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Parking the bus or “to the Arsenal one nil” – politicalbetting.com

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  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,603
    viewcode said:

    Say what you like about Kinnock, but forty years later we are still quoting him... 🤔
    "I have in my hand a piece of paper. A Labour piece of paper. And we are hiring taxis to scuttle round a city handing out these bits of paper to its own workers before alternately outsourcing their jobs, then replacing any remaining by cheaper imported workers".

    I may have misquoted Blair there...
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,242

    I just discovered that the plane in Raiders of the lost Ark is not a genuine German plane at all, and is totally fictitious. I’m shocked. Always assumed it was based on a real world version for some reason.

    What else in the film is not real?

    Nah, it's totally genuine:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secret_Weapons_of_the_Luftwaffe
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,590
    isam said:

    Has there been lots of trouble with terrorism and a transformation of huge parts of the country because of the immigration of Eastern European refugees post WW2, or the Italians that came over in the Sixties? I don’t believe so. Perhaps that’s why he didn’t criticise it, nor predict it may cause big problems in years to come
    Foxy mentioned three sources of immigration: Ireland, eastern Europe and Italy. You responded to the latter two. Is there a reason you didn't respond to the first?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,759
    Nigelb said:

    That is precisely one of the critiques of the Thatcher government - that it believed that market discipline absolved government from responsibility for its consequences.
    I may be wrong about this - but ISTR there was massive amounts of retraining offered by the government, which the unions put considerable pressure on individuals not to take up.
    Some did though. I used to work with an ex-docker fron Liverpool who had made a decent living as an assembler programmer from such a scheme. But he'd had to be pretty, er, determined to do the scheme, and ended up moving out to Ellesmere Port.
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,185

    I just discovered that the plane in Raiders of the lost Ark is not a genuine German plane at all, and is totally fictitious. I’m shocked. Always assumed it was based on a real world version for some reason.

    What else in the film is not real?

    Well quite how there could be so many Nazis in pre War British controlled Egypt was a bit odd
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,708

    Foxy mentioned three sources of immigration: Ireland, eastern Europe and Italy. You responded to the latter two. Is there a reason you didn't respond to the first?
    In a very real sense, Ireland is not a foreign country, so it doesn't make sense to put it in the same bracket.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,442

    I just discovered that the plane in Raiders of the lost Ark is not a genuine German plane at all, and is totally fictitious. I’m shocked. Always assumed it was based on a real world version for some reason.

    What else in the film is not real?

    Not 100% fiction, as it did have a real world inspiration.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horten_H.VII

    (There was also a turbojet bomber which was constructed in prototype.)
  • I just discovered that the plane in Raiders of the lost Ark is not a genuine German plane at all, and is totally fictitious. I’m shocked. Always assumed it was based on a real world version for some reason.

    What else in the film is not real?

    Your nerd status is hereby withdrawn. Realised it the moment I first saw it in the cinema but it didn’t detract from my enjoyment.

    I regret to inform you that the tank is a load of crap also.
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,185

    Your nerd status is hereby withdrawn. Realised it the moment I first saw it in the cinema but it didn’t detract from my enjoyment.

    I regret to inform you that the tank is a load of crap also.
    What's more concerning is where the hell was the Ark going to go on this 'Plane'? There wasn't any room for it!
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,442
    rcs1000 said:

    British firms paid the same for "cheap" North Sea oil as everyone else did.
    Gardenwalker was talking about ‘Britain’, not ‘British firms’.
    The oil granted the exchequer tax revenue which allowed them to ignore, for a time, the rest of industry.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082

    Didn't Churchill mandate the move of the Royal Navy from coal to oil? It was probably a sensible thing to do, but it's had a heck of a lot of effects, both nationally and geopolitically.
    It was between him and Fisher. Oil had higher calorific value per ton, didn’t require hundreds of men to shovel it into the furnaces, and best all, allowed larger boilers - far deeper than coal grate could be worked.

    As a final touch, oil fired systems didn’t require stopping frequently to remove clinker and fix other issues - they could be run at full power for days.

    Oil was inevitable.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427

    I just discovered that the plane in Raiders of the lost Ark is not a genuine German plane at all, and is totally fictitious. I’m shocked. Always assumed it was based on a real world version for some reason.

    What else in the film is not real?

    Just don't tell me the Ark of the Covenant isn't exactly as described - complete with Nazi-killing setting.....
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,603

    Good; it is the patent system working. Apple have a long and sad history of just nicking the patents of smaller companies, relying on their heft to get away with it, and their fanbois to excuse their behaviour.

    Edit: as an example: https://www.radiofreemobile.com/apple-vs-qualcomm-pressure-cooker-pt-iii/
    To quote some dude or other :

    Good artists copy; great artists steal
    Think it was some guy called "Jobs' or something.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    edited December 2023
    CatMan said:

    What's more concerning is where the hell was the Ark going to go on this 'Plane'? There wasn't any room for it!
    It was a fairly thick flying wing. A 3 x 3 x 4 foot chest would fit in easily.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,759
    CatMan said:

    Well quite how there could be so many Nazis in pre War British controlled Egypt was a bit odd
    I'm watching ROTLA as well. Never actually seen it before.
    Main reaction: Can you not lay off the incidental music for a bit Mr. Spielberg?

    Also discussing it by text with a friend elsewhere who is watching it. My daughter was briefly baffled by the coincidence, having forgotten about the concept of linear TV.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,590

    In a very real sense, Ireland is not a foreign country, so it doesn't make sense to put it in the same bracket.
    I think that point of view may also have had a lot to do with certain troubles.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,442
    edited December 2023
    CatMan said:

    What's more concerning is where the hell was the Ark going to go on this 'Plane'? There wasn't any room for it!
    Raiders was inspired by prewar B-movie serials; logic was not a strong part of its structure.
    OTOH, the Nazi flying wing which came closest to reality was a bomber, and would have had plenty of carrying capacity.
  • Call. The. Election.
  • Good news Manchester United fans.

    Andre Onana is off to the Africa Cup of Nations next week.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,759

    Call. The. Election.

    Ninj, you may be overestimating the influence of pb.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,217

    Foxy mentioned three sources of immigration: Ireland, eastern Europe and Italy. You responded to the latter two. Is there a reason you didn't respond to the first?
    Do you think terrorism in England was caused by mass immigration of people from Southern
    Ireland then?
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    Cookie said:

    Ninj, you may be overestimating the influence of pb.
    It’s also Boxing Day. Give it a rest.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,265
    edited December 2023
    ohnotnow said:

    To quote some dude or other :

    Good artists copy; great artists steal

    Think it was some guy called "Jobs' or something.
    Yeah, and that's another example of why Jobs was an utter sh*t. A small company spends a decade building an insanely good (*) technology, and get a load of relevant patents. A massively larger company (let's call it 'A') offers to buy their tech, but they need to see all the details in due diligence. A while later they magically use that tech without buying the minnow or paying the licensing.

    Which leads to another massive company (called, say 'Q') buying the minnow for a fraction of its value, and having a very public legal battle with 'A' - which they win.

    But that's of little help to the minnow, which no longer exists.

    And this matters, as it really stifles innovation, and pushes it only into the hands of massive companies.

    Apple is a really, really shit company.

    (*) To borrow another phrase of his.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,650
    rcs1000 said:

    That the Coal Board was unwilling to keep mines open long after they had ceased to be economically viable?

    If you want to blame the Thatcher government, blame them for failing to appreciate the societal and human impact of closing mining town's sole large employer. Blame them for failing to be proactive about support the human cost of closure.

    But you do need to recognise reality. The remaining coal in those mines was increasingly unviable.
    The cumulative costs of:

    - Imported coal
    - Benefit payments to the unemployed
    - Making the abandoned mines safe
    - Breakdown of community cohesion
    - Increased crime
    - Treating increased ill health and the impacts on alcoholism, drug abuse, etc.
    - And countless other negative impacts

    It would have been cheaper to subsidise coal production.
  • Nigelb said:

    Raiders was inspired by prewar B-movie serials; logic was not a strong part of its structure.
    OTOH, the Nazi flying wing which came closest to reality was a bomber, and would have had plenty of carrying capacity.
    That the Nazis were test flying (and crashing) the Horten prototypes in Feb ‘45 then putting in production orders tells you as much as anything why their enterprise was doomed.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,558
    edited December 2023
    isam said:


    Do you think terrorism in England was caused by mass immigration of people from Southern Ireland then?

    Kinda, mass immigration into Ireland led to the IRA nearly killing both Margaret Thatcher and John Major and actually murdering the likes of Airey Neave and Ian Gow.
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,185
    Meh, well I defer to Malmesbury and Nigelb's knowledge of things, even if I don't remember the plane being big enough...

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited December 2023
    Nigelb said:

    Raiders was inspired by prewar B-movie serials; logic was not a strong part of its structure.
    OTOH, the Nazi flying wing which came closest to reality was a bomber, and would have had plenty of carrying capacity.
    See also 14:08 here

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KY2IuLpPuN8

    Not familiar with the details myself - but the USA built something very similar for transatlantic bombing and reconnaissance (X/YB-35 and XB-49), presumably in parallel (I believe they were drawn up well before the intelligence bonanza at the end of the war).

    BTW in terms of tech the tank isn't so far off the TOG. But that was British,m not your actual modern Panzer.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AU0o29llhkI
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,558
    edited December 2023
    CatMan said:

    Meh, well I defer to Malmesbury and Nigelb's knowledge of things, even if I don't remember the plane being big enough...

    Wait until you get onto the submarine controversy in Raiders.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,265

    The cumulative costs of:

    - Imported coal
    - Benefit payments to the unemployed
    - Making the abandoned mines safe
    - Breakdown of community cohesion
    - Increased crime
    - Treating increased ill health and the impacts on alcoholism, drug abuse, etc.
    - And countless other negative impacts

    It would have been cheaper to subsidise coal production.
    Have you actually seen any figures for that?

    For one thing, "Making the abandoned mines safe" would have to be done anyway once they were fully mined out.

    Besides, it utterly ignores the fact that we (and especially the left) are supposed to be interested in the environment, and burning gas is *loads* greener than burning coal. If it was Thatcher who closed all the mines (hint: it wasn't); ten she did the environment a load of good... ;)
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,442
    .

    The cumulative costs of:

    - Imported coal
    - Benefit payments to the unemployed
    - Making the abandoned mines safe
    - Breakdown of community cohesion
    - Increased crime
    - Treating increased ill health and the impacts on alcoholism, drug abuse, etc.
    - And countless other negative impacts

    It would have been cheaper to subsidise coal production.
    It would have been smarter to have done far more for the communities affected.
    Apart from your first item (which is in any event a diminishing factor), none if the rest were inevitable consequences.
  • Wait until you get onto the submarine controversy in Raiders.
    "Zen ve vill decide whether or not to blow your ship from ze water!"
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,318

    I just discovered that the plane in Raiders of the lost Ark is not a genuine German plane at all, and is totally fictitious. I’m shocked. Always assumed it was based on a real world version for some reason.

    What else in the film is not real?

    Harrison Ford doesn't really hate snakes. Apparently. He was even quite flattered when they named a species of them after him.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Kinda, mass immigration into Ireland led to the IRA nearly killing both Margaret Thatcher and John Major and actually murdering the likes of Airey Neave and Ian Gow.
    You could well go back further. 1880s onwards. "Fenians" and all that.
  • RobD said:

    It’s also Boxing Day. Give it a rest.
    Wrestling Day?
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,185

    Wait until you get onto the submarine controversy in Raiders.
    Ah, no spoilers please, Cookie hasn't seen it all yet!
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,650

    Canadian coal mines are just insane, there's no way anything in Britain could compete.

    Saw a train leave a Canadian coal mine. The train had that many carriages it took about 10 minutes to for the entire train go past, there are well over a hundred carriages per train.
    Wagons. Not carriages.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,318

    Wagons. Not carriages.
    We should have no truck with such mistakes.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Carnyx said:

    You could well go back further. 1880s onwards. "Fenians" and all that.
    Edit: 1860s, even. Manchester Martyrs, as they were called at the time.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,148
    Carnyx said:

    See also 14:08 here

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KY2IuLpPuN8

    Not familiar with the details myself - but the USA built something very similar for transatlantic bombing and reconnaissance (X/YB-35 and XB-49), presumably in parallel (I believe they were drawn up well before the intelligence bonanza at the end of the war).

    BTW in terms of tech the tank isn't so far off the TOG. But that was British,m not your actual modern Panzer.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AU0o29llhkI
    Has anybody used the phrase "napkinwaffe" yet?... 😃
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,759
    Nigelb said:

    .

    It would have been smarter to have done far more for the communities affected.
    Apart from your first item (which is in any event a diminishing factor), none if the rest were inevitable consequences.
    Well, yes, but, as I said earlier - if I remember correctly, which I'm not sure that I do, but I have known people who went through this - lots of pretty good retraining was offered, which unions put a lot of pressure on people not to accept (for what use is a computer programmer to the NUM?)
  • Wagons. Not carriages.
    "On, ON!" urged the trucks.
  • Carnyx said:

    You could well go back further. 1880s onwards. "Fenians" and all that.
    Indeed, that said the IRA terrorism did have some positives, it led to the regeneration of Manchester.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    viewcode said:

    Has anybody used the phrase "napkinwaffe" yet?... 😃
    Never heard that expression! But it's an ill-spent day when one doesn't learn something new on PB.

    (full with stovies, pickled beetroot, and cold pheasant leftover from yesterday, plus plenty of Rhone red)
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,759
    CatMan said:

    Ah, no spoilers please, Cookie hasn't seen it all yet!
    My goodness. I've just seen the bit where they opened the ark. And we were arguing about the accuracy or otherwise of the model of the plane?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Indeed, that said the IRA terrorism did have some positives, it led to the regeneration of Manchester.
    Not sure if it is safe to 'like' that, as opposed to admiring your, erm, penetration ...
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,759
    It's finished now. Comment from middle daughter: "so - what happened?"
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,318
    viewcode said:

    Go to a train station near a UK port later at night. Wait. Sooner or later you will see a cargo train pulling many carriages, each holding a shipping container. They will take minutes to go past you and hold tens of containers. It is not unreasonable to imagine them as being over a hundred.

    I am happy to accept your assessment of Canadian mass. But that does not mean that UK trains cannot attain similar masses. Additionally, it used to be the case that well into the 20th century much intra-country cargo was done via coastal shipping. But I digress...
    A little mathematics:

    A train is pulling 100 containers.

    Let's say the weight of the containers, including the truck, is around 40 tons on average (which is definitely the upper limit - most containers wouldn't carry that much).

    That's 4000 tons.

    I saw heavier trains than that in Canada over twenty years ago. And I think they're heavier now.

    A train of that size would also be hauled only a short distance. I live near Rugeley and if you look at the WCML container trains most of them have about 30 trucks on (usually with not all of them loaded).

    That's 1200 tons.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,558
    edited December 2023
    Carnyx said:

    Not sure if it is safe to 'like' that, as opposed to admiring your, erm, penetration ...
    You can understand why I decided not to become an MP, I'd be perpetually apologising.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427
    I'm sure you all know the story in ROTLA, in the scene where the giant guy with the massive scimitar appears swirling it around his body. He was supposed to engage Indy in a massive fight. But Harrison Ford was suffering from a bout of the shits, and reluctant to do the scene, he just pulled out his pistol and shot the guy.

    They loved it and kept it in.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    BTW who was it who recommended Smeaton the CE as a worthy topic? I've treated myself to the multi-paper collection edited by P. Skempton - in the middle and enjoying it very much.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/John-Smeaton-Frs-W-Skempton/dp/072770088X
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,759
    Arguably they'd have been better off letting Hitler open it.
  • Cookie said:

    It's finished now. Comment from middle daughter: "so - what happened?"

    One of my favourite revelations about an iconic scene from Raiders.

    https://www.slashfilm.com/1251746/raiders-of-the-lost-ark-iconic-moment-improvised-gross-reason/
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,318

    The cumulative costs of:

    - Imported coal
    - Benefit payments to the unemployed
    - Making the abandoned mines safe
    - Breakdown of community cohesion
    - Increased crime
    - Treating increased ill health and the impacts on alcoholism, drug abuse, etc.
    - And countless other negative impacts

    It would have been cheaper to subsidise coal production.
    Hmmm.

    May I gently remind you of the health impacts coal mining had on the colliers?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,759
    I thought the final scene was quite giid though.
  • I'm sure you all know the story in ROTLA, in the scene where the giant guy with the massive scimitar appears swirling it around his body. He was supposed to engage Indy in a massive fight. But Harrison Ford was suffering from a bout of the shits, and reluctant to do the scene, he just pulled out his pistol and shot the guy.

    They loved it and kept it in.

    The same guy (Pat Roach) played the big bald guy brawling with Indy under the Flying Wing, and also played the big guy with the turban in the second Indy film (Temple of Doom).
  • The cumulative costs of:

    - Imported coal
    - Benefit payments to the unemployed
    - Making the abandoned mines safe
    - Breakdown of community cohesion
    - Increased crime
    - Treating increased ill health and the impacts on alcoholism, drug abuse, etc.
    - And countless other negative impacts

    It would have been cheaper to subsidise coal production.
    Imagine the process in reverse, though.

    Butterfly away the difficulty of reopening abandoned mines. Then imagine Rishi doing a New Year Speech where he announced that the mines are reopening, and residents of towns X, Y and Z should report to the pithead 6am Monday.

    People would rightly think that the PM had taken leave of his senses and it would be really unpopular. Because sending people to work deep underground is a pretty lousy thing to do. And that's even when the product of their efforts is useful and creating value, which coal mining increasingly doesn't.

    However, there are two enormous caveats. One is the one alluded to upthread. There are countless practicalities to sort out if you are going to upend the economy of a town. And whilst the Thatcher government didn't do nothing, it also didn't do enough.

    The other is to do with the sense of self that people and places have. It's a good thing that British coal mining died as an industry, but it deserved a dignified death and a proper send off. I'm not sure that Thatcher got that; I'm confident that Sunak doesn't get it at all.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427

    The same guy (Pat Roach) played the big bald guy brawling with Indy under the Flying Wing, and also played the big guy with the turban in the second Indy film (Temple of Doom).
    Never seen Temple of Doom a second time. The monkey brains scene was gross, but what has kept me away was the monstrously irritating kid.

    Pat Roach was also Bomber in Auf Wiedershen Pet.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,590
    isam said:

    Do you think terrorism in England was caused by mass immigration of people from Southern
    Ireland then?
    I don't think terrorism generally has been caused by mass immigration. If you are concerned about terrorism, the vast majority of terrorism in the UK, since any modern definition of terrorism, was associated with the Troubles in Northern Ireland. Hmmm... perhaps you could advance an argument that it was, thus, distantly associated with the mass immigration of Scottish people to Ulster in the 17th century?

    Most terrorism in the UK has been conducted by people born in the UK. Some has been conducted by immigrants. Among immigrants, most terrorism has been conducted by immigrants from the Republic of Ireland. No other group comes close.

    So, I think anyone make an association between immigrants and terrorism in the UK without acknowledging this is being, at best, disingenuous.
  • Cookie said:

    Arguably they'd have been better off letting Hitler open it.

    He would have felt uneasy about this "Jewish Ritual" :lol:
  • Never seen Temple of Doom a second time. The monkey brains scene was gross, but what has kept me away was the monstrously irritating kid.

    Pat Roach was also Bomber in Auf Wiedershen Pet.
    Steady on! The kid was one of The Goonies!
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,266

    That the Nazis were test flying (and crashing) the Horten prototypes in Feb ‘45 then putting in production orders tells you as much as anything why their enterprise was doomed.
    The prototype Spitfire was crashed and written off (albeit 3 years after its first flight).
  • TresTres Posts: 2,810
    Cookie said:

    It's finished now. Comment from middle daughter: "so - what happened?"

    Tune in same time next week, when Cookie and family are astounded when an alien makes a bicycle fly.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,100
    isam said:

    Do you think terrorism in England was caused by mass immigration of people from Southern
    Ireland then?
    Who uses the term "Southern Ireland"? I mean, really?
  • Never seen Temple of Doom a second time. The monkey brains scene was gross, but what has kept me away was the monstrously irritating kid.

    Pat Roach was also Bomber in Auf Wiedershen Pet.
    D'oh!

    Belay my earlier message! Roach played one of the big Sherpa guys in the early scene in Nepal in ROTLA, NOT the Sword Guy!

    ALSO: He was in the Last Crusade as a Gestapo agent.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,442
    .
    Cookie said:

    Well, yes, but, as I said earlier - if I remember correctly, which I'm not sure that I do, but I have known people who went through this - lots of pretty good retraining was offered, which unions put a lot of pressure on people not to accept (for what use is a computer programmer to the NUM?)
    I didn’t say government did nothing, but what it did was inadequate.
    And retraining alone - even if accepted - didn’t really address either the social or economic disruption.
  • Tres said:

    Tune in same time next week, when Cookie and family are astounded when an alien makes a bicycle fly.
    "Be Good!"
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427

    Steady on! The kid was one of The Goonies!
    That is no plea in mitigation in my book.
  • Who uses the term "Southern Ireland"? I mean, really?
    The most northerly point on the island of Ireland is NOT in Northern Ireland :lol:
  • That is no plea in mitigation in my book.
    He's great in Loki and Everything Everywhere All at Once.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427
    edited December 2023

    Wait until you get onto the submarine controversy in Raiders.
    They would have wanted to make the fastest journey with the Ark, so they would have travelled on the surface. (17.7 knots versus 7.6 submerged.)

    The only thing that suggests it travelled submerged (and consequently, drowned Indy) was when the Captain looks through the periscope.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,759
    Tres said:

    Tune in same time next week, when Cookie and family are astounded when an alien makes a bicycle fly.
    That is another film that my wife finds astonishing that I have not watched.
    (I mean, she finds it astonishing that I haven't watched it. Not that she finds tge film astonishing. Though she quite liked it, I think.)
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,148
    Tres said:

    Tune in same time next week, when Cookie and family are astounded when an alien makes a bicycle fly.
    "I don't get it. Why should the DeLorean hit 88miles a hour?"

  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,148

    He's great in Loki and Everything Everywhere All at Once.
    I still say they got the OB name from Red Dwarf...
  • isamisam Posts: 41,217

    I don't think terrorism generally has been caused by mass immigration. If you are concerned about terrorism, the vast majority of terrorism in the UK, since any modern definition of terrorism, was associated with the Troubles in Northern Ireland. Hmmm... perhaps you could advance an argument that it was, thus, distantly associated with the mass immigration of Scottish people to Ulster in the 17th century?

    Most terrorism in the UK has been conducted by people born in the UK. Some has been conducted by immigrants. Among immigrants, most terrorism has been conducted by immigrants from the Republic of Ireland. No other group comes close.

    So, I think anyone make an association between immigrants and terrorism in the UK without acknowledging this is being, at best, disingenuous.
    The troubles weren’t caused by mass immigration of Irish people to England though.

    The men who killed Lee Rigby and 3/4 of those who bombed the tube on 7/7 were born in the UK, that doesn’t excuse mass immigration as a cause though
  • Villa title gone. They needed to hold onto that.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,217

    Who uses the term "Southern Ireland"? I mean, really?
    Is it offensive? I meant Republic, it’s been a long day
  • MJWMJW Posts: 2,010

    D'oh!

    Belay my earlier message! Roach played one of the big Sherpa guys in the early scene in Nepal in ROTLA, NOT the Sword Guy!

    ALSO: He was in the Last Crusade as a Gestapo agent.
    Another good fact is that Ronald Lacey, who plays the villain Toht in Raiders, is also the Baby Eating Bishop of Bath and Wells in Blackadder.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,148
    Cookie said:

    That is another film that my wife finds astonishing that I have not watched.
    (I mean, she finds it astonishing that I haven't watched it. Not that she finds tge film astonishing. Though she quite liked it, I think.)
    I have never seen ET in full. It's basically a kid's film: quite well liked but no obvious hook for adults. It was widely popular at the time.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    Excellent thread header, thanks Foxy.
  • Villa title gone. They needed to hold onto that.

    Complete Villa meltdown
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,046
    Cookie said:

    It's finished now. Comment from middle daughter: "so - what happened?"

    According to popular myth, almost nothing...

    The argument is that if Indiana Jones had not interfered at all, the Germans would have found the Ark without him and opened it anyway
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,674
    Phil said:

    Rigid views on gender were (and are) absolutely a hallmark of fascists sadly. Those pictures of book burnings we’re all familiar with? A fair chunk of them come from the burning of the library of the Institute of Sexology in 1933: https://www.hmd.org.uk/resource/6-may-1933-looting-of-the-institute-of-sexology/

    If you spend all your time ranting about how the trans are coming for people’s children on Twitter then you can’t complain when people draw the obvious conclusion that you’ll side with a fascist party that promises to clamp down on gender variance regardless of your other politics when the time comes.

    (See also, https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-forgotten-history-of-the-worlds-first-trans-clinic/ for a longer article on the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft & it’s research into trans & non-binary as well as gay sexualities & gender presentations.)
    It is a rather asinine abuse of logic to suggest that because fascists and Nazis held traditional views on gender (no shit), that means anyone departing from the implications of today's rather extreme trans ideas deserves to be lumped in with them.

    With your indignation that people would 'spend their time' objecting publicly to trans policies, I take it you have no objection to being called out as a fascist yourself, given that attaching social stigma to expressing the wrong type of ideas was also a favourite fascist pastime.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,590
    isam said:

    The troubles weren’t caused by mass immigration of Irish people to England though.

    The men who killed Lee Rigby and 3/4 of those who bombed the tube on 7/7 were born in the UK, that doesn’t excuse mass immigration as a cause though
    53 people were murdered in 7/7 + the death of Lee Rigby. Each one of those deaths was a tragedy. I was in London on 7/7, working a few hundred metres from the bus bombing. (I used to work even closer, my office was on Tavistock Sq.)

    However, I note 3,532 were killed in the Troubles. That's about 67 times as many people. When thinking about policy, I think we do sometimes need to take that sort of perspective and compare numbers.

    I don't see any evidence that mass immigration was the cause of 7/7 and Rigby's murder. Three of the 7/7 bombers were second generation immigrants, while Germaine Lindsay was a first generation immigrant, born in Jamaica. But many of the attacks in the Troubles were by first or second generation immigrants, so I don't understand why you see one sort of terrorism as being caused by mass immigration and another as not. Is it because one sort was motivated by religion and the other was... oh, also motivated by religion. Is it because one sort was committed by people who didn't embrace British values, while the other was caused by people who didn't embrace British values... hmmm. So, what is it? What's different about the two groups of terrorists? Something that Enoch Powell would have noticed...?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    CatMan said:

    Meh, well I defer to Malmesbury and Nigelb's knowledge of things, even if I don't remember the plane being big enough...

    ydoethur said:

    Hmmm.

    May I gently remind you of the health impacts coal mining had on the colliers?
    There was a Professor at UCH who liked to say that his specialty - black lung - was dying, and would be gone by the time he was.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450

    Never seen Temple of Doom a second time. The monkey brains scene was gross, but what has kept me away was the monstrously irritating kid.

    Pat Roach was also Bomber in Auf Wiedershen Pet.
    Not to mention the monstrously irritating girlfriend. I was really pissed when she wasn't dumped in the lava pool.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,046
    Only 6 per cent of voters think the Conservatives have done a good job in government, but fears about Labour are holding back Sir Keir Starmer, a poll has found.

    The YouGov survey for The Times found that only 15 per cent of people think the Tories are fit for office, and half of all voters say they would never vote Conservative under any circumstances.

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/only-6-percent-of-voters-think-tories-have-done-a-good-job-wp8wmq2wl
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082

    Have you actually seen any figures for that?

    For one thing, "Making the abandoned mines safe" would have to be done anyway once they were fully mined out.

    Besides, it utterly ignores the fact that we (and especially the left) are supposed to be interested in the environment, and burning gas is *loads* greener than burning coal. If it was Thatcher who closed all the mines (hint: it wasn't); ten she did the environment a load of good... ;)
    The problem was that the coal was getting more expensive to mine - where it hadn’t actually run out - at a time when coal was getting cheaper and cheaper internationally.

    This had been foreseen in 1948 - there were clear forecasts of the issue then. Which were buried in the civil service archives. You can read them at Kew.

    To try and subsidise the pits into working would have required an open ended cheque book on the scale of percents of GDP.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,266
    Sean_F said:

    Not to mention the monstrously irritating girlfriend. I was really pissed when she wasn't dumped in the lava pool.
    Pissed-off surely, or had you had a lot to drink?
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,674

    He would have felt uneasy about this "Jewish Ritual" :lol:
    Given that it failed to stop any of the participants being fried, his unease would have been justified.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,674

    I'm sure you all know the story in ROTLA, in the scene where the giant guy with the massive scimitar appears swirling it around his body. He was supposed to engage Indy in a massive fight. But Harrison Ford was suffering from a bout of the shits, and reluctant to do the scene, he just pulled out his pistol and shot the guy.

    They loved it and kept it in.

    Hopefully Harrison did too.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,217

    53 people were murdered in 7/7 + the death of



    Lee Rigby. Each one of those deaths was a tragedy. I was in London on 7/7, working a few hundred metres from the bus bombing. (I used to work even closer, my office was on Tavistock Sq.)

    However, I note 3,532 were killed in the Troubles. That's about 67 times as many people. When thinking about policy, I think we do sometimes need to take that sort of perspective and compare numbers.

    I don't see any evidence that mass immigration was the cause of 7/7 and Rigby's murder. Three of the 7/7 bombers were second generation immigrants, while Germaine Lindsay was a first generation immigrant, born in Jamaica. But many of the attacks in the Troubles were by first or second generation immigrants, so I don't understand why you see one sort of terrorism as being caused by mass immigration and another as not. Is it because one sort was motivated by religion and the other was... oh, also motivated by religion. Is it because one sort was committed by people who didn't embrace British values, while the other was caused by people who didn't embrace British values... hmmm. So, what is it? What's different about the two groups of terrorists? Something that Enoch Powell would have noticed...?
    “ I don't see any evidence that mass immigration was the cause of 7/7 and Rigby's murder”

    Then you’ve no idea what you’re taking about

  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,442
    Sean_F said:

    Not to mention the monstrously irritating girlfriend. I was really pissed when she wasn't dumped in the lava pool.
    A shame, as Capshaw was actually a pretty good actress.
    I blame the director, who quite effectively sabotaged her career. And then married her.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,242

    Never seen Temple of Doom a second time. The monkey brains scene was gross, but what has kept me away was the monstrously irritating kid.

    Pat Roach was also Bomber in Auf Wiedershen Pet.
    Temple of Doom is pretty awful.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,590
    isam said:

    “ I don't see any evidence that mass immigration was the cause of 7/7 and Rigby's murder”

    Then you’ve no idea what you’re taking about

    If it's so obvious, it shouldn't take you long to explain it.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,708

    53 people were murdered in 7/7 + the death of Lee Rigby. Each one of those deaths was a tragedy. I was in London on 7/7, working a few hundred metres from the bus bombing. (I used to work even closer, my office was on Tavistock Sq.)

    However, I note 3,532 were killed in the Troubles. That's about 67 times as many people. When thinking about policy, I think we do sometimes need to take that sort of perspective and compare numbers.

    I don't see any evidence that mass immigration was the cause of 7/7 and Rigby's murder. Three of the 7/7 bombers were second generation immigrants, while Germaine Lindsay was a first generation immigrant, born in Jamaica. But many of the attacks in the Troubles were by first or second generation immigrants, so I don't understand why you see one sort of terrorism as being caused by mass immigration and another as not. Is it because one sort was motivated by religion and the other was... oh, also motivated by religion. Is it because one sort was committed by people who didn't embrace British values, while the other was caused by people who didn't embrace British values... hmmm. So, what is it? What's different about the two groups of terrorists? Something that Enoch Powell would have noticed...?
    Something that Christopher Hitchens would have noticed too, if he has better credentials than Enoch Powell?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,148
    edited December 2023
    Sean_F said:

    Not to mention the monstrously irritating girlfriend. I was really pissed when she wasn't dumped in the lava pool.
    Kate Capshaw. Later Mrs Spielberg. Hollywood is littered with talented actresses whose careers were made or destroyed by relationships with the director. For examples good and bad, see Nicholas Roeg/Theresa Russell, Brian DePalma/Nancy Allen, Warren Beatty/Annette Bening, Spielberg/Amy Irving/Kate Capshaw. James Cameron's list of ex-wives is amazing, as is (for different reasons) Tom Cruise's.
  • Sean_F said:

    Not to mention the monstrously irritating girlfriend. I was really pissed when she wasn't dumped in the lava pool.
    Stephen Spielberg's wife!
  • sarissasarissa Posts: 2,100
    Sean_F said:

    Not to mention the monstrously irritating girlfriend. I was really pissed when she wasn't dumped in the lava pool.
    Kate Capshaw, who soon after became Mrs Steven Spielberg.
This discussion has been closed.