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Kemi now clear betting favourite to be next CON leader – politicalbetting.com

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  • I wouldn’t ban cash. But if businesses only want to go cashless, up to them. Cash is a rubbish, outdated and expensive system. If businesses want to be cashless, so be it.
    I agree about businesses and the choice should be their's

    However, while cash use is much less there will always be a demand for lose change or indeed some of our elderly who will continue to use it

    Personally I only use cash at the hairdressers or where a business demands it...

    Everyone who does jobs for us is paid through our banking app
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,213
    dixiedean said:

    Yes.
    Kids just don't recognise the coins. We have the same trouble with teaching the time on clocks.
    They just don't see them. But they're on the national curriculum. As are Roman numerals for some reason.
    I think this is what modern Maths is supposed to solve.
    How else are they going to know when certain movies were copyrighted without Roman numerals?

    https://youtu.be/S9qom1xMSiU?si=IFhPDRX1TgWWnTsq
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    edited October 2023

    Is Chas on stamps now? Stopped using those a while back - just do click and collect with the postman nowadays.

    (P.S. find the prejudice that elderly folk can’t/won’t use contactless bizarre. Why don’t we put our efforts into reducing digital exclusion rather than propping up an obsolete form of barter?)
    In Ireland they've started doing digital stamps. Have you seen them?
    https://www.anpost.com/Post-Parcels/Sending/Digital-Stamp
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    "Digital exclusion" isn't a clear cut thing.

    Are you "digitally excluded" if you refuse to touch Facebook with a 10ft pole?

    What if you refuse to install 10 parking apps of unknown provenance and security?

    Or you prefer not to bother paying for mobile data that you don't need?
    How do all these parking apps work? You have to load credit onto them in advance, or you link them to your card to be charged each time?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,815
    Andy_JS said:

    It surprises me how popular cash is once you go outside metropolitan areas. Even younger people use it a bit, which they certainly don't in central London, etc.

    I saw a handwritten sign in the window of a takeaway on Wigan's main drinking street recently:"We accept card payments". The fact that they need to spell it out suggests card payments aren't exactly the norm yet.
  • Carnyx said:

    I was going to say, wait till they get onto biscuits, but then I remembered that biscuits became part of the arguments about atrocities in Belgium in 1914, with German biscuits being cancelled and renamed Belgian biscuits, though oddly enough not cakes (or at least not Battenberg).
    I've got a few ex squaddies as mates. They have a completely different take on Belgian Biscuits than you...
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    In Ireland they've started doing digital stamps. Have you seen them?
    https://www.anpost.com/Post-Parcels/Sending/Digital-Stamp
    Damn good idea - much better than faffing around printing out labels.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,784
    Carnyx said:

    Mr Yousaf's relatives are already UK subjects, anyway. So luck is not involved there. (Except obvs in getting out safely.)
    Im not talking about the ones currently visiting but the ones being visited and Im picking him out only because he's a well publicised case. But across Europe there will be a handful of well connected people who have friends and relatives they can assist and will. But there will be no demand to take in a million refugees.
  • The French Minister of the Interior, Gérald Darmanin has ordered that Pro-Palestinian Demonstrations across the Country be Banned and that anybody who Participates in them will be Arrested.
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,213
    Carnyx said:

    Damn good idea - much better than faffing around printing out labels.
    Those silly state owned companies with their innovation
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,675
    Andy_JS said:

    It surprises me how popular cash is once you go outside metropolitan areas. Even younger people use it a bit, which they certainly don't in central London, etc.

    There was a stand at the party conferences demanding that all businesses accept both cash and electronic payment - I think they were basically a pro-cash group but I didn't have time to investigate.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    I've got a few ex squaddies as mates. They have a completely different take on Belgian Biscuits than you...
    Ah. The things one learns on PB, after a quick check of Urban Dictionary. Though I see Empire Biscuit also has its double meaning.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,714
    .
    Andy_JS said:

    John Gray being his normal optimistic self.

    "John Gray: liberal civilisation is finished
    Our reigning ideology has rotted from within
    BY JOHN GRAY"

    https://unherd.com/2023/10/john-gray-liberal-civilisation-is-finished/

    I read some book by Gray several decades ago, and decided he was a bit of a berk.
    I've not seen any reason to revise that assessment since.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,359

    Indeed, and it's been an increasing problem for Primary School teachers for a while now. Because so few children handle coins these days (for a variety of reasons) the standard methods for inculcating practical mental arithmetic are disappearing. There's less need (and less comprehension for the need) to calculate change due, or the combinations of coins needed to buy sweets etc.

    (Also, thanks for the Royal Mail info.)
    When I was knee-high to a grasshopper, my dad would get me to calculate the men's weekly wages in cash. About half of the men were paid monthly by cheque; the others wanted weekly cash. The secretary would calculate each man's wages, and my dad would write out the cheques. Then he were had to deal with the cash.

    To make up the pay, one man might need (say) £154.23, and another £178.61 (figures illustrative). He would ask me to calculate how many 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 50p, £1, £5, £10 etc he would need to get from the bank to pay all the men. In the example above, we would need 2 pennies and 1 tuppence, etc.

    I loved doing it. Later on, I would occasionally even go to the bank to get the cash - which caused a little alarm at the bank when a young lad with a burly labourner as munder turned up asking for a few grand out of a business account...

    I think it certainly helped me with mental arithmetic.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,918
    edited October 2023
    Sandpit said:

    How do all these parking apps work? You have to load credit onto them in advance, or you link them to your card to be charged each time?
    I refuse to install any, so I can't answer fully. :smile:

    I believe some store your credit card details (like Amazon do, if you let them). I know they have to jump through a lot of hoops with the card companies to do this but I still don't think it is a good idea.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Andy_JS said:

    John Gray being his normal optimistic self.

    "John Gray: liberal civilisation is finished
    Our reigning ideology has rotted from within
    BY JOHN GRAY"

    https://unherd.com/2023/10/john-gray-liberal-civilisation-is-finished/

    "The restraints on freedom of speech and expression that exist in formally liberal societies are not imposed by a dictatorial or authoritarian government. On the whole, they’re imposed by civil institutions themselves. They’re imposed by universities, by arts associations, by museums. All the kinds of things that happen in China, because people are terrified to deviate from the government, happen by themselves spontaneously here. And that’s a profound metamorphosis. I can’t see how we can get back to a situation in which tolerance and freedom of speech and expression for some very wide range is taken for granted. Which it was — I’m old enough to remember the Seventies and Eighties, and even almost up to the Nineties, it was simply taken for granted that you could think and say what you like."
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    geoffw said:

    Where does an "Ayrton" come from?
    to add: ok, I've worked it out - rhyming slang
    GRATUITOUS GENDER STEREOTYPING WARNING:

    Women don't get rhyming slang. There, I've said it.

    Ask what plates of meat, brown bread, Ayrton or chalfonts mean and they can't figure it out. Men usually can.

    Tin hat on.

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Im not talking about the ones currently visiting but the ones being visited and Im picking him out only because he's a well publicised case. But across Europe there will be a handful of well connected people who have friends and relatives they can assist and will. But there will be no demand to take in a million refugees.
    Had forgotten about the visitor/visitee distinction (but actually I don't know what passports the latter hold).
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    "Digital exclusion" isn't a clear cut thing.

    Are you "digitally excluded" if you refuse to touch Facebook with a 10ft pole?

    What if you refuse to install 10 parking apps of unknown provenance and security?

    Or you prefer not to bother paying for mobile data that you don't need?
    I’d answer No to all of your questions.

    However, if you insist on paying cash for everything you certainly ARE digitally excluded because, apart from anything else, you are unable to buy anything online.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    Andy_JS said:

    "The restraints on freedom of speech and expression that exist in formally liberal societies are not imposed by a dictatorial or authoritarian government. On the whole, they’re imposed by civil institutions themselves. They’re imposed by universities, by arts associations, by museums. All the kinds of things that happen in China, because people are terrified to deviate from the government, happen by themselves spontaneously here. And that’s a profound metamorphosis. I can’t see how we can get back to a situation in which tolerance and freedom of speech and expression for some very wide range is taken for granted. Which it was — I’m old enough to remember the Seventies and Eighties, and even almost up to the Nineties, it was simply taken for granted that you could think and say what you like."
    Yes, we took liberalism for granted - having to fight for it now.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Aus 177 all out. A comprehensive win for the Saffas.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,714
    CNN is airing an interview with John fucking Bolton and letting him assert with no evidence that Iran directed the timing of the Hamas attack. Bolton has no access to intelligence besides the newspaper. Zero lessons learned from the Iraq war propaganda disaster.
    https://twitter.com/TVietor08/status/1712448711358648358
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,688

    How ? One of the things notable about European Jews is how they have successfully blended in with the country;s culture. One of the more memorable thing for me was reading accounts of Nazis beating up Jewish WW1 war veterans. people who had done their duty for country and Kaiser more than the thugs attacking them.

    Our recent brush as a host country has been naive in parts and probably needed a longer period to let communities integrate. I suspect that route might be less effective as modern comms means immigrant communities can live in a cultural silo if they want. Denmark and Sweden appear to be trying to tackle this it remains to be seen what the outcome is.
    Every single second generation immigrant I've ever met in the UK (which includes my Mum) has been more acculturated to British values than not. But then maybe I don't meet the people in cultural silos.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    I agree about businesses and the choice should be their's

    However, while cash use is much less there will always be a demand for lose change or indeed some of our elderly who will continue to use it

    Personally I only use cash at the hairdressers or where a business demands it...

    Everyone who does jobs for us is paid through our banking app
    Your hairdresser is probably dodging tax old bean.

    I saw news the other day of a church that was switching its donations regimen to SumUp!
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383
    Andy_JS said:

    "The restraints on freedom of speech and expression that exist in formally liberal societies are not imposed by a dictatorial or authoritarian government. On the whole, they’re imposed by civil institutions themselves. They’re imposed by universities, by arts associations, by museums. All the kinds of things that happen in China, because people are terrified to deviate from the government, happen by themselves spontaneously here. And that’s a profound metamorphosis. I can’t see how we can get back to a situation in which tolerance and freedom of speech and expression for some very wide range is taken for granted. Which it was — I’m old enough to remember the Seventies and Eighties, and even almost up to the Nineties, it was simply taken for granted that you could think and say what you like."
    There's a common misconception that Free Speech and Consequence Free Speech are the same thing.

    They're not.

    If I wanted to publish a newspaper with cartoons of Jews that could be straight out of Der Stürmer, the law shouldn't stop me.

    But I have to deal with the fact that other people have agency too. They can choose not to sell my newspaper. They can choose not to advertise in it. They can organize demonstrations against it.

    All those thing, see, are free speech as well.
  • Sunak announces £3 million to protect Jewish Communities

    Truly depressing we have to do this

  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,688

    How do you actually destroy Hamas?
    How did we destroy the IRA? We used security forces to reduce their attacks and negotiation to persuade them to change their position.
  • How do you actually destroy Hamas?
    Something proximate to how the Tamil Tigers were destroyed.

    2 things need to happen:

    1: Take every single bit of land they have under their control off them and bring it under your own control.

    2: Kill everyone who is a member of, supporting or fighting on behalf of Hamas until either they are all dead, or there is nobody left who is fighting for Hamas as they have surrendered unconditionally or fled abroad.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    edited October 2023
    Nigelb said:

    .

    I read some book by Gray several decades ago, and decided he was a bit of a berk.
    I've not seen any reason to revise that assessment since.
    It was probably Straw Dogs. I'm a big fan of Gray and think that book is a masterpiece. On first reading you'll be angry, on second you pay attention and annotate, on third you realise that he's right.

  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,359
    CatMan said:

    How else are they going to know when certain movies were copyrighted without Roman numerals?

    https://youtu.be/S9qom1xMSiU?si=IFhPDRX1TgWWnTsq
    I sometimes wonder whether a more reasonable counting system would have helped the Roman Empire's longevity.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    Stocky said:

    It was probably Straw Dogs. I'm a big fan of Gray and think that book is a masterpiece. On first reading you'll be angry, on second you pay attention and annotate, on third you realise that he's right.

    Yes. And he’s been proven right on far too many counts. Which is unfortunate as he’s a cultural pessimist
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,688

    Something proximate to how the Tamil Tigers were destroyed.

    2 things need to happen:

    1: Take every single bit of land they have under their control off them and bring it under your own control.

    2: Kill everyone who is a member of, supporting or fighting on behalf of Hamas until either they are all dead, or there is nobody left who is fighting for Hamas as they have surrendered unconditionally or fled abroad.
    I don't think what happened in Sri Lanka is a model anyone should follow!

    Killing anyone who supports Hamas... that's thought crime stuff. We punish actions, not beliefs.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,359
    "Second World War tweets from 1939
    @RealTimeWWII
    German occupiers have begun "Blitzpogrome", lightning pogroms against Jewish Poles, often beating victims or cutting/burning their beards."

    https://twitter.com/RealTimeWWII/status/1712497672077115622
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,029
    edited October 2023

    Your hairdresser is probably dodging tax old bean.

    I saw news the other day of a church that was switching its donations regimen to SumUp!
    How on earth can you make such an allegation

  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005
    France getting some things right.

    BREAKING: France has banned pro-Palestinian protests.
    https://x.com/visegrad24/status/1712501885293285590?s=20
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    edited October 2023
    Understanding analog clock time is an easy way into understanding modulo operator / non-10 basis maths, which is vitally important in STEM.....
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    I don't think what happened in Sri Lanka is a model anyone should follow!

    Killing anyone who supports Hamas... that's thought crime stuff. We punish actions, not beliefs.
    Hamas is not the IRA. How long will it take you to realise this?

    They are nearer to the Nazis, or ISIS

    We had to completely obliterate Nazi Germany to defeat the Nazis, ditto ISIS
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    Leon said:

    Yes. And he’s been proven right on far too many counts. Which is unfortunate as he’s a cultural pessimist
    An anti-humanist, which he fleshes out in Straw Dogs:

    "For much of their history and all of prehistory, humans did not see themselves as being any different from the other animals among which they lived. Hunter-gatherers saw their prey as equals, if not superiors, and animals were worshipped as divinities in many traditional cultures. The humanist sense of a gulf between ourselves and other animals is an aberration. Feeble as it is today, the feeling of sharing a common destiny with other living things is embedded in the human psyche. Those who struggle to conserve what is left of the natural environment are moved by the love of living things, biophilia, the frail bond of feeling that ties humankind to the Earth."
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,918
    edited October 2023

    I’d answer No to all of your questions.

    However, if you insist on paying cash for everything you certainly ARE digitally excluded because, apart from anything else, you are unable to buy anything online.
    Contactless cards are one thing I think - it is when you get to 'apps' that the real problems start.

    You might be surprised how many people don't buy things online, though.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,359

    Your hairdresser is probably dodging tax old bean.

    I saw news the other day of a church that was switching its donations regimen to SumUp!
    A few months ago, I was amused to wander into a church (as I sometimes do) and find a contactless donation system inside it. This was a small village church, not a cathedral.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,359

    Contactless cards are one thing I think - it is when you get to 'apps' that the real problems start.

    You might be surprised how many people don't buy things online, though.
    Parking apps are evil. Officially.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383
    Stocky said:

    It was probably Straw Dogs. I'm a big fan of Gray and think that book is a masterpiece. On first reading you'll be angry, on second you pay attention and annotate, on third you realise that he's right.

    I went through an opposite cycle: I read Straw Dogs and found it exhilerating and exciting, even though I didn't agree with all of it. I recommended it to my friends, and several poor sods even ended up with copies for their birthday.

    And then five years later I got it on the Kindle, and started to reread it.

    This time, I found it rather shallow. I found too many straw man arguments and too much - and we're all guilty of this I know - decide the conclusion, and then find the argument to back it up.
  • UK to send Royal Navy ships to the Mediterranean
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    Leon said:

    Hamas is not the IRA. How long will it take you to realise this?

    They are nearer to the Nazis, or ISIS

    We had to completely obliterate Nazi Germany to defeat the Nazis, ditto ISIS
    We were pretty lenient on the Nazis, actually. Only a few of the senior leadership and some of the other most blatant war criminals ever faced trial. Anyone that knew anything about missile technology got a free pass.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    How on earth can you make such an allegation

    I’m saying probably- as in on the balance of probability. They might not be, of course…
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    edited October 2023

    Parking apps are evil. Officially.
    Really like the one near me. Keeps me updated how long I have got left, very easy to use. The problem is the proliferation of them, not the app per se.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    Stansted. Hopefully not what it looks like.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-essex-67093649
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,815
    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    "A woman who spent 20 years saving for her dream wedding has thrown herself her own big day after not meeting the right partner.

    Sarah Wilkinson, 42, decided to hold a wedding ceremony conducted by her celebrant friend at Harvest House in Felixstowe, Suffolk. The credit controller said the occasion was a natural progression after she treated herself to an engagement ring. "It was a lovely day for me to be centre of attention," she said. "The ceremony wasn't an official wedding, but I had my wedding day. "I think you get to the point where you think 'I might not have this with a partner by my side, but why should I miss out?' "That money was reserved for my wedding - it was a case of it's there and why not use it for something I want to do."

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-suffolk-67084850

    Thereby explaining her failure to find a partner.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    "Second World War tweets from 1939
    @RealTimeWWII
    German occupiers have begun "Blitzpogrome", lightning pogroms against Jewish Poles, often beating victims or cutting/burning their beards."

    https://twitter.com/RealTimeWWII/status/1712497672077115622

    If you thought WW2 couldn't get any worse than it already was... WW2 with twitter.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Contactless cards are one thing I think - it is when you get to 'apps' that the real problems start.

    You might be surprised how many people don't buy things online, though.
    How do they pay their mortgages?
  • How do they pay their mortgages?
    Lots of people do not have mortgages not least the elderly
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    edited October 2023

    Really like the one near me. Keeps me updated how long I have got left, very easy to use. The problem is the proliferation of them, not the app per se.
    I always find it slightly strange there seems to be 27,000 different ones. Economies of scale, combined platform / developed etc you would think by now one or two would be winning out, as in most tech opportunities.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,764

    I agree about businesses and the choice should be their's

    However, while cash use is much less there will always be a demand for lose change or indeed some of our elderly who will continue to use it

    Personally I only use cash at the hairdressers or where a business demands it...

    Everyone who does jobs for us is paid
    through our banking app
    Wouldn’t a business threat was cashless be discriminating against people who weren’t capable of handling electronic payments?

    Some of the elderly, the terminally stupid (must be deemed a disability), those who don’t like debt etc?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,528
    " Mr. Trump, taking notice of Ms. Haley’s ascent, has nicknamed her “Birdbrain.” "

    Nikki Haley gains momentum in GOP presidential primary race
    Washington Times
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    …..
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    edited October 2023
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    "An SNP MP has announced she has quit the party and joined the Tories because of ‘toxic and bullying’ treatment from colleagues.

    Lisa Cameron has today announced the bombshell decision to become a Conservative MP after she revealed that the deterioration of her mental health led to her being put on antidepressants.

    She said that she has received support from the Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in recent weeks after opening up about her mental wellbeing, but no contact from the SNP leadership."

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12622289/SNP-MP-Lisa-Cameron-quits-party-joins-Conservatives-Tories-conference-bulling-toxic.html
  • ..

    If you thought WW2 couldn't get any worse than it already was... WW2 with twitter.
    Worse than WWII with twitter would be WWII with X, Musky Elon spreading his 'I'm only asking questions and supporting free speech' crap all over the shop.

    He'd definitely have Lindbergh signed up for one of his space missions.
  • Wouldn’t a business threat was cashless be discriminating against people who weren’t capable of handling electronic payments?

    Some of the elderly, the terminally stupid (must be deemed a disability), those who don’t like debt etc?
    I cannot answer your question as I really do not know
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,528

    If you thought WW2 couldn't get any worse than it already was... WW2 with twitter.
    @ LordHaw-Haw

    Three million followers on X.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917
    Leon said:

    Hamas is not the IRA. How long will it take you to realise this?

    They are nearer to the Nazis, or ISIS

    We had to completely obliterate Nazi Germany to defeat the Nazis, ditto ISIS
    You think we killed everyone in Germany who had supported the Nazis??

    What planet are you on?
  • Parking apps are evil. Officially.
    Govt run car parks and those with over 200 spaces should be obliged to offer at least 2 from 3 out of cash, card and phone options.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    Carnyx said:

    That's a new one to me in the euphemism line. I look forward to someone on PB using it. Very learned humour.
    It was kinda literal - the Bishop in question had brought the original prosecution.

    More was worried that the Bishop’s street cred and (by extension) the church’s would suffer
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    Chris said:

    You think we killed everyone in Germany who had supported the Nazis??

    What planet are you on?
    I said we completely obliterated Nazi GERMANY. Which we did. By the end all their big cities were in ruins, half the country was starving, and the entire country was occupied - often in a brutal way

    I hope this doesn’t happen to Gaza but it’s illustrative of the lengths you have to go to, if you want to really defeat a dangerous enemy
  • UK to send Royal Navy ships to the Mediterranean

    Any particular reason? Two US Navy carrier groups not up to the job?
  • carnforth said:

    There have historically been a broad range of political views within the SNP, independence aside.
    Lisa Cameron voted against her party on legalisation of abortion in Northern Ireland and on a bill to prevent anti-abortion protests in the vicinity of clinics. So, as with Kate Forbes, I think there's a strong religious conservatism that put her at odds with mainstream SNP views. Her argument is that she was, at best, ostracised by the SNP in Westminster and her constituency due to these views - whether that's wholly correct or whether other clashes were involved, I don't know.

    Going Tory rather than just resigning the whip does seem a bit of a pointed FU to her former colleagues, and is quite a stark illustration of one of the major divides in the SNP. Being pro-independence doesn't mean you agree on other things, and that's a real problem for the SNP.

    Others have asked on here why she didn't defect to Labour. Possibly it's due to her being closer to the Tories, but I note she was a union rep in her past career. I'd actually not be hugely surprised if she had conversations with Labour - parties don't necessary welcome defectors with open arms where the backstory is problematic, and she wouldn't be the first prospective defector by any means to make a confidential approach and have it politely brushed off.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    Stocky said:

    GRATUITOUS GENDER STEREOTYPING WARNING:

    Women don't get rhyming slang. There, I've said it.

    Ask what plates of meat, brown bread, Ayrton or chalfonts mean and they can't figure it out. Men usually can.

    Tin hat on.

    An atm near my aunt used to have the option for cockney rhyming slang - which was weird considering she lives almost as north as you can get in North London...
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,262
    FWIW, most local gas stations in my area charge extra (10 cents a gallon) for using any card not their own, instead of cash. (In spite of the state's high taxes, the price per gallon just dropped below 5 dollars in Washington state.)

    For many years, I avoided using cards for purchases of less than 200 dollars, in spite of the legal advantages credit cards give you here in the US. It just seemed simpler.

    But now Chase bank bribes me a little for almost every purchase I make with their credit card, 1.5 to 2.5 percent, and more on special deals. So I use the card for purchases of over 20 dollars.

    Even though I an nearly certain that practice contributes to the inflation that I see at, for example, inexpensive restaurants.
  • Any particular reason? Two US Navy carrier groups not up to the job?
    Sky saying to show solidarity with the US
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,624
    Stocky said:

    GRATUITOUS GENDER STEREOTYPING WARNING:

    Women don't get rhyming slang. There, I've said it.

    Ask what plates of meat, brown bread, Ayrton or chalfonts mean and they can't figure it out. Men usually can.

    Tin hat on.

    I always thought it was ‘Farmers’ not ‘Chalfonts’, but I am no cockernee.

    Aris for arse always makes me laugh. A double rhyme.

    One of the things I love watching old episodes of the sweeney and minder is the language.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155

    The French Minister of the Interior, Gérald Darmanin has ordered that Pro-Palestinian Demonstrations across the Country be Banned and that anybody who Participates in them will be Arrested.

    No people here who usually like to defend "freedom of speech" want to shout about authoritarians on this one? Again - what is wrong with demonstrating in favour of the Palestinian people and making it clear you don't want them to be war crimed? If anyone openly supports Hamas or says Israelis deserve to die - sure, that sounds like hate speech / incitement. But just being pro Palestinian?
  • Lisa Cameron voted against her party on legalisation of abortion in Northern Ireland and on a bill to prevent anti-abortion protests in the vicinity of clinics. So, as with Kate Forbes, I think there's a strong religious conservatism that put her at odds with mainstream SNP views. Her argument is that she was, at best, ostracised by the SNP in Westminster and her constituency due to these views - whether that's wholly correct or whether other clashes were involved, I don't know.

    Going Tory rather than just resigning the whip does seem a bit of a pointed FU to her former colleagues, and is quite a stark illustration of one of the major divides in the SNP. Being pro-independence doesn't mean you agree on other things, and that's a real problem for the SNP.

    Others have asked on here why she didn't defect to Labour. Possibly it's due to her being closer to the Tories, but I note she was a union rep in her past career. I'd actually not be hugely surprised if she had conversations with Labour - parties don't necessary welcome defectors with open arms where the backstory is problematic, and she wouldn't be the first prospective defector by any means to make a confidential approach and have it politely brushed off.
    This is Sky's take on it

    https://news.sky.com/story/snp-mp-lisa-cameron-defects-to-conservatives-over-bullying-in-westminster-group-12982971
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    edited October 2023

    FWIW, most local gas stations in my area charge extra (10 cents a gallon) for using any card not their own, instead of cash. (In spite of the state's high taxes, the price per gallon just dropped below 5 dollars in Washington state.)

    For many years, I avoided using cards for purchases of less than 200 dollars, in spite of the legal advantages credit cards give you here in the US. It just seemed simpler.

    But now Chase bank bribes me a little for almost every purchase I make with their credit card, 1.5 to 2.5 percent, and more on special deals. So I use the card for purchases of over 20 dollars.

    Even though I an nearly certain that practice contributes to the inflation that I see at, for example, inexpensive restaurants.

    It is something I really dislike about the US, all this kind of nonsense (same with adding the tax at check-out rather than on the shelf price and the crazy variance in ATM fees). Its anti-consumer and just adds friction to the whole process of life.
  • Govt run car parks and those with over 200 spaces should be obliged to offer at least 2 from 3 out of cash, card and phone options.
    Why on earth is a central diktat needed on this sort of stuff?

    For private car parks, if people don't find it convenient enough, they don't use it and the operator loses out financially. With Council car parks, it's the same plus people can vote them out.
  • Lisa Cameron voted against her party on legalisation of abortion in Northern Ireland and on a bill to prevent anti-abortion protests in the vicinity of clinics. So, as with Kate Forbes, I think there's a strong religious conservatism that put her at odds with mainstream SNP views. Her argument is that she was, at best, ostracised by the SNP in Westminster and her constituency due to these views - whether that's wholly correct or whether other clashes were involved, I don't know.

    Going Tory rather than just resigning the whip does seem a bit of a pointed FU to her former colleagues, and is quite a stark illustration of one of the major divides in the SNP. Being pro-independence doesn't mean you agree on other things, and that's a real problem for the SNP.

    Others have asked on here why she didn't defect to Labour. Possibly it's due to her being closer to the Tories, but I note she was a union rep in her past career. I'd actually not be hugely surprised if she had conversations with Labour - parties don't necessary welcome defectors with open arms where the backstory is problematic, and she wouldn't be the first prospective defector by any means to make a confidential approach and have it politely brushed off.
    Ms Cameron says she is no longer pro-independence, so that's probably nothing she agrees on with (most of) her former colleagues.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917
    Leon said:

    I said we completely obliterated Nazi GERMANY. Which we did. By the end all their big cities were in ruins, half the country was starving, and the entire country was occupied - often in a brutal way

    I hope this doesn’t happen to Gaza but it’s illustrative of the lengths you have to go to, if you want to really defeat a dangerous enemy
    You seem to have already forgotten what you were replying to in that post. Admittedly it must be difficult to keep track.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    edited October 2023
    148grss said:

    No people here who usually like to defend "freedom of speech" want to shout about authoritarians on this one? Again - what is wrong with demonstrating in favour of the Palestinian people and making it clear you don't want them to be war crimed? If anyone openly supports Hamas or says Israelis deserve to die - sure, that sounds like hate speech / incitement. But just being pro Palestinian?
    Personally, I think its a terrible decision from the French. Particularly given it is a nation who prides itself on protest, often excusing even violent protest, as their right to express their feelings. It also rather plays into those claims of racism in how the French authorities treat different types of people.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754

    Personally, I think its a terrible decision from the French.
    All purpose statement.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,837

    Personally, I think its a terrible decision from the French.
    They probably figure that such demonstrations are de facto Le Pen electoral rallies.
  • RandallFlaggRandallFlagg Posts: 1,381

    Lisa Cameron voted against her party on legalisation of abortion in Northern Ireland and on a bill to prevent anti-abortion protests in the vicinity of clinics. So, as with Kate Forbes, I think there's a strong religious conservatism that put her at odds with mainstream SNP views. Her argument is that she was, at best, ostracised by the SNP in Westminster and her constituency due to these views - whether that's wholly correct or whether other clashes were involved, I don't know.

    Going Tory rather than just resigning the whip does seem a bit of a pointed FU to her former colleagues, and is quite a stark illustration of one of the major divides in the SNP. Being pro-independence doesn't mean you agree on other things, and that's a real problem for the SNP.

    Others have asked on here why she didn't defect to Labour. Possibly it's due to her being closer to the Tories, but I note she was a union rep in her past career. I'd actually not be hugely surprised if she had conversations with Labour - parties don't necessary welcome defectors with open arms where the backstory is problematic, and she wouldn't be the first prospective defector by any means to make a confidential approach and have it politely brushed off.
    Of course it may well be the case the Tories reached out to her.

    J
    @Beyond_Topline
    Let's be honest, the seat she's in now, there's no point defecting to the Tories, there's nothing in her interest to do so. She obviously didn't come cap in hand.

    They've given her something, we just don't know what yet.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754

    Ms Cameron says she is no longer pro-independence, so that's probably nothing she agrees on with (most of) her former colleagues.
    Feels like that should be a pretty fundamental and unshakeable belief for someone standing as an SNP MP. Unless they were in it for the job and saw some convenient coattails.
  • Taz said:

    I always thought it was ‘Farmers’ not ‘Chalfonts’, but I am no cockernee.

    Aris for arse always makes me laugh. A double rhyme.

    One of the things I love watching old episodes of the sweeney and minder is the language.
    As a born and bred Cockney I would recognise both Farmers and Chalfonts without difficulty.

    One if the charms of this most peculiar linguistic quirk is the variation, flexibility and the way it changes over the years.
  • I don't think what happened in Sri Lanka is a model anyone should follow!

    Killing anyone who supports Hamas... that's thought crime stuff. We punish actions, not beliefs.
    Why not follow that model, Sri Lanka won.

    Providing material support to the enemy is an action and makes people a combatant under the rules of war.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enemy_combatant
    On October 27, 2008, Leon ruled that the definition of "enemy combatant" he would use was that set forth in the 2004 rules for Combatant Status Review Tribunals.[14][15][16]

    "Enemy combatant" shall mean an individual who was part of or supporting Taliban or al Qaeda forces, or associated forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners. This includes any person who has committed belligerent act or has directly supported hostilities in aid of enemy armed forces.
  • Scottish Nationalism is full of bigotry, we see it on here with Scotch experts.

    An SNP councillor who called a Sri Lankan-born Labour opponent a “new Scot” has been reported to a watchdog over the “racist” remarks.

    Kairin van Sweeden, an Aberdeen city councillor, made the comments about Deena Tissera during a heated meeting on Wednesday on the cost of living crisis and how to spend city funds.

    “I realise as a ‘new Scot’, councillor Tissera maybe doesn’t know about the mitigations [to austerity] that the SNP government have had to put in over the years,” Van Sweeden said. “For example, the bedroom tax . . . Maybe you’re not aware of the bedroom tax?”

    Tissera, councillor for Hilton, Woodside and Stockethill, moved to Aberdeen for university and became a British citizen in June. Last year she became the first woman of colour to be elected as an Aberdeen city councillor.

    She has reported the incident to the Standards Commission, the body that policies the conduct of councillors in Scotland. She has also written to Humza Yousaf, asking him to suspend Van Sweeden and investigate her comment

    M Tauqeer Malik, the Labour group leader, interrupted Van Sweeden to protest at her comments, leaving David Cameron, the lord provost, unable to regain control of the chamber.

    “I would like to be respected,” Tissera told the chamber. “I do not appreciate those comments. I have taken the Life in the UK test to become a citizen. I probably know more than you do.”

    Cameron adjourned the council meeting in an attempt to calm the situation.

    Van Sweeden later told the meeting: “I would like to apologise to councillor Tissera unreservedly if anything I said to you has caused personal offence in any way. I hope you can accept my apology.”

    Tissera said that the comments made her feel like “an outsider” and that she was “absolutely hurt” by her words. “I’m not a second-class citizen. I am a citizen of this country,” she added.

    Tissera later told the Press and Journal that she believed Van Sweeden’s comments were “absolutely racist” and criticised her “empty apology”.

    “The innuendo was that I had just come off the boat and, as a so-called new Scot, I was not as Scottish as others in the room,” she said.

    “And therefore, it insinuates I do not know about Scotland despite being a British citizen.


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/labour-councillor-called-a-new-scot-in-racism-row-rbtdhlh7m
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    edited October 2023
    This from Mr Bellingcat...

    South First Responders is now publishing pages from a 14 page document found on a dead Hamas fighter, dated October 2022, and contains intelligence and operational details

    https://x.com/EliotHiggins/status/1712497643924943190?s=20

    Raid plan page says June 15, 2023. If this is verifiable, could suggest the attack maybe was originally supposed to happen 4 months ago.

    https://x.com/azelin/status/1712505142879142305?s=20
  • RandallFlaggRandallFlagg Posts: 1,381

    Ms Cameron says she is no longer pro-independence, so that's probably nothing she agrees on with (most of) her former colleagues.
    Stuart Campbell claims she still is pro-indy. Though, as I imagine you'd agree, I'd take anything he says with a very large pinch of salt.
    "Contrary to a report in The National, Dr Cameron told Wings this morning that she had NOT “had a significant change of heart about independence”, but that like many other people – including this site – she would have grave misgivings about it being achieved under the current SNP leadership."
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    148grss said:

    No people here who usually like to defend "freedom of speech" want to shout about authoritarians on this one? Again - what is wrong with demonstrating in favour of the Palestinian people and making it clear you don't want them to be war crimed? If anyone openly supports Hamas or says Israelis deserve to die - sure, that sounds like hate speech / incitement. But just being pro Palestinian?
    I will. I think this is wrong and, worse, a mistake

    People saying “gas the Jews” like the crowd in Sydney should be arrested immediately. But a simple protest? No
  • Chris said:

    You seem to have already forgotten what you were replying to in that post. Admittedly it must be difficult to keep track.
    No, you have. This is the original comment that sparked the chain.

    2: Kill everyone who is a member of, supporting or fighting on behalf of Hamas until either they are all dead, or there is nobody left who is fighting for Hamas as they have surrendered unconditionally or fled abroad.

    BiB: Nazi Germany surrendered unconditionally, that ended the war.

    Until they did, we absolutely were quite rightly killing the frontline soldiers and those who were supporting them.
  • Ms Cameron says she is no longer pro-independence, so that's probably nothing she agrees on with (most of) her former colleagues.
    She hasn't quite even said that - the form of words is around the SNP approach to independence being "divisive" and wanting to "focus on other issues".

    She kind of has no option but to distance herself from independence if she's to join any unionist party, particularly the Tories. I think it's pretty clear she's not had a Damascene conversion though... she was standing for nomination as an SNP candidate at the next election until five minutes ago, so it's pretty clear she saw the gate closing on her political career and just wanted to stick two fingers up to her former party. It seems incredibly unlikely she just woke up one morning and had a vision of the benefits of the Acts of Union.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,356

    Scottish Nationalism is full of bigotry, we see it on here with Scotch experts.

    An SNP councillor who called a Sri Lankan-born Labour opponent a “new Scot” has been reported to a watchdog over the “racist” remarks.

    Kairin van Sweeden, an Aberdeen city councillor, made the comments about Deena Tissera during a heated meeting on Wednesday on the cost of living crisis and how to spend city funds.

    “I realise as a ‘new Scot’, councillor Tissera maybe doesn’t know about the mitigations [to austerity] that the SNP government have had to put in over the years,” Van Sweeden said. “For example, the bedroom tax . . . Maybe you’re not aware of the bedroom tax?”

    Tissera, councillor for Hilton, Woodside and Stockethill, moved to Aberdeen for university and became a British citizen in June. Last year she became the first woman of colour to be elected as an Aberdeen city councillor.

    She has reported the incident to the Standards Commission, the body that policies the conduct of councillors in Scotland. She has also written to Humza Yousaf, asking him to suspend Van Sweeden and investigate her comment

    M Tauqeer Malik, the Labour group leader, interrupted Van Sweeden to protest at her comments, leaving David Cameron, the lord provost, unable to regain control of the chamber.

    “I would like to be respected,” Tissera told the chamber. “I do not appreciate those comments. I have taken the Life in the UK test to become a citizen. I probably know more than you do.”

    Cameron adjourned the council meeting in an attempt to calm the situation.

    Van Sweeden later told the meeting: “I would like to apologise to councillor Tissera unreservedly if anything I said to you has caused personal offence in any way. I hope you can accept my apology.”

    Tissera said that the comments made her feel like “an outsider” and that she was “absolutely hurt” by her words. “I’m not a second-class citizen. I am a citizen of this country,” she added.

    Tissera later told the Press and Journal that she believed Van Sweeden’s comments were “absolutely racist” and criticised her “empty apology”.

    “The innuendo was that I had just come off the boat and, as a so-called new Scot, I was not as Scottish as others in the room,” she said.

    “And therefore, it insinuates I do not know about Scotland despite being a British citizen.


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/labour-councillor-called-a-new-scot-in-racism-row-rbtdhlh7m

    The van Sweedens, a famous Scottish dynasty?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    RobD said:

    The van Sweedens, a famous Scottish dynasty?
    Weirdly, the “new Scot” argument is one made by own much missed Swedish Nat, @StuartDickson
  • Why on earth is a central diktat needed on this sort of stuff?

    For private car parks, if people don't find it convenient enough, they don't use it and the operator loses out financially. With Council car parks, it's the same plus people can vote them out.
    Public services have been regulated by government throughout my lifetime and many generations before me, with a view to ensuring wide access to them. Car parks should be part of that, and recent changes have been bad for the consumer and wider economy, imo of course.
  • Blinken reaction to Hamas attacks

    When asked what his reaction to the “gruesome” photos of dead children, Antony Blinken said: “We did see photos and videos the Israeli government showed us.

    “A baby, and infant riddled with bullets... Soldiers beheaded, young people burned alive in their cars. I could go on but it’s simply depravity in the worst imaginable way, it almost defies comprehension and in the most immediate future harkens back to ISIS and some of the things we saw when it was on his rampage, which thankfully was stopped.

    “So I think for any human being to see this is really beyond anything we can comprehend or digest.”
    Blinken said: “Images are worth one thousand words, these images may be worth a million”.

    It comes after shocking pictures of dead babies were shown to him by the Israeli government.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,359

    This from Mr Bellingcat...

    South First Responders is now publishing pages from a 14 page document found on a dead Hamas fighter, dated October 2022, and contains intelligence and operational details

    https://x.com/EliotHiggins/status/1712497643924943190?s=20

    Raid plan page says June 15, 2023. If this is verifiable, could suggest the attack maybe was originally supposed to happen 4 months ago.

    https://x.com/azelin/status/1712505142879142305?s=20

    Which makes some of the 'excuses' for the raids by the excusers somewhat sh*t, when they refer to events that happened in the last few weeks.

    Because Hamas organised this in just a few days...
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,677

    Any particular reason? Two US Navy carrier groups not up to the job?
    Nicer weather than the North Sea.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,784
    Leon said:

    Weirdly, the “new Scot” argument is one made by own much missed Swedish Nat, @StuartDickson
    Do you anticipate he'll be around to comment on the next election ?
  • Of course it may well be the case the Tories reached out to her.

    J
    @Beyond_Topline
    Let's be honest, the seat she's in now, there's no point defecting to the Tories, there's nothing in her interest to do so. She obviously didn't come cap in hand.

    They've given her something, we just don't know what yet.
    I don't know. The Tories need a bit of a boost, and she wants to stick two fingers up to the SNP.

    Does there need to be more to it than that? And what can the Tories offer her realistically? They're not going to waste a peerage on her, and she's leaving Parliament at the same time as they are likely to leave Government. She'll get a bit of a hero's welcome, and that'll be nice for her. But I'm not sure there's more to it than the obvious.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,356
    edited October 2023

    I don't know. The Tories need a bit of a boost, and she wants to stick two fingers up to the SNP.

    Does there need to be more to it than that? And what can the Tories offer her realistically? They're not going to waste a peerage on her, and she's leaving Parliament at the same time as they are likely to leave Government. She'll get a bit of a hero's welcome, and that'll be nice for her. But I'm not sure there's more to it than the obvious.
    The insinuation is that she was bribed into doing it. It’s just a smear.
This discussion has been closed.