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Suddenly the betting money goes on Michelle Obama – politicalbetting.com

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  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    HYUFD said:

    For asylum seekers it shouldn't be no
    So Christianity is inexplicably linked to knowledge of the Bible? Sounds like Bibliolatry - no true Christian would endorse that.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,527
    148grss said:

    So revelation is not proof of religious belief?
    Once a friend of mine was arguing with the wife of the Rector about hymns. He wanted ones that were musical, she wanted ones that were fashionable.

    Eventually she said, snootily, 'Mr Davies, I don't believe you're a true Christian, you've never seen Jesus.'

    And Mr Davies, very miffed, fired back, 'You don't know what I've seen when I've had a couple of pints.'

    I've always thought it a brilliant summary of the problem with the argument from religious experience.

    (In case anyone wonders - he got the sack.)
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    AlsoLei said:

    I would have thought that it would be pretty hard to say anything on the matter if you've been chucked out of the UK and put to death for apostasy in your home country.
    If you are a Muslim from a hardline nation looking to convert to Christianity for economic reasons for a UK passport you would quickly return to Islam if evicted before you got home and faced the above
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,359
    Leon said:

    Is Russia undermanned? Maybe, but

    "Serhiy was injured last autumn in Avdiivka, where the fighting has been fierce and even Ukrainian officials admit their army is outgunned and outmanned.

    One source put the difference at 8-1, in Russia's favour."

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-68255490

    Moreover, Putin doesn't really need to attack. He can defend what he has, and rely on Ukraine to give up, out of sheer exhaustion, because Ukraine no longer has the manpower or strength to mount another large offensive

    The war is frozen, and Ukraine cannot win. They might as well seek a ceasefire and save what few soldiers they have left
    Ukraine might be outgunned in some areas, but there are suggestions that the casualty rate leans rather heavily the other way.

    But (cueing @Dura_Ace) : the information space is filled with contradictory information. And if you favour Russia, you might choose pro-Russian figures. ;)

    "Moreover, Putin doesn't really need to attack. He can defend what he has"

    Yet oddly, Russia is attacking. There are obvious reasons (and one major reason) why.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,677
    Carnyx said:

    So why are your colleagues in the Party complaining about the poor vicars?
    The Conservative Party has fallen out with vicars, who go around saying woke nonsense like Matthew 25:35-40.

  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917
    HYUFD said:

    No, as the Word is based on the Bible so they would still need to have some Biblical knowledge
    Moving on from "salvation by faith" and "salvation by works", apparently we now have Hyufdism - "salvation by knowledge".
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    Taz said:

    That’s not what he said.

    We also have left wing labour MPs suspended for saying far less.

    In your world it is all fake offence from so called PB Tories. However there is offence across the political divide at, what are, offensive comments.
    His comments were offensive but not anti -Semitic .

    At this rate saying you don’t like knishes will result in accusations of anti-Semitism !

    Accusing Netenyahu and the IDF of allowing an attack or not assisting quickly enough to aid the people effected so you can then pulverize Gaza is just that .

    The fault is with those not the Jewish people as a whole .
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    148grss said:

    So Christianity is inexplicably linked to knowledge of the Bible? Sounds like Bibliolatry - no true Christian would endorse that.
    For asylum yes, otherwise anybody could start speaking gibberish and pretend it was Christian revelation
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    ydoethur said:

    Once a friend of mine was arguing with the wife of the Rector about hymns. He wanted ones that were musical, she wanted ones that were fashionable.

    Eventually she said, snootily, 'Mr Davies, I don't believe you're a true Christian, you've never seen Jesus.'

    And Mr Davies, very miffed, fired back, 'You don't know what I've seen when I've had a couple of pints.'

    I've always thought it a brilliant summary of the problem with the argument from religious experience.

    (In case anyone wonders - he got the sack.)
    But it's a good point - so many people claim to hear and see God, why should your specific version of Christianity matter more than anyone else's? If they say they believe Christ died for their sins - they're a Christian. Everything else I'm sure there has been a schism about at some point.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,527
    eek said:

    Worth saying they do need to decide by or on March 25th. If they announce it a day later the election date would be May 9th as you need 25 working days and Easter makes that calculation slightly more complex.
    March 25th being, appropriately, the first day of the new year for many centuries until 1582.

    Also Lady Day, so linked to Easter.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    Carnyx said:

    So why are your colleagues in the Party complaining about the poor vicars?
    The state is at fault but priests who convert those asylum seekers who aren't Christian already just seeking a passport are too
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,072
    eek said:

    Worth saying they do need to decide by or on March 25th. If they announce it a day later the election date would be May 9th as you need 25 working days and Easter makes that calculation slightly more complex.
    Parliament closes on the 26th March, we will know days before then. Probably told Monday following the budget when the old lectern - no the new one 4ft lower - will appear and media told to expect announcement. But we will know before then because the weekend papers will be full of it. In fact we will know before the weekend papers are full of it, as there will be subtle moves on infrastructure and contracts.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,775
    rcs1000 said:

    Russia is only 3x bigger than Ukraine.

    And holding territory you've captured is not free. You need troops to hold down the (unhappy) local population. Look at Northern Ireland: even though 55% of the population want us (against - what - 10% in Ukraine), it was incredibly expensive for us.
    Another fatuous error

    As of today, in its present wartime borders, Ukraine's population is estimated at about 31 million; it is severely reduced from pre-war times due to refugees, lost land, war time deaths, and draft dodgers


    https://www.wilsoncenter.org/blog-post/ukraines-demography-second-year-full-fledged-war


    Russia's population is 144 million

    https://www.worldometers.info/world-population/russia-population/

    So Russia is actually nearly five times larger, not three
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,527
    Carnyx said:

    So why are your colleagues in the Party complaining about the poor vicars?
    Because they're always whingeing about the state of education. Why should theological colleges be exempt?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    ydoethur said:

    Once a friend of mine was arguing with the wife of the Rector about hymns. He wanted ones that were musical, she wanted ones that were fashionable.

    Eventually she said, snootily, 'Mr Davies, I don't believe you're a true Christian, you've never seen Jesus.'

    And Mr Davies, very miffed, fired back, 'You don't know what I've seen when I've had a couple of pints.'

    I've always thought it a brilliant summary of the problem with the argument from religious experience.

    (In case anyone wonders - he got the sack.)
    Prsesumably he was trhe organist rather than the catechist?!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,527
    Carnyx said:

    Not the Christian Old Testament, though. That's only one millennium and some centuries.
    New Testament, shurely?
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,625
    Taz said:

    NPXMP was saying something sensible along the lines of the first part of your final paragraph.

    Of course the Ukrainian Ultra PB Chairborne Division (copyright dura ace) will have anyone who is not fully on board with continuing the war as a Putinist. However reality will eventually bite.
    All wars end with either total defeat of one side or a compromise. Ukraine needs some belief that if it agreed to cede territory to the bully, the bully wouldn't be back in a few years time.

    Like paying Danegeld only led to a need to pay more Danegeld.

    And yet, what can they do if they run out of troops? Conscription (have they already done this?) Call up women too? (Have they already done this?)
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    ydoethur said:

    New Testament, shurely?
    Sorry, yes! But certainly the Christian added-on bit.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,501
    rcs1000 said:

    Russia is only 3x bigger than Ukraine.

    And holding territory you've captured is not free. You need troops to hold down the (unhappy) local population. Look at Northern Ireland: even though 55% of the population want us (against - what - 10% in Ukraine), it was incredibly expensive for us.
    Ukraine has close to one million men under arms.

    A few weeks ago, the BBC reported that at the start of the war, the typical Russian death was a 21 year old professional soldier. Now, it's a 34 year old convict.

    No army recruits convicts, unless it has no alternative.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    HYUFD said:

    For asylum yes, otherwise anybody could start speaking gibberish and pretend it was Christian revelation
    So if a preacher came to China or Iran, sans Bible (because they're illegal), and told parables (in ways that fit in with Chinese or Iranian traditions, to better help them understand the messages - as Paul did to the gentiles) and the people who listened to those parables and took them to heart and were then persecuted because of it - that's not good enough for you? Not real conversion, not real faith?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,527
    Carnyx said:

    Prsesumably he was trhe organist rather than the catechist?!
    He certainly was.

    But I think she was the really massive organ involved...
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,775
    HYUFD said:

    True but the US could have invaded Afghanistan on its own and indeed it was US Navy Seals who killed Bin Laden.

    Indeed the US could defeat any other nation on its own, including Russia, except perhaps China
    The USA cannot defeat Russia, or China, or indeed North Korea probably, because nukes
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    edited February 2024
    HYUFD said:

    The state is at fault but priests who convert those asylum seekers who aren't Christian already just seeking a passport are too
    I still don't understand how some of the Tories think priests are supposed to know the supplicants are asylum seekers in the first place (especially if they are assumed to be fibbing anyway). Does one need to bnring a passport or HO documents to the catechism class?

    Edit: but I forget, it's been like that for ages for banks and landlords and employers ... . Though it's not been enshrined in law that the state church should also conform. Or will it be?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    nico679 said:



    His comments were offensive but not anti -Semitic .

    At this rate saying you don’t like knishes will result in accusations of anti-Semitism !

    Accusing Netenyahu and the IDF of allowing an attack or not assisting quickly enough to aid the people effected so you can then pulverize Gaza is just that .

    The fault is with those not the Jewish people as a whole .
    How does that square with your comment:

    "The biggest recruiting sergeant for anti-Semitism is Netenyahu and his disgusting cabinet."
  • Parliament closes on the 26th March, we will know days before then. Probably told Monday following the budget when the old lectern - no the new one 4ft lower - will appear and media told to expect announcement. But we will know before then because the weekend papers will be full of it. In fact we will know before the weekend papers are full of it, as there will be subtle moves on infrastructure and contracts.
    Yes, the announcement would be no later than Monday 18th March, with a few days of mopping up before parliament prorogues on Thursday 21st.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917
    HYUFD said:

    The state is at fault but priests who convert those asylum seekers who aren't Christian already just seeking a passport are too
    Sheer gibberish, isn't it? How could they be converted if they were Christian already? And how does "not Christian already" equate to "just seeking a passport"?

    Thank the Lord we don't have "salvation by intelligence"!
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,322
    148grss said:

    You would have thought Putin's and Carlson's teams would have discussed this before hand.
    Preparation probably beneath Putin, he already thinks the history of Ukraine is his specialist subject. Carlson is just a chancer.

    It did occur to me that maybe the only Germans Putin is in touch with these days are the more extreme AfD types, so he thought having a bit of sympathy for Hitler's case against Poland would go down well in Germany. But I think he just needs to believe the Soviet Union behaved "honourably" when it invaded Poland, and the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact was justified, so Hitler was somehow right to invade Poland. Of course when Hitler broke the pact and attacked Russia he was very bad. Maybe that is the history they teach in Russian schools for all I know.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    edited February 2024
    Chris said:

    Sheer gibberish, isn't it? How could they be converted if they were Christian already? And how does "not Christian already" equate to "just seeking a passport"?

    Thank the Lord we don't have "salvation by intelligence"!
    Ignore - amended by @ydoethur .

  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,527
    Carnyx said:

    There's such a thing as being the wrong sort of Christian. It's no good being baptised into the C of S if you want to change your mind and be a RC. It needs to be done all over again. No idea what the C of E position is on this.
    They will accept any member of any recognised church without need for further confirmation. Any practising Christian who wishes may partake of Holy Communion.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    TOPPING said:

    How does that square with your comment:

    "The biggest recruiting sergeant for anti-Semitism is Netenyahu and his disgusting cabinet."
    Because some people can’t distinguish between the actions of a corrupt cesspit administration and the wider Jewish population.

    Which is my point. And why Netenyahu is a handmaiden for anti-Semitism.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,158

    All wars end with either total defeat of one side or a compromise. Ukraine needs some belief that if it agreed to cede territory to the bully, the bully wouldn't be back in a few years time.

    Like paying Danegeld only led to a need to pay more Danegeld.

    And yet, what can they do if they run out of troops? Conscription (have they already done this?) Call up women too? (Have they already done this?)
    They have conscription, but the minimum age for conscription is something like 29. This is because the age cohort of the 20s is particularly small, so it would be demographically catastrophic to suffer heavy casualties in that age cohort.

    This is one of the things behind Zelenskyy replacing Zaluzhny - disagreements about the future of conscription.

    Again, the more in the way of ammunition, long-range weaponry, etc, that we provide, then the lower will be Ukraine's casualties. Being able to fire fewer artillery shells than Russia is not helpful when trying to minimise their own casualties. Being forbidden from firing NATO munitions at targets in Russia does not help Ukraine minimise their casualties. Being denied long-range weapons does not help Ukraine to minimise their casualties.

    I want Ukraine to have its best chance of decreasing Russia so that any other dictator tempted to invade a democratic neighbour will reconsider. There is more that we could do to improve Ukraine's chances.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    edited February 2024
    ydoethur said:

    They will accept any member of any recognised church without need for further confirmation. Any practising Christian who wishes may partake of Holy Communion.
    Thanks. Thinking of Baptists and adult baptism being needed even if one was done as a baby, but that's not very likely in the current political context.
  • Sean_F said:

    Germany did not realise that that the conquest of Western Europe, at a cost of 50,000 dead, was a fluke. The casualties in the USSR were the norm.
    It was a case of whoever can run faster, wins. Germany was qualitatively better than France in 1940, and the UK for that matter, but that's not saying much: it's economic base was poor and mechanisation way behind.

    On paper French forces were stronger than German. It should have been able to compete or stall them for months, if not years. But it seemed to have a complete collapse of national confidence even before the first shot was fired. And then they were so ashamed and bitter at their rapid defeat and, worse, that Britain fought on that their answer to this was to turn their collaboration up to 11 to manage their self-esteem thereafter.

    I've never really got to the bottom of this, or what happened to France in the 1930s. They don't ever talk about it.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    Chris said:

    Sheer gibberish, isn't it? How could they be converted if they were Christian already? And how does "not Christian already" equate to "just seeking a passport"?

    Thank the Lord we don't have "salvation by intelligence"!
    They couldn't be and shouldn't be, conversions should be focused on the domestic English population only already resident here. Not Muslims seeking a temporary conversion for a passport for economic reasons before going back to Islam again
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,359
    nico679 said:



    Because some people can’t distinguish between the actions of a corrupt cesspit administration and the wider Jewish population.

    Which is my point. And why Netenyahu is a handmaiden for anti-Semitism.
    There's a contrary angle to this: anti-Semitism is a handmaiden for Netenyahu and his fellow travellers. As long as Jewish people feel they don't have anywhere safe in the world, the desire for a 'safe' Israel will exist.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    nico679 said:



    Because some people can’t distinguish between the actions of a corrupt cesspit administration and the wider Jewish population.

    Which is my point. And why Netenyahu is a handmaiden for anti-Semitism.
    Ridiculous. Because we have been told by everyone on here in particular that criticism of Israel is obviously not criticism of Jews but here you are saying that it could be seen that way.

    Not by you, obviously, you just point out the danger.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    edited February 2024
    Leon said:

    The USA cannot defeat Russia, or China, or indeed North Korea probably, because nukes
    It could defeat a Russian invasion most likely, nukes would likely only be used by Moscow to defend themselves.

    Though again on that basis even if that was not the case the US, UK and France could defend themselves as they have nukes as a last resort so Russia would not risk invading them unlike the rest of NATO
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    HYUFD said:

    The state is at fault but priests who convert those asylum seekers who aren't Christian already just seeking a passport are too
    If only one part of the Christian trinitarian god had ever spoken of supporting those from other cultures or beliefs if they were in need. Like, regardless of whether they were an enemy or not. Like a Good Someone.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,775
    Sean_F said:

    Ukraine has close to one million men under arms.

    A few weeks ago, the BBC reported that at the start of the war, the typical Russian death was a 21 year old professional soldier. Now, it's a 34 year old convict.

    No army recruits convicts, unless it has no alternative.
    You've always been a cheerleader for Ukraine (and fair enough), but your many predictions of their advances and successes have not come true, have they? Not since early 2023

    The counter offensive was a complete failure, and they lost 100,000s of men killed and injured, for no significant territorial gain whatsoever

    Given that, how do you suggest they proceed? There is no way for them to win a ground offensive, but they can maybe defend what they have

    But if all they are doing is defending what they have, then they might as well seek a truce or an armistice no? Then rebuild, and save all those lives

    The only alternative I can see is that they try and hold their ground AND fight Russia in more unconventional ways, attacking the navy (as they have done with great success), maybe fomenting unrest in Russia (much less successful)

    But all that risks Russia slowly grinding them down and Russia is still bombing Ukrainian cities daily, it has not run out of drones and missiles, as we have been assured was immiment, every week since about November 2022
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    148grss said:

    So if a preacher came to China or Iran, sans Bible (because they're illegal), and told parables (in ways that fit in with Chinese or Iranian traditions, to better help them understand the messages - as Paul did to the gentiles) and the people who listened to those parables and took them to heart and were then persecuted because of it - that's not good enough for you? Not real conversion, not real faith?
    Yes not real Christianity just parables in the Iranian or Chinese tradition
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,359
    Leon said:

    Another fatuous error

    As of today, in its present wartime borders, Ukraine's population is estimated at about 31 million; it is severely reduced from pre-war times due to refugees, lost land, war time deaths, and draft dodgers


    https://www.wilsoncenter.org/blog-post/ukraines-demography-second-year-full-fledged-war


    Russia's population is 144 million

    https://www.worldometers.info/world-population/russia-population/

    So Russia is actually nearly five times larger, not three
    Using the CIA factbook:

    Russia: 141,698,923 (2023 est.)
    Ukraine: 43,306,477 (2023 est.)

    But both cases have seen a fair few people trying to escape: either rich Russians fleeing the draft and sanctions; or Ukrainians fleeing Russian fascism.

    https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/field/population/
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    edited February 2024
    TOPPING said:

    How does that square with your comment:

    "The biggest recruiting sergeant for anti-Semitism is Netenyahu and his disgusting cabinet."
    I mean, this is a sentiment I've heard echoed by many Jewish people - because Netenyahu himself equates Israel to Judaism inherently, it does act as a form of "justification" for others who erroneously believe that.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,527
    Carnyx said:

    Thanks. Thinking of Baptists and adult baptism being needed even if one was done as a baby, but that's not very likely in the current political context.
    It doesn't go the other way, much like your example of the Church of Scotland not counting for the Catholics, but it is based in the idea the Church of England as the 'national' church should set an example of ecumenicalism.

    In Wales it would go further and ordained ministers of the four Covenanted Churches (plus some independent Baptists) are recognised as ministers for the purpose of taking services in other denominations.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,373
    Sean_F said:

    Ukraine has close to one million men under arms.

    A few weeks ago, the BBC reported that at the start of the war, the typical Russian death was a 21 year old professional soldier. Now, it's a 34 year old convict.

    No army recruits convicts, unless it has no alternative.
    It's funny: @Leon is absolutely right to point out that many people are blind to Ukraine's problems.

    But he fails to apply the same analysis to his own views.

    Like almost everyone on here, he's blind in one eye. His is just a different eye.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    HYUFD said:

    Yes not real Christianity just parables in the Iranian or Chinese tradition
    Okay - so you dislike Paulite theology; you don't sound like a real Christian to me HYUFD.
  • Leon said:


    This guy died on Ukrainian soil, for Ukraine, so your example is fatuous
    You say you like your referendums. Have you forgotten the Ukrainian Independence Referendum of 1991?

    Yes 92%
    No 8%

    Turnout 84%

    Every single Ukrainian region (even Crimea, tho it was much closer there) backed Independence.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1991_Ukrainian_independence_referendum
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    TOPPING said:

    Ridiculous. Because we have been told by everyone on here in particular that criticism of Israel is obviously not criticism of Jews but here you are saying that it could be seen that way.

    Not by you, obviously, you just point out the danger.
    I’m pointing out that the actions of the Israeli government can effect the perception of the wider Jewish community . Unfortunately some people don’t make the distinction and clump both together .

  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,158
    ydoethur said:

    They will accept any member of any recognised church without need for further confirmation. Any practising Christian who wishes may partake of Holy Communion.
    My daughter took up bellringing, and now visits lots of churches to ring their bells. She may also have become religious; certainly she is making the most of being part of the church community.

    I visited her recently and went to church with her to hear the bells ring, and stayed for the service, singing the hymns. If I'd wanted to take communion, no-one would have checked, or asked me about my church membership.

    Maybe it's naiveté on their part, but compared to every other part of life, where one has to constantly prove who you are and whether you're "genuine", I found it a refreshing break from the constant suspicion and challenge. And did it harm them to have a polite atheist in their midst?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,373
    Leon said:


    This guy died on Ukrainian soil, for Ukraine, so your example is fatuous
    That sound you heard, that was my point whistling over your head.

    I was pointing out that that is how RUSSIAN MOTHERS will about their DEAD CHILDREN.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,775

    They have conscription, but the minimum age for conscription is something like 29. This is because the age cohort of the 20s is particularly small, so it would be demographically catastrophic to suffer heavy casualties in that age cohort.

    This is one of the things behind Zelenskyy replacing Zaluzhny - disagreements about the future of conscription.

    Again, the more in the way of ammunition, long-range weaponry, etc, that we provide, then the lower will be Ukraine's casualties. Being able to fire fewer artillery shells than Russia is not helpful when trying to minimise their own casualties. Being forbidden from firing NATO munitions at targets in Russia does not help Ukraine minimise their casualties. Being denied long-range weapons does not help Ukraine to minimise their casualties.

    I want Ukraine to have its best chance of decreasing Russia so that any other dictator tempted to invade a democratic neighbour will reconsider. There is more that we could do to improve Ukraine's chances.
    The minimum age for conscription in Ukraine is 27. Or so I was told by Ukrainians, in Ukraine, coming up to their 27th birthdays

    They've run out of men and the war is lost. To the extent that it can no longer be won. We are now asking them to sacrifice the last cohort of young people for..... what exactly?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    edited February 2024

    My daughter took up bellringing, and now visits lots of churches to ring their bells. She may also have become religious; certainly she is making the most of being part of the church community.

    I visited her recently and went to church with her to hear the bells ring, and stayed for the service, singing the hymns. If I'd wanted to take communion, no-one would have checked, or asked me about my church membership.

    Maybe it's naiveté on their part, but compared to every other part of life, where one has to constantly prove who you are and whether you're "genuine", I found it a refreshing break from the constant suspicion and challenge. And did it harm them to have a polite atheist in their midst?
    Welcoming the likes of Ezedi and helping them get UK citizenship however is a different matter
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    148grss said:

    Okay - so you dislike Paulite theology; you don't sound like a real Christian to me HYUFD.
    It is Christianity not Paulianity and even Paulite theology can be found in the Bible
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    ydoethur said:

    You may find the following of interest:

    Tim O'Neill (Carrier's fellow amateur historian and blogger with postgrad history qualifications) gives a readable intro to Jesus Mythicism here:
    https://historyforatheists.com/2017/05/did-jesus-exist-the-jesus-myth-theory-again/
    Larry Hurtado summarises some of the key issues with Carrier's book here:
    https://larryhurtado.wordpress.com/2017/12/02/why-the-mythical-jesus-claim-has-no-traction-with-scholars/
    Bart Ehrman, one of the actual scholars Carrier has attacked, comments on Carrier's misunderstandings of his own work here: https://ehrmanblog.org/fuller-reply-to-richard-carrier/
    James McGrath notes issues with the Rank Raglan scale here: https://bibleinterp.arizona.edu/articles/2014/12/mcg388023
    Luke Barnes evaluates Carrier's methodology here: https://letterstonature.wordpress.com/2016/02/05/final-word-on-richard-carrier/
    Stephanie Fisher discusses his misunderstandings of the historical literature here: https://rjosephhoffmann.com/2012/05/22/the-jesus-process-stephanie-louise-fisher/

    (The only person on that list who is in any way religious, so far as I know, is McGrath.)

    It is worth noting that all of these are blog posts of one description or another. That is because to my knowledge there has only ever been one review of his book in an actual academic journal, which compared his knowledge to a first year theology undergraduate and his writing style to evangelical apologetics. Petterson's review is available here: https://relegere.org/relegere/article/view/702

    In response Carrier accused her of being a Christian out to get him, which led the editor of Relegere to clarify Petterson is an atheist.

    Useful.

    Very short guide as to Jesus being real historical figure: move from undisputed material not from mythological overlay.

    1) Paul believed Jesus existed, though he didn't meet him ('born of a woman'). Undisputed.

    2) Paul personally knew Jesus's brother, James, and Peter, both followers of Jesus, (both of whom were martyred by the way). Undisputed.

    3) It is not credible that James and Peter were followers of a person they knew had not existed, and also that Paul was ignorant of this.
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,076
    Leon said:

    Another fatuous error

    As of today, in its present wartime borders, Ukraine's population is estimated at about 31 million; it is severely reduced from pre-war times due to refugees, lost land, war time deaths, and draft dodgers


    https://www.wilsoncenter.org/blog-post/ukraines-demography-second-year-full-fledged-war


    Russia's population is 144 million

    https://www.worldometers.info/world-population/russia-population/

    So Russia is actually nearly five times larger, not three
    The vast majority of Ukrainans who have fled in the last two years, want to return once the war is over. That may not be true for those who have made it to the UK, but most are in Poland and Germany and they see their residency very much as temporary.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,072

    Yes, the announcement would be no later than Monday 18th March, with a few days of mopping up before parliament prorogues on Thursday 21st.
    It would need the budget debated and all the giveaways and good news voted through, before Parliament closes.

    The last election didn’t have a fiscally responsible option for the voters, but thanks to Reeves the Relentless now taking control of the Labour Party, voters will get stark choice between belt tightening and going without for the next 5 years of hard labour, and the upbeat sunny optimism and money in our pockets courtesy of Hunt and Sunak.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,775
    rcs1000 said:

    That sound you heard, that was my point whistling over your head.

    I was pointing out that that is how RUSSIAN MOTHERS will about their DEAD CHILDREN.
    But the example cited, and which I was debating, was a Ukrainian mother

    So then your point is otiose, if not fatuous
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    ydoethur said:

    It doesn't go the other way, much like your example of the Church of Scotland not counting for the Catholics, but it is based in the idea the Church of England as the 'national' church should set an example of ecumenicalism.

    In Wales it would go further and ordained ministers of the four Covenanted Churches (plus some independent Baptists) are recognised as ministers for the purpose of taking services in other denominations.
    Thanks again. (It was marriage that I was thinking of as regards the RCs, I now realise. But that's a different matter.)
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    HYUFD said:

    It is Christianity not Paulianity and even Paulite theology can be found in the Bible
    I mean, sure - again, if only Christ supposedly said that everyone is a brother or sister in Christ, that acts are not needed and belief is enough, and that people should help people regardless of them being of the same faith. If only.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,373
    Leon said:

    But the example cited, and which I was debating, was a Ukrainian mother

    So then your point is otiose, if not fatuous
    No.

    My point is that the will of the invader is almost always less.

    It's much easier to throw away your life to prevent your mother and sister being raped, and your Uncle being shot for being a politican, than it is because your leader believes some corner of a foreign field is Russian.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,158
    edited February 2024
    Leon said:

    The minimum age for conscription in Ukraine is 27. Or so I was told by Ukrainians, in Ukraine, coming up to their 27th birthdays

    They've run out of men and the war is lost. To the extent that it can no longer be won. We are now asking them to sacrifice the last cohort of young people for..... what exactly?
    I'm not asking them to do anything. They are asking us for support so that they can defend themselves against Russia.

    Not complicated.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,775
    rcs1000 said:

    It's funny: @Leon is absolutely right to point out that many people are blind to Ukraine's problems.

    But he fails to apply the same analysis to his own views.

    Like almost everyone on here, he's blind in one eye. His is just a different eye.
    I'd love to see Putin defeated and Ukraine triumphant. I still have a Ukrainian flag hanging from my London balcony. It's been there so long it's probably on Google Street View (I might actually check in a moment)

    But I am also a realist. Ukraine cannot WIN this war, for reasons I have pointing out for a year. Lack of men

    I made this comment back in April '23, I stand by it. I will be delighted if I am wrong and Zelensky pushes Putin out of Ukraine entirely


    "It’s gonna end in a muddy and angry armistice roughly where it is now. Like Korea"


    https://vf.politicalbetting.com/discussion/comment/4505437#Comment_4505437
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    edited February 2024

    It would need the budget debated and all the giveaways and good news voted through, before Parliament closes.

    The last election didn’t have a fiscally responsible option for the voters, but thanks to Reeves the Relentless now taking control of the Labour Party, voters will get stark choice between belt tightening and going without for the next 5 years of hard labour, and the upbeat sunny optimism and money in our pockets courtesy of Hunt and Sunak.
    Good afternoon

    I have never considered it likely that Sunak will call a May election, but it seems the middle east conflict especially through the Rochdale debacle is becoming a problem for Starmer and it could be that May is a possibility now and if so @MoonRabbit deserves considerable credit
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,606
    edited February 2024
    Leon said:

    Brutal

    Ukraine has run out of men. The war is lost


    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-68255490

    The lower age limit for conscription in Ukraine is 27. Ukraine has not “run out of men”.

    (This is not to deny the current reality on the front. War is hell, etc.)
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,760
    148grss said:

    I would agree - but I wouldn't consider that ascribing of motive to be anti-Semitic as just generally cynical of state intelligence apparatus.
    Cynical of state intelligence apparatus would be they missed it / overlooked it / didn’t believe it. That’s what I suspect happened.

    That isn’t what he said. He said that they deliberately allowed the attack to happen to give them an excuse for their subsequent actions in Gaza.

    That is very different to cynicism
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,373

    There's a contrary angle to this: anti-Semitism is a handmaiden for Netenyahu and his fellow travellers. As long as Jewish people feel they don't have anywhere safe in the world, the desire for a 'safe' Israel will exist.
    Do you believe that Netanyahu makes Israel safer?

    Do you believe that when Palestinians are turfed out of their homes for another settlement, that makes the State of Israel more secure?

    Or do you think it radicalizes yet another Muslin to hate Israel with all consuming passion.

    I'm not saying - obviously - that anti-semitism would disappear if the settlement building did. But I strongly believe that if the Palestinian people have no hope, then any energy they have will be channeled into hurting who they see as the source of that hopelessness.

    That is - I believe - an unstable equilibrium.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,775
    rcs1000 said:

    I'm sorry: we're asking them?

    This isn't our war. We're not fighting. We're not choosing to fight.

    Even if the war is utterly futile, it's their fight.

    And when they give in, and the Russian troops come in, and they round up those who supported the war and shoot them? And when they rape the women?

    Will that have been a perfectly reasonable price to pay?

    They are fighting so the flame of their country is not estinguished, so they can avoid the brutal occupation of the Russians.

    We are not fighting. And we are certainly not forcing them to fight.

    Stirring words, and all true in a way, but this is realpolitik

    They cannot win, as I see it. Let's say I am right for the purposes of this argument

    If they come to us as their allies, and ask our advice, what should we say? Urge them to fight on, even though we know they cannot win? Is that moral?
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155

    Cynical of state intelligence apparatus would be they missed it / overlooked it / didn’t believe it. That’s what I suspect happened.

    That isn’t what he said. He said that they deliberately allowed the attack to happen to give them an excuse for their subsequent actions in Gaza.

    That is very different to cynicism
    To me it's on par with "Bush let 9/11 happen to do the war on terror / invade Iraq / do security state shit" - clearly stupid conspiracy stuff but I don't think it, by itself, falls into anti-Semitism. It's something lots of people have said about lots of countries during / prior to conflict - it isn't a trope specific to Jewish people or Judaism.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,373
    Leon said:

    I'd love to see Putin defeated and Ukraine triumphant. I still have a Ukrainian flag hanging from my London balcony. It's been there so long it's probably on Google Street View (I might actually check in a moment)

    But I am also a realist. Ukraine cannot WIN this war, for reasons I have pointing out for a year. Lack of men

    I made this comment back in April '23, I stand by it. I will be delighted if I am wrong and Zelensky pushes Putin out of Ukraine entirely


    "It’s gonna end in a muddy and angry armistice roughly where it is now. Like Korea"


    https://vf.politicalbetting.com/discussion/comment/4505437#Comment_4505437
    And I've said many times, that's entirely possible.

    But nothing is written in stone.

    The Ukrainians, despite your moaning are still fighting. And just as with the Russians in the second world war, you will be staggered to discover how deep a state can dig to find soldiers when its very existence is under threat.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,829
    Leon said:

    I'd love to see Putin defeated and Ukraine triumphant. I still have a Ukrainian flag hanging from my London balcony. It's been there so long it's probably on Google Street View (I might actually check in a moment)

    But I am also a realist. Ukraine cannot WIN this war, for reasons I have pointing out for a year. Lack of men

    I made this comment back in April '23, I stand by it. I will be delighted if I am wrong and Zelensky pushes Putin out of Ukraine entirely


    "It’s gonna end in a muddy and angry armistice roughly where it is now. Like Korea"


    https://vf.politicalbetting.com/discussion/comment/4505437#Comment_4505437
    The big question for the West is this: what if the only way to push Russia out of Ukraine is to send men and not just weapons?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,373
    Leon said:

    Stirring words, and all true in a way, but this is realpolitik

    They cannot win, as I see it. Let's say I am right for the purposes of this argument

    If they come to us as their allies, and ask our advice, what should we say? Urge them to fight on, even though we know they cannot win? Is that moral?
    They're not coming to us for advice, they're coming to us for aid.

    And so long as they keep fighting and asking, we should keep giving.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,158
    edited February 2024
    Leon said:

    I'd love to see Putin defeated and Ukraine triumphant. I still have a Ukrainian flag hanging from my London balcony. It's been there so long it's probably on Google Street View (I might actually check in a moment)

    But I am also a realist. Ukraine cannot WIN this war, for reasons I have pointing out for a year. Lack of men

    I made this comment back in April '23, I stand by it. I will be delighted if I am wrong and Zelensky pushes Putin out of Ukraine entirely


    "It’s gonna end in a muddy and angry armistice roughly where it is now. Like Korea"


    https://vf.politicalbetting.com/discussion/comment/4505437#Comment_4505437
    One of the reasons wars often carry on for a long time is that it takes time for both sides to accept that they cannot make any further military gains.

    You seem to be arguing that we should not provide Ukraine with further support and instead encourage them to agree a ceasefire with Russia. But if the situation for Ukraine is as bad as you say, and we attempt such a coercion, then what incentive does Russia have to agree?

    If they stick at it in such circumstances then they might make it to Kyiv after all.

    So what do we do? What action gives us the best possible outcome?

    Providing as much support to Ukraine as possible.
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,606

    My daughter took up bellringing, and now visits lots of churches to ring their bells. She may also have become religious; certainly she is making the most of being part of the church community.

    I visited her recently and went to church with her to hear the bells ring, and stayed for the service, singing the hymns. If I'd wanted to take communion, no-one would have checked, or asked me about my church membership.

    Maybe it's naiveté on their part, but compared to every other part of life, where one has to constantly prove who you are and whether you're "genuine", I found it a refreshing break from the constant suspicion and challenge. And did it harm them to have a polite atheist in their midst?
    In my experience the majority of bellingers are non-religious. They do like their beer though.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,641
    edited February 2024

    Cynical of state intelligence apparatus would be they missed it / overlooked it / didn’t believe it. That’s what I suspect happened.

    That isn’t what he said. He said that they deliberately allowed the attack to happen to give them an excuse for their subsequent actions in Gaza.

    That is very different to cynicism
    "They were Israel's 'eyes on the border' - but their Hamas warnings went unheard"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-67958260
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    rcs1000 said:

    Do you believe that Netanyahu makes Israel safer?

    Do you believe that when Palestinians are turfed out of their homes for another settlement, that makes the State of Israel more secure?

    Or do you think it radicalizes yet another Muslin to hate Israel with all consuming passion.

    I'm not saying - obviously - that anti-semitism would disappear if the settlement building did. But I strongly believe that if the Palestinian people have no hope, then any energy they have will be channeled into hurting who they see as the source of that hopelessness.

    That is - I believe - an unstable equilibrium.
    They were given Gaza as a test case. I would have to google how often/long missiles have been fired at Israel since 2006 but I would guess it pre-dates October 6th.

    I absolutely think that illegal settlements should be stopped, dismantled even, in the West Bank but it seems that throughout history Israel has adopted the sheep/lamb approach. If nothing they do is going to make a difference then fuck it, they might as well go for broke. They did this in the wars of 1947-48 and seem to be doing it again now.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,224
    edited February 2024
    Leon said:

    This is what I thought when I went to Ukraine last summer. I saw all the men on crutches, arms in slings, etc, and I thought: wow, Ukraine is going to run out of men. I said so on this site

    And here we are

    Dire TFR, lots of emigration and I expect life expectancy also falling.
    Leon said:

    I'd love to see Putin defeated and Ukraine triumphant. I still have a Ukrainian flag hanging from my London balcony. It's been there so long it's probably on Google Street View (I might actually check in a moment)

    But I am also a realist. Ukraine cannot WIN this war, for reasons I have pointing out for a year. Lack of men

    I made this comment back in April '23, I stand by it. I will be delighted if I am wrong and Zelensky pushes Putin out of Ukraine entirely


    "It’s gonna end in a muddy and angry armistice roughly where it is now. Like Korea"


    https://vf.politicalbetting.com/discussion/comment/4505437#Comment_4505437
    With the Red Audi and orange Beemer parked outside ?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,106
    Little waves on a sky blue sea, under a cloudless blue sky; what a beautiful day. One could almost believe that spring is here already.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,227
    kamski said:

    Preparation probably beneath Putin, he already thinks the history of Ukraine is his specialist subject. Carlson is just a chancer.

    It did occur to me that maybe the only Germans Putin is in touch with these days are the more extreme AfD types, so he thought having a bit of sympathy for Hitler's case against Poland would go down well in Germany. But I think he just needs to believe the Soviet Union behaved "honourably" when it invaded Poland, and the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact was justified, so Hitler was somehow right to invade Poland. Of course when Hitler broke the pact and attacked Russia he was very bad. Maybe that is the history they teach in Russian schools for all I know.
    By Putin's logic, it was perfectly reasonable for the Nazis to want to regain the Polish Corridor and Danzig in 1939, being lost territories of the Second Reich, just as Eastern Poland, the Baltics, Finland and Bessarabia were lost Russian territories.

    German and Russian expansionist have the same roots, as indeed does Hungarian longing for the lost territories of Greater Hungary from before 1918.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,795
    IanB2 said:

    Little waves on a sky blue sea, under a cloudless blue sky; what a beautiful day. One could almost believe that spring is here already.

    Yep. Except it's bollock cold.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,775
    rcs1000 said:

    They're not coming to us for advice, they're coming to us for aid.

    And so long as they keep fighting and asking, we should keep giving.
    But what if they do seek our advice?

    Look at it this way

    Imagine Ukraine is your best friend at school and he's in a fight.He's already had a leg broken and lost a few teeth, but he will survive. He is incredibly brave, and the attack on him was unprovoked. Unfortunately he is fighting an absolute lying thug who is three times his size and known for brutal cruelty

    The fighting has reached a stalemate, the thug is hinting at calling it a draw, but if it kicks off again it is much more likely your friend will lose both eyes and an arm, rather than the thug losing
    .
    The friend turns to you and asks for advice. You are his friend. What do you say? Maybe nothing? Say: it's up to you?

    Or as a good friend is it better to say, Look, you're gonna lose both eyes if you fight on, take the draw for now and then we can go home and I will teach you judo



  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,806
    Phil said:

    In my experience the majority of bellingers are non-religious. They do like their beer though.
    I used to be a bell-ringer, and can confirm Phil's observation - though I would also say that on average bell-ringers are more likely to be Christian, and more actively Christian, than the population at large.
    But yes, the correlation between bell ringers and real ale drinkers is approaching 100%, and is much, much stronger than that between bell ringers and Christians/churchgoers.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,806
    148grss said:

    To me it's on par with "Bush let 9/11 happen to do the war on terror / invade Iraq / do security state shit" - clearly stupid conspiracy stuff but I don't think it, by itself, falls into anti-Semitism. It's something lots of people have said about lots of countries during / prior to conflict - it isn't a trope specific to Jewish people or Judaism.
    But I think we would have been similarly alarmed if in late 2001 a prospective by-eelction candidate was making that point.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,501
    Leon said:

    You've always been a cheerleader for Ukraine (and fair enough), but your many predictions of their advances and successes have not come true, have they? Not since early 2023

    The counter offensive was a complete failure, and they lost 100,000s of men killed and injured, for no significant territorial gain whatsoever

    Given that, how do you suggest they proceed? There is no way for them to win a ground offensive, but they can maybe defend what they have

    But if all they are doing is defending what they have, then they might as well seek a truce or an armistice no? Then rebuild, and save all those lives

    The only alternative I can see is that they try and hold their ground AND fight Russia in more unconventional ways, attacking the navy (as they have done with great success), maybe fomenting unrest in Russia (much less successful)

    But all that risks Russia slowly grinding them down and Russia is still bombing Ukrainian cities daily, it has not run out of drones and missiles, as we have been assured was immiment, every week since about November 2022
    Plenty of invaded nations have kept going in terrible circumstances, and have emerged victorious. Invading is harder than defending, and eventually they sicken the invader.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,373
    Leon said:

    But what if they do seek our advice?

    Look at it this way

    Imagine Ukraine is your best friend at school and he's in a fight.He's already had a leg broken and lost a few teeth, but he will survive. He is incredibly brave, and the attack on him was unprovoked. Unfortunately he is fighting an absolute lying thug who is three times his size and known for brutal cruelty

    The fighting has reached a stalemate, the thug is hinting at calling it a draw, but if it kicks off again it is much more likely your friend will lose both eyes and an arm, rather than the thug losing
    .
    The friend turns to you and asks for advice. You are his friend. What do you say? Maybe nothing? Say: it's up to you?

    Or as a good friend is it better to say, Look, you're gonna lose both eyes if you fight on, take the draw for now and then we can go home and I will teach you judo



    That's a massive fucking *if* that you are hanging your entire premise off.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155

    "They were Israel's 'eyes on the border' - but their Hamas warnings went unheard"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-67958260
    The framing of this makes me so angry - they're just young women doing something fun for the good of the nation, not at all soldiers in an army doing a brutal oppression.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,501
    Leon said:

    But what if they do seek our advice?

    Look at it this way

    Imagine Ukraine is your best friend at school and he's in a fight.He's already had a leg broken and lost a few teeth, but he will survive. He is incredibly brave, and the attack on him was unprovoked. Unfortunately he is fighting an absolute lying thug who is three times his size and known for brutal cruelty

    The fighting has reached a stalemate, the thug is hinting at calling it a draw, but if it kicks off again it is much more likely your friend will lose both eyes and an arm, rather than the thug losing
    .
    The friend turns to you and asks for advice. You are his friend. What do you say? Maybe nothing? Say: it's up to you?

    Or as a good friend is it better to say, Look, you're gonna lose both eyes if you fight on, take the draw for now and then we can go home and I will teach you judo



    And, if the bullying thug makes clear that he's going to beat the crap out of your friend, and his relative that he already has in his power, what then?
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    Cookie said:

    But I think we would have been similarly alarmed if in late 2001 a prospective by-eelction candidate was making that point.
    Sure - but that's different to immediately having a conversation about anti-Semitism.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,806
    IanB2 said:

    Little waves on a sky blue sea, under a cloudless blue sky; what a beautiful day. One could almost believe that spring is here already.

    Since my early 30s, I have been increasingly aware of - and enjoyed - the season of late winter. The first evidence of nature waking up; the occasional mildness; the feeling that the darkest days are finally behind us. This morning was the first weekday this year I have got up in the light. It's not spring yet; but winter's days are clearly numbered.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,775

    One of the reasons wars often carry on for a long time is that it takes time for both sides to accept that they cannot make any further military gains.

    You seem to be arguing that we should not provide Ukraine with further support and instead encourage them to agree a ceasefire with Russia. But if the situation for Ukraine is as bad as you say, and we attempt such a coercion, then what incentive does Russia have to agree?

    If they stick at it in such circumstances then they might make it to Kyiv after all.

    So what do we do? What action gives us the best possible outcome?

    Providing as much support to Ukraine as possible.
    You can do both. Arm them and help them defend themselves, but accept that the war is unwinnable for now, and partition is inevitable: armistice

    This is exactly what we did in Korea, and there has been a grisly peace ever since. Not nice for the North Koreans, but excellent for South Korea and it surely saved millioms of lives on all sides
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,105
    @DeltapollUK

    🚨🚨New Voting Intention🚨🚨
    Labour lead widens to eighteen points in the latest results from Deltapoll.
    Con 27% (-)
    Lab 45% (+2)
    Lib Dem 8% (-2)
    Other 19% (-1)
    Fieldwork: 9th - 12th February 2024
    Sample: 1,977 GB adults
    (Changes from 2nd - 5th February 2024)
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,829
    Foxy said:

    By Putin's logic, it was perfectly reasonable for the Nazis to want to regain the Polish Corridor and Danzig in 1939, being lost territories of the Second Reich, just as Eastern Poland, the Baltics, Finland and Bessarabia were lost Russian territories.

    German and Russian expansionist have the same roots, as indeed does Hungarian longing for the lost territories of Greater Hungary from before 1918.
    It wasn't just the Nazis who wanted to regain Danzig, and even after WW2 it was a relatively mainstream position in Germany that the territories they had lost in the east should eventually be returned.
  • AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 1,522
    HYUFD said:

    They couldn't be and shouldn't be, conversions should be focused on the domestic English population only already resident here. Not Muslims seeking a temporary conversion for a passport for economic reasons before going back to Islam again
    In the Times article, a priest recommended judging the sincerity of people's belief by using their willingness to do unpaid work as a shibboleth. Another said he'd had good success by soaking people with cold water in the winter.

    By tutting at these easily-fooled liberals and crying that ducking stools sound a bit woke, you are rather missing the point. None of this stuff works. There's no way to tell whether people are sincere or not.

    England tried this with the Test Acts for about seventy years. It didn't work. Today, there are more Catholics than Anglicans in England.
    In Ireland, the laws were harsher and in place for longer. The last of the Penal Laws was only lifted in 1829. But they still didn't work. Today, there are more than eight times more Catholics than Anglicans in Ireland.

    Francis Bacon told us in the 16th century that Elizabeth I was unable to "make windows into men's hearts and secret thoughts". They were right.

    How about focussing the asylum debate on things that can actually be measured and factors that we are able to control?
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,606
    Leon said:

    You've always been a cheerleader for Ukraine (and fair enough), but your many predictions of their advances and successes have not come true, have they? Not since early 2023

    The counter offensive was a complete failure, and they lost 100,000s of men killed and injured, for no significant territorial gain whatsoever

    Given that, how do you suggest they proceed? There is no way for them to win a ground offensive, but they can maybe defend what they have

    But if all they are doing is defending what they have, then they might as well seek a truce or an armistice no? Then rebuild, and save all those lives

    The only alternative I can see is that they try and hold their ground AND fight Russia in more unconventional ways, attacking the navy (as they have done with great success), maybe fomenting unrest in Russia (much less successful)

    But all that risks Russia slowly grinding them down and Russia is still bombing Ukrainian cities daily, it has not run out of drones and missiles, as we have been assured was immiment, every week since about November 2022
    This is, in actual fact, exactly what is happening.

    The ground war has effectively been fought to a bloody stalemate, with Russia barely able to push into a town (Adviivka) only a km or two beyond the border they’ve held since 2014 & a city (Donetsk) that has a railhead for supplies. Likewise the Ukrainians seem unable to break through Russian lines in the face of drone defenses & dense minefields.

    Behind the lines meanwhile, the Ukranians appear to be hitting Russian infrastructure 100s of km from the border: https://twitter.com/Osinttechnical/status/1755765561156321427

    I do wonder exactly how much Russian oil infrastructure the Ukrainians can credibly threaten. Wipe out enough & Russia has real problems; would that be enough to force Putin’s hand?
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155

    The big question for the West is this: what if the only way to push Russia out of Ukraine is to send men and not just weapons?
    That's not going to happen. 1) because that would cause huge issues at home for many countries and 2) because the moment a NATO member state is at war with Russia, all NATO states are at war with Russia, and that means people getting scared of the nukes flying and 3) because nobody is quite sure what China would do.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,829
    edited February 2024
    148grss said:

    That's not going to happen. 1) because that would cause huge issues at home for many countries and 2) because the moment a NATO member state is at war with Russia, all NATO states are at war with Russia, and that means people getting scared of the nukes flying and 3) because nobody is quite sure what China would do.
    Point two isn't actually true. Article Five doesn't automatically mean all of NATO would be 'at war' with Russia. It provides for the option of taking military action if one member state is attacked, but it would also be entirely consistent with Article Five to help in the same way we are helping Ukraine.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,227
    Sean_F said:

    Plenty of invaded nations have kept going in terrible circumstances, and have emerged victorious. Invading is harder than defending, and eventually they sicken the invader.
    Given the choice for Ukranians is to flee as refugees, submit to the butchers of Bucha or fight on, then none of the options is great.

    War weariness doesn't always make for a desire to surrender, in the absence of military defeat. All the major powers in 1917 had it to some degree, but all bar Russia fought on.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,775
    edited February 2024
    Sean_F said:

    And, if the bullying thug makes clear that he's going to beat the crap out of your friend, and his relative that he already has in his power, what then?
    You tell your friend to take the draw, then secretly give him a gun

    I am not suggesting we appease Putin, he is a c*nt

    I am suggesting there may be cleverer ways of tackling him than this trench warfare in Ukraine which is slowly killing all the men in Ukraine

    I have now said, several times, we should let Poland acquire nukes. And we should (I think it will happen anyway)

    That will stop Putin going anywhere near Eastern Europe. The idea that if we let Putin keep the Donbas he will immediately seize Estonia is nonsense. We have options
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,775
    rcs1000 said:

    That's a massive fucking *if* that you are hanging your entire premise off.
    Is it? I am pretty sure there are top people in Kyiv who want the advice of the best military and strategic experts in the west. Why would they not? They are now in deep shit, and the leadership is split on how to proceed (hence Zelensky sacking his hero general)
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,359
    rcs1000 said:

    Do you believe that Netanyahu makes Israel safer?

    Do you believe that when Palestinians are turfed out of their homes for another settlement, that makes the State of Israel more secure?

    Or do you think it radicalizes yet another Muslin to hate Israel with all consuming passion.

    I'm not saying - obviously - that anti-semitism would disappear if the settlement building did. But I strongly believe that if the Palestinian people have no hope, then any energy they have will be channeled into hurting who they see as the source of that hopelessness.

    That is - I believe - an unstable equilibrium.
    I agree with all of that - in that Bibi is not making Israel 'safer'; that the Israeli settlers are utterly and totally in the wrong; that what's happening radicalises people (though I'd alter it to say on both sides); and that Palestinians need to have hope - and see a way forward.
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