular amongst women if a particular age.

    Whereas the term may be sexist, I do not believe it to be racist.
    It would be racist if you were of Karen ethnicity!
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Cracking game of Rugby Wales/Fiji 18-14 HT
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745

    Cracking game of Rugby Wales/Fiji 18-14 HT

    Even if Fiji lose I can see them giving Australia a torrid time
  • Not looking good for ukraine now sadly. From telegraph.

    Ukraine’s counter-offensive is stalling. The West must prepare for humiliation

    We cannot have a repeat of the foreign-policy errors that followed Putin’s 2014 Crimean land grab

    RICHARD KEMP10 September 2023 • 11:00am

    Time is running out for Ukraine. After 18 months of war, it is no longer a question of if the Western alliance will falter, but when. Since the start, despite making many of the right noises and supplying some military hardware, France and Germany, in particular, have been reluctant partners. Their leaders have often seemed more concerned with finding an “off-ramp” for Vladimir Putin than ejecting his forces from Ukraine. As well as dependency on Russian energy, a pacifist instinct among Western European political classes has led to neglect of their armed forces and a corresponding fear of escalation.

    As the provider of the lion’s share of backing for Ukraine, it is the US calling the shots in this war. Yet, since the earliest days, President Biden, too, has been dragging his heels, giving just about enough military assistance to keep Ukraine fighting, but intentionally not enough to enable a victory.

    Like his Western European allies, Biden has been successfully deterred by Putin’s empty threats of widening the war. Faint-hearted concerns over provoking Putin explains his failure to provide urgently-needed weapons, including combat planes and long-range missiles, and for his obstinate resistance against Nato membership for Ukraine.

    Now, polls in both Europe and the US show public support for military aid to Kyiv dropping away, with one recent survey indicating that less than 50 per cent of Americans are in favour of additional funding. This at least partially reflects sluggish progress in Ukraine’s counter-offensive, which has seen only limited gains so far.

    Western military analysts and the media built expectations that, this summer, Kyiv would repeat its striking victories of last autumn at Kharkiv and Kherson. Now, people are wondering how much bang they are getting for their buck, and whether the significant investment made by their countries will ever achieve anything concrete.

    Advertisement

    There is also growing disquiet about Ukrainian corruption, amplified by those voices who oppose American engagement in Europe for other reasons. Corruption concerns do need to be addressed, but they do not trump the West’s overriding strategic interest in preventing a Russian victory.

    Zelensky obviously recognises the coming hinge point in Western support, and his recent actions may indicate a degree of alarm. He has, for example, jailed the allegedly corrupt tycoon and former provincial governor Igor Kolomoisky, a long-term ally and supporter. He sacked defence minister Oleksii Reznikov at the height of the war, again amid corruption allegations. The latter may signal a coming change to Ukraine’s military strategy.







  • Why Ukraine’s defeat could mean the end of NATO in its current form. As the West’s proxy war in Ukraine slips inexorably towards utter failure, the neocons behind the debacle are faced with dwindling avenues of retreat. Early confidence that Russia, in its current form, would collapse under the pressure of the harshest sanctions regime in history failed to materialize. Early Russian miscalculations on the battlefield were not followed by a military meltdown, but by a pragmatic display of strategic adaptability, which is begrudgingly admired in the military war rooms of the West. The Russian army, far from falling apart, has steeled itself into making bold decisions to retreat when prudent and advance when required, both of which have proven devastating for their Ukrainian opponents. It follows that, as the Western political elites that cultivated this conflict peer into another winter of political, military, and potentially economic discontent, it is now that we potentially face the most dangerous period in Europe since the outbreak of WWII.

    https://twitter.com/BowesChay/status/1700841794957615570?s=20
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295

    ...

    But that is not But that is not from where the pejorative "Karen" is derived. The derivation is from a popular American name popular amongst women if a particular age.

    Whereas the term may be sexist, I do not believe it to be racist.
    Best case: Sunil's winding you up; other case: Sunil's very odd. I prefer to believe case 1.
  • Now that the Ukrainian Zaporozhe Offensive is grinding to a halt after three months of brutal but absolutely fruitless attacks, a note on how the Russians have shaped the battlefield - in some ways literally - for the last year to win this critical battle. The Russians, the Ukrainians, and NATO all know that the road to Ukrainian victory leads through Melitopol. The Stavka identified the land corridor to Crimea as key terrain before the war - the Russians likely launched a large operation in Ukraine rather than a more limited intervention to "bail out" the LDPR in February 2022 due to their overriding need to secure the Zaporozhe Corridor and prevent Ukrainian forces occupying the Azov coast from threatening Crimea. In turn NATO has developed a clear plan of action to isolate and effectively besiege Crimea should their Ukrainian proxy manage to seize Zaporozhe and left-bank Kherson, likely working off prewar Ukrainian schemes to deter and punish a repeat of Russia's more limited 2014 intervention. Simply put, no other direction of attack promised nearly the potential for a rapid end to the war on Ukrainian terms.

    https://twitter.com/ArmchairW/status/1700352606034665744?s=20
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited September 2023

    IIRC, one of Rab C. Nesbitts chums was a cannibal who ate his own Rottweiler for LOLs.
    Wasn't that Still Game? Definitely a "status dog" owner, and not a chum at all of the heroes, though I can't recall the dinner bit. Unless it was a kebab?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Leon said:

    What a load of defeatist nonsense. A ban - with the threat of your dog being shot, if seen - means no one will walk the dogs, for fear of being spotted. These dogs will probably turn on their owners in madness (let's hope so). Anyway, end of problem

    Without the demand for new dogs the breeders will stop spplying them, which mwans the breed disappears. This isn't hard. It works in Australia
    Sorry to say it, but there are far too many dogs around now. Every third person seems to have one.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    Sanders said:

    Now that the Ukrainian Zaporozhe Offensive is grinding to a halt after three months of brutal but absolutely fruitless attacks, a note on how the Russians have shaped the battlefield - in some ways literally - for the last year to win this critical battle. The Russians, the Ukrainians, and NATO all know that the road to Ukrainian victory leads through Melitopol. The Stavka identified the land corridor to Crimea as key terrain before the war - the Russians likely launched a large operation in Ukraine rather than a more limited intervention to "bail out" the LDPR in February 2022 due to their overriding need to secure the Zaporozhe Corridor and prevent Ukrainian forces occupying the Azov coast from threatening Crimea. In turn NATO has developed a clear plan of action to isolate and effectively besiege Crimea should their Ukrainian proxy manage to seize Zaporozhe and left-bank Kherson, likely working off prewar Ukrainian schemes to deter and punish a repeat of Russia's more limited 2014 intervention. Simply put, no other direction of attack promised nearly the potential for a rapid end to the war on Ukrainian terms.

    https://twitter.com/ArmchairW/status/1700352606034665744?s=20

    How's the weather in Moscow?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516
    Aaaand we're back. And on a Sunday evening instead of a Saturday lunchtime.

    Is the return of the Russki Troll a sign Putin having eliminated Fatso has successfully integrated his crew of drunken weirdos into Russian command structures?
  • Sadly the ukraine war has been a total disaster for the west. There are no good options left.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,189
    A
    Sanders said:

    Why Ukraine’s defeat could mean the end of NATO in its current form. As the West’s proxy war in Ukraine slips inexorably towards utter failure, the neocons behind the debacle are faced with dwindling avenues of retreat. Early confidence that Russia, in its current form, would collapse under the pressure of the harshest sanctions regime in history failed to materialize. Early Russian miscalculations on the battlefield were not followed by a military meltdown, but by a pragmatic display of strategic adaptability, which is begrudgingly admired in the military war rooms of the West. The Russian army, far from falling apart, has steeled itself into making bold decisions to retreat when prudent and advance when required, both of which have proven devastating for their Ukrainian opponents. It follows that, as the Western political elites that cultivated this conflict peer into another winter of political, military, and potentially economic discontent, it is now that we potentially face the most dangerous period in Europe since the outbreak of WWII.

    https://twitter.com/BowesChay/status/1700841794957615570?s=20

    Hi

    You are late

    Also, if a plane crashes on the Ukrainian/ Republic of China border, which side do you bury the survivors?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516

    How's the weather in Moscow?
    Wet.

    Putin's reign continues.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,013

    Why shouldn't non-workers contribute to those things ?

    And given that only about 5% of estates pay inheritance tax your idea would be a tax cut on unearned income for the very rich.

    Is this really your view as to what the Conservative party should be for ?
    They did, they paid in national insurance when they were working. Now most estates in the south especially are above the IHT threshold. Absolutely the Conservative party should be about preserving wealth and inheritance in the family, that is what Toryism has always been about, even before free market liberals joined it to keep out Labour
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Leon said:

    What a load of defeatist nonsense. A ban - with the threat of your dog being shot, if seen - means no one will walk the dogs, for fear of being spotted. These dogs will probably turn on their owners in madness (let's hope so). Anyway, end of problem

    Without the demand for new dogs the breeders will stop spplying them, which mwans the breed disappears. This isn't hard. It works in Australia
    Citation, please? I'd be interested to know *how* it works in Australia, actually.
  • Leon said:

    OK, Kommissar Sensible, what would you do if you were Home Sec, confronted by that awful vid from Brum? Do nothing? That doesn't work. If you do nothing there will inevitably be another video in a day or two, possibly worse (a child dying? An old lady ripped apart) and then still more videos, and the public is clamouring for a ban, and social media is demanding a ban, and YOU will get the blame for any deaths after this video

    She really had no choice. A ban it is. But what would you do that's "better"?

    Well, she could have said she would be speaking to all people and agencies involved to understand the incident, what led to it and get any background information. To try to gain an understanding of the situation and how it could have been prevented. And to discuss with the police and the council what the barriers were for them to take pre-emptive action, and how these could be removed. (I suspect Birmingham City Council financial woes might feature heavily in the reposnse to that one)

    An effective politician would take the time to find out the details and get a thorough understanding of the problem, and get input from people, like the community, local councils, police, vets, rspca etc before deciding on the best way forward.

    I think it's an incredibly difficult problem, and tbh, I can't come up with a solution. A ban may seem obvious, but you have to game all the possible consequences. The first question is: *what* do you ban? If the breed, how do you define it? If the behaviour, how do you define that?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,013
    Carnyx said:

    Red tape. Very un-Conservative.

    Well, what other explanation is there, in all seriousness?

    (Edit: very glad when something is done that is effective. I don't even like having pit bulls and Staffies around.)

    Good on the PM for banning these dangerous XL Bully Dogs, now can we ensure owners of alsatians, pit bulls and rottweillers have to have a license too please
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    HYUFD said:

    They did, they paid in national insurance when they were working. Now most estates in the south especially are above the IHT threshold. Absolutely the Conservative party should be about preserving wealth and inheritance in the family, that is what Toryism has always been about, even before free market liberals joined it to keep out Labour
    "preserving wealth and inheritance in the family" = not paying their fair share of taxes, especially on massive capital gains orchestrated by the "Conservative" Party. Which used to be one of hard work and self-respect. Now, no longer.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516
    Gosh, that was quick.

    Nearly as quick as Putin's elimination of Prigozhin.
  • Sanders said:

    Not looking good for ukraine now sadly. From telegraph.

    Ukraine’s counter-offensive is stalling. The West must prepare for humiliation

    We cannot have a repeat of the foreign-policy errors that followed Putin’s 2014 Crimean land grab

    RICHARD KEMP10 September 2023 • 11:00am

    Time is running out for Ukraine. After 18 months of war, it is no longer a question of if the Western alliance will falter, but when. Since the start, despite making many of the right noises and supplying some military hardware, France and Germany, in particular, have been reluctant partners. Their leaders have often seemed more concerned with finding an “off-ramp” for Vladimir Putin than ejecting his forces from Ukraine. As well as dependency on Russian energy, a pacifist instinct among Western European political classes has led to neglect of their armed forces and a corresponding fear of escalation.

    As the provider of the lion’s share of backing for Ukraine, it is the US calling the shots in this war. Yet, since the earliest days, President Biden, too, has been dragging his heels, giving just about enough military assistance to keep Ukraine fighting, but intentionally not enough to enable a victory.

    Like his Western European allies, Biden has been successfully deterred by Putin’s empty threats of widening the war. Faint-hearted concerns over provoking Putin explains his failure to provide urgently-needed weapons, including combat planes and long-range missiles, and for his obstinate resistance against Nato membership for Ukraine.

    Now, polls in both Europe and the US show public support for military aid to Kyiv dropping away, with one recent survey indicating that less than 50 per cent of Americans are in favour of additional funding. This at least partially reflects sluggish progress in Ukraine’s counter-offensive, which has seen only limited gains so far.

    Western military analysts and the media built expectations that, this summer, Kyiv would repeat its striking victories of last autumn at Kharkiv and Kherson. Now, people are wondering how much bang they are getting for their buck, and whether the significant investment made by their countries will ever achieve anything concrete.

    Advertisement

    There is also growing disquiet about Ukrainian corruption, amplified by those voices who oppose American engagement in Europe for other reasons. Corruption concerns do need to be addressed, but they do not trump the West’s overriding strategic interest in preventing a Russian victory.

    Zelensky obviously recognises the coming hinge point in Western support, and his recent actions may indicate a degree of alarm. He has, for example, jailed the allegedly corrupt tycoon and former provincial governor Igor Kolomoisky, a long-term ally and supporter. He sacked defence minister Oleksii Reznikov at the height of the war, again amid corruption allegations. The latter may signal a coming change to Ukraine’s military strategy.







    Grim.
  • Andy_JS said:

    Sorry to say it, but there are far too many dogs around now. Every third person seems to have one.
    True, Andy.

    Just had our little dog spayed. I was sad about it because she's a beuatiful dog, well bred and would be a good mum, but there are simply too many dogs around and the idea of putting another half-a-dozen or so border collie puppies on the market was just unacceptable.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    HYUFD said:

    Good on the PM for banning these dangerous XL Bully Dogs, now can we ensure owners of alsatians, pit bulls and rottweillers have to have a license too please
    PM? Banning? News to me. Unless you are confusing Mr Sunak and Ms Braverman, not to mention the difference between tweeting and actually doing something.

    And re other dogs, see my posts below.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,136
    Andy_JS said:

    Sorry to say it, but there are far too many dogs around now. Every third person seems to have one.
    To be fair on XL Bullies, they are doing a good job reducing the number (particularly elderly spaniels).
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,013
    Carnyx said:

    PM? Banning? News to me. Unless you are confusing Mr Sunak and Ms Braverman, not to mention the difference between tweeting and actually doing something.

    And re other dogs, see my posts below.
    The Home Secretary leads on criminal law and the PM is hardly going to contradict her when he gets back from the G20 given how popular a ban is with most voters and the Mail and tabloids (and Leon)
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745


    Well, she could have said she would be speaking to all people and agencies involved to understand the incident, what led to it and get any background information. To try to gain an understanding of the situation and how it could have been prevented. And to discuss with the police and the council what the barriers were for them to take pre-emptive action, and how these could be removed. (I suspect Birmingham City Council financial woes might feature heavily in the reposnse to that one)

    An effective politician would take the time to find out the details and get a thorough understanding of the problem, and get input from people, like the community, local councils, police, vets, rspca etc before deciding on the best way forward.

    I think it's an incredibly difficult problem, and tbh, I can't come up with a solution. A ban may seem obvious, but you have to game all the possible consequences. The first question is: *what* do you ban? If the breed, how do you define it? If the behaviour, how do you define that?
    OK, lol, pathetic: don't become a politician
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516

    Grim.
    Hmmmm.

    If you read the whole article rather than the semi-literate subeditor's headline and the selected quotations of Lardy Lad's associate, he's actually saying there are several things that can be done, the issue is they're not being done and if they aren't, things might go sour.

    I've no idea whether he's right or not. I would say he seems to downplay the role of Biden in, for example, providing weapons based on what I know, but I could easily be wrong.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    True, Andy.

    Just had our little dog spayed. I was sad about it because she's a beuatiful dog, well bred and would be a good mum, but there are simply too many dogs around and the idea of putting another half-a-dozen or so border collie puppies on the market was just unacceptable.
    Quite so.

    A friend of mine had his dog (collie x lurcher or terrier) castrated as well. He was lying on its back on its bean bag with its four legs up in the air while I was playing chess with his "owner". I was hopelessly handicapped in the game by the utterly uneasy feeling there was something missing but I couldn't put my finger on it ...
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516
    Carnyx said:

    Quite so.

    A friend of mine had his dog (collie x lurcher or terrier) castrated as well. He was lying on its back on its bean bag with its four legs up in the air while I was playing chess with his "owner". I was hopelessly handicapped in the game by the utterly uneasy feeling there was something missing but I couldn't put my finger on it ...
    Why were you playing chess next to a dog while it was being castrated?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    HYUFD said:

    The Home Secretary leads on criminal law and the PM is hardly going to contradict her when he gets back from the G20 given how popular a ban is with most voters and the Mail and tabloids (and Leon)
    You said "Good on the PM for banning". Unless English comprehension has changed since I were a bairn, that's not the same thing at all.
  • Carnyx said:

    Citation, please? I'd be interested to know *how* it works in Australia, actually.
    I wondered that too. I suspect Australia's stringent controls on import of animals (including semen and ova) would prevent a lot of dog breeds getting into the country in the first place. Thus, once most of the problem animals in the country have been eliminated, there will no longer be a problem.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,013
    Carnyx said:

    "preserving wealth and inheritance in the family" = not paying their fair share of taxes, especially on massive capital gains orchestrated by the "Conservative" Party. Which used to be one of hard work and self-respect. Now, no longer.
    They already paid tax on that estate and income and assets their working life.

    The Tory party has always been a party which has supported inherited wealth, indeed even Thatcher would arguably have been a Gladstone free market Liberal rather than a Tory in the 19th century. Today's Conservative Party does indeed support hard work and the free market on the whole (certainly compared to Labour) but those are add ons from free market liberals, inheritance is more a cornerstone of Toryism
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    Why were you playing chess next to a dog while it was being castrated?
    I said 'had' not 'was having'. But yes, ambiguity there. I stand or rather lie corrected, thanks.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    edited September 2023
    Andy_JS said:

    Sorry to say it, but there are far too many dogs around now. Every third person seems to have one.
    I thought you were all for individual freedom.

    For what it's worth I agree dangerous dog breed should be banned.

    Braverman has total control over this since according to the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991, the following dogs are banned:

    Dogs bred for fighting.
    (1) This section applies to—
    (a) any dog of the type known as the pit bull terrier;
    (b) any dog of the type known as the Japanese tosa; and
    (c) any dog of any type designated for the purposes of this section by an order of the Secretary of State, being a type appearing to him to be bred for fighting or to have the characteristics of a type bred for that purpose.


    https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1991/65/section/1

    No new legislation needed.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745
    Well done Wales! Deserved
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745

    I thought you were all for individual freedom.

    For what it's worth I agree dangerous dog breed should be banned. Braverman has total controll over this since according to the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991, the following dogs are banned:

    Dogs bred for fighting.
    (1) This section applies to—
    (a) any dog of the type known as the pit bull terrier;
    (b) any dog of the type known as the Japanese tosa; and
    (c) any dog of any type designated for the purposes of this section by an order of the Secretary of State, being a type appearing to him to be bred for fighting or to have the characteristics of a type bred for that purpose.


    https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1991/65/section/1

    No new legislation needed.
    Yes, as the legal expert on Twitter has pointed out, all that is needed is for the Home Sec to tick a box marked "XL Bully?" and that's that. No new legislation required, no Parliamentary debate. Just do it
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited September 2023
    HYUFD said:

    They already paid tax on that estate and income and assets their working life.

    The Tory party has always been a party which has supported inherited wealth, indeed even Thatcher would arguably have been a Gladstone free market Liberal rather than a Tory in the 19th century. Today's Conservative Party does indeed support hard work and the free market on the whole (certainly compared to Labour) but those are add ons from free market liberals, inheritance is more a cornerstone of Toryism
    THEY DID NOT PAY TAX ON THAT INCOME FROM MASSIVE CAPITAL GAINS.

    Look at how estates are de facto immune from CGT.

    CGT allowance when you are alive - 6k, 3K next year.

    Dead, effectively 500k for many.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    That didn't take long:

    Luis Rubiales resigns as president of Spanish FA over Jenni Hermoso kiss

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/66637879
  • Leon said:

    OK, lol, pathetic: don't become a politician
    Hahaha, I *couldn't* be a politician, Leon, I'm too honest!

    Don't you become a politician either, I suffer to think what knee jerk ideas you might implement!
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    I wonder whether it would be possible to be a successful politician while criticising dog ownership.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    edited September 2023
    Leon said:

    Yes, as the legal expert on Twitter has pointed out, all that is needed is for the Home Sec to tick a box marked "XL Bully?" and that's that. No new legislation required, no Parliamentary debate. Just do it
    Although Barverman may have to change gender ("...a type appearing to him to be bred for fighting...") but fortunately that's very simple these days.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Marvellous Mark Drakefords boys going well
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745

    Hahaha, I *couldn't* be a politician, Leon, I'm too honest!

    Don't you become a politician either, I suffer to think what knee jerk ideas you might implement!
    Oh God, I'd be terrible

    I think I'd be quite good as a dictator, tho. I am quite capable of merciless cruelty. Not much fun for anyone else
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,263
    How to chastise your cat by using cat language

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/S3IXhpQ-ATI
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745
    edited September 2023
    Wales deserve their lead, but a damn shame if Fiji go out at the Pool Stage. They are so exciting
  • Andy_JS said:

    Sorry to say it, but there are far too many dogs around now. Every third person seems to have one.
    I think you're right, although the cost of living may result in the number of pet dogs reducing.
    The sheer volume of poo produced by pet dogs every day is quite phenomenal and is a big environmental problem, as well as a potential health hazard.

    Cats are problematic too, in that they are a threat to birds and small mammals.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    HYUFD said:

    They already paid tax on that estate and income and assets their working life.

    The Tory party has always been a party which has supported inherited wealth, indeed even Thatcher would arguably have been a Gladstone free market Liberal rather than a Tory in the 19th century. Today's Conservative Party does indeed support hard work and the free market on the whole (certainly compared to Labour) but those are add ons from free market liberals, inheritance is more a cornerstone of Toryism
    Even Thatcher fails the HYUFD 'True Tory' test.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,798
    Leon said:

    Even if Fiji lose I can see them giving Australia a torrid time
    On another subject - on your tour of the English side of the border with Wales, you missed out the city I visited today: Chester. Which, it feels, is just as attractive as ever and is in rude health. I think Chester gets a bit overlooked; the instinctive reaction to it always seems to be "it's not as good as York". Which is true, but 99% of England also fails on that metric. There certainly isn't as much for the touristin Chester as in York. But there are few more pleasant cities to be in. The city walls, the rows and the riverside are all remarkable, the cathedral as fine as any; the city is awash with Roman ruins, and there are more interesting historical buildings than you can shake a stick at (I'm sure a curious visitor accompanying fewer children could have found out a bit more about this but that's all I can give you.)
    In common with Hereford, Shrewsbury and so on, it feels a long way west, but isn't really remote; it's only 45 minutes from Manchester and less from Liverpool, but doesn't feel like a satellite of either.
    Mainly, it's a very pleasant place to be. We fantasised vaguely of retiring there.
  • Leon said:

    Oh God, I'd be terrible

    I think I'd be quite good as a dictator, tho. I am quite capable of merciless cruelty. Not much fun for anyone else
    For some reason the name Caligula came into my head. Or maybe Nero
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,263

    Although Barverman may have to change gender ("...a type appearing to him to be bred for fighting...") but fortunately that's very simple these days.
    It's not often I preempt the lawyers on a point of law, but ALL TOGETHER NOW...

    Interpretation Act 1978, section 6: Gender and number.
    See https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/section/6
  • Cookie said:

    On another subject - on your tour of the English side of the border with Wales, you missed out the city I visited today: Chester. Which, it feels, is just as attractive as ever and is in rude health. I think Chester gets a bit overlooked; the instinctive reaction to it always seems to be "it's not as good as York". Which is true, but 99% of England also fails on that metric. There certainly isn't as much for the touristin Chester as in York. But there are few more pleasant cities to be in. The city walls, the rows and the riverside are all remarkable, the cathedral as fine as any; the city is awash with Roman ruins, and there are more interesting historical buildings than you can shake a stick at (I'm sure a curious visitor accompanying fewer children could have found out a bit more about this but that's all I can give you.)
    In common with Hereford, Shrewsbury and so on, it feels a long way west, but isn't really remote; it's only 45 minutes from Manchester and less from Liverpool, but doesn't feel like a satellite of either.
    Mainly, it's a very pleasant place to be. We fantasised vaguely of retiring there.
    I was on a course in Chester about 25 years ago. A very nice city. I remember going for a jog around the city walls one morning.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745

    I think you're right, although the cost of living may result in the number of pet dogs reducing.
    The sheer volume of poo produced by pet dogs every day is quite phenomenal and is a big environmental problem, as well as a potential health hazard.

    Cats are problematic too, in that they are a threat to birds and small mammals.
    The POOP issue - it is a real thing

    https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/is-your-pet-killing-the-planet/
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,798
    ISTR most of this board played rugby in the 80s. I can't be the only one who laments the demise of the well-choreographed tap penalty with dummy runners and a receiver with his back to defenders. Why does no-one do this any more?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    I think you're right, although the cost of living may result in the number of pet dogs reducing.
    The sheer volume of poo produced by pet dogs every day is quite phenomenal and is a big environmental problem, as well as a potential health hazard.

    Cats are problematic too, in that they are a threat to birds and small mammals.
    Cats are okay with me, because they don't threaten human life.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,013
    Cookie said:

    On another subject - on your tour of the English side of the border with Wales, you missed out the city I visited today: Chester. Which, it feels, is just as attractive as ever and is in rude health. I think Chester gets a bit overlooked; the instinctive reaction to it always seems to be "it's not as good as York". Which is true, but 99% of England also fails on that metric. There certainly isn't as much for the touristin Chester as in York. But there are few more pleasant cities to be in. The city walls, the rows and the riverside are all remarkable, the cathedral as fine as any; the city is awash with Roman ruins, and there are more interesting historical buildings than you can shake a stick at (I'm sure a curious visitor accompanying fewer children could have found out a bit more about this but that's all I can give you.)
    In common with Hereford, Shrewsbury and so on, it feels a long way west, but isn't really remote; it's only 45 minutes from Manchester and less from Liverpool, but doesn't feel like a satellite of either.
    Mainly, it's a very pleasant place to be. We fantasised vaguely of retiring there.
    Was in Chester this weekend too seeing a friend and Knutsford yesterday, certainly plenty of history and good history displays and workshops in the cathedral
  • That didn't take long:

    Luis Rubiales resigns as president of Spanish FA over Jenni Hermoso kiss

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/66637879

    At least doing it his way, his name is likely to be remembered for, ooh, maybe a few weeks longer?
This discussion has been closed.